Creative Partnerships have just published a piece I wrote for them comparing CP to other New Labour initiatives in Education and outlining some of the difficulties inherent in the challenge of defining the impact and effect of large scale education reform programmes.
TransAction – The University of Oslo
I am working at the University of Oslo with the research grouping TransAction. The group is bringing together research about learning, knowledge and identity and aims to develop a better understanding of the relationship between formal and informal learning processes and learning arenas among children and young people with special reference to knowledge devlopment and identity construction. I am working with the group to develop a research bid to investigate these ideas in practice.
Is informal learning the new ‘new literacies’
I spoke at a session of the ESRC Seminar Series – Play, Creativity and Digital Cultures. I explored how the notion of informal learning is mobilised in discussion about learning, play and educational policy especially in relation to the ways we talk about new technologies and learning outside the school – in the home and in peer culture. I surveyed some of the ways that the notion of Informal Learning has been defined and used in research about children and media culture as well as discussing problems in defining the term. I ended up by describing how Informal Learning is used in debate about changing sites of learning in educational policy, in the consumer marketplace and in learning theory and concluded by drawing parallels in the way Informal Learning is used to how the idea of the new literacies were developed with similar strategic and political aspirations.
Creative Work
I am working with Kate Oakley on a project aiming to characterise the nature of creative work. As a result of being involved in a number of research initiatives which imagine creativity as output of the education system and, to an extent a property of individuals, I am exploring the reverse idea: whether it might be better to think of creativity more as a product of the work process. This project is very much a pilot project and aims to get us to reflect on how we can actually research creativity at work and what this might mean. What would we look for and how can we capture it?
I am attaching a 1 page PDF which describes the project to date and there will be more to follow
Creative_workforce.pdf
Evaluating the Impact of Arts Education
This month I am speaking at a European and International Research Symposium, called Evaluating the Impact of Arts and Cultural Education on Children and Young People with my colleague David Parker from Creative Partnerships (CP). We will be reporting on the methods we have developed to be able to capture the impact of this programme and how we have tried to move the research and evaluation framework for CP towards a more meaningful understanding of impact and effect. The paper we wrote as well as a video of the proceedings is available through the symposium website.
Young Businesses
My current project is describing and theorising the business support provided by WAC Performing Arts and Media College to new or young businesses. This initiative is aimed at start-ups in the creative and/or cultural industries and offers mentoring and incubation facilities. Most of the businesses are led by young people from ethnic minorities. As part of the The Last Mile ( an EQUAL project) I am analysing the effectiveness of these sorts of interventions and thinking what it means to be in business as a creative career choice, since it is obvious that most of the businesses supported are more than just attempts to earn income or make money.
Informal Learning and Digital Media
I am speaking at the DREAM conference on Odense in September. I will argue that informal learning has become a way of describing the value of digital technologies but that the term has no real meaning – there is only learning . If we are really serious about changes to the nature of learning in the current era, then we have to find ways to make informal learning mean more in policy terms
Media Cultures and Learning?
I have just finished my chapter for the 2006 Review of Research in Education for the American Education Research Association. The chapter takes a critical look at how theories of learning have been used to rationalise, justify or explain the meaning and pleasure of media culture amongst young people in contradistinction to school. I want those people who think that media culture has won the ‘competition with schools to think again about what this means for the politics of education. Publication details for Volume 30 can be found here.
Out-of School Learning
My Hawke Research Institute working paper has just been published. It offers a description of and a contribution to a theory about the sector of out-of-school (non-formal) educational provision for young people. Focusing particularly on arts and culturally based activities, it surveys the forms and structures of such provision and explores how it is used in a range of policy contexts, especially those aiming to redress social exclusion and promote economic regeneration. This is contextualised within a consideration of how out-of-school education could form part of the overall ecology of education provision offered to young people in the community. It draws on examples of study, research and evaluation from around the world and is aimed at education administrators, academics, researchers, practitioners and social policy makers, and attempts to offer a coherent overview of a crucial but neglected part of what should constitute the educational sector in the global, post-industrialised world.
New Spaces at the Hawke Institute, UniSA
In May 2006, I will be working in Adelaide, UniSA again developing the New Spaces Project. This involves working with government and the University to etablish and build up non-formal learning centres, as well as strategically developing the University as a centre for research and study in this field.