3. Equality Diversity and Inclusion, Critical Race Theory, Intersectionality and Policy in Education

I’ve had a flurry of intense emotional responses whilst going through the materials for this blog post. Perhaps it is because much of it resonated with my own intersectional experience of going through education systems that followed colonial practices. My experience of kindergarten was most mild as it was very small and kinder then my later school experiences but I learnt then what authority was and what it wanted from me. To be obedient and follow instructions. Very quickly my convent education thwarted my curiosity. At home I was always asking difficult questions. In school that was not allowed. We needed to rote learn everything and the books were always right. It wasn’t until I went to an independent art and design college where I earned a diploma in communication design that I was encouraged to think critically. But even this had it’s confines. We were asked to think critically but not to challenge authority 

Asif Sadiq’s Tedx talk was approachable, direct and mentioned key approaches that I practice –privileging process in pedagogy and storytelling. I resonated with his point about not being responsible for educating others and the futility and frustration over essentialising identities.

The clip from the Telegraph lacked nuance and served to reinforce ‘wokeness’ as a criticism of criticality of academia. It lacked nuance. While it mentioned what was happening to free speech in academia, not enough was interrogated effectively. Foucault’s “Fearless Speech” came to mind. In this series of lectures that has been published as a book, he distinguishes between free speech and fearless speech.

The Channel 4 clip of young schoolchildren taking part in a persona pedagogy exercise was excruciating to watch. It was a very inappropriate exercise to reinforce marginalised positions in such young people. Who did this help and what was gained (rather not gained) from the exercise? Persona pedagogy is most effectively to be used in ways to allow students to imagine stepping into other people’s shoes to explore different positions that can equip them to reflect on their own identities (and not publicly incriminate them to leave them exposed and vulnerable).

Bradbury’s article made me acutely aware of my own privilege in convent school. Being a girl of north Indian heritage and having fairer skin afforded me privileges I had not recognised then (and for a long time after). I also remembered what classmates with darker skin experienced – being told they did not clean themselves well. Teachers would admonish us for speaking ‘butler English’ when we did not enunciate English words correctly. What this article illuminated for me was policy sociology in the context of education and the stages that it needs to be considered in: the context of influence, the context of text production, and context of practice. A larger question that I probe here as I think about pedagogy is who does this education serve? And if we are honest about this then perhaps the needs of the student will be centred. This will also force the writers of policy and educators to imagine futures of these children. Who are they, where do they come from, where can they possible go and how will this education serve them? What seems to be missing from this study is a critique of the financial structure and business that education has become today. These institutions are built for profit first – this is a structural nuisance that is in direct conflict with the values that education must embody for real diversity, equity and inclusion.

Garrett’s article struck a different chord. It resonated completely with my adult intersectional experience of being an academic and educator in the UK as well as my brief stint as a PhD student at an Indian university. My move to the UK has made me acutely aware of my intersectional identity in this context and the struggles voiced by the interviewees resonate loudly with my own experience. As an educator my focus is on student learning and a large part of my pedagogic practice in Fine Art is to offer my students the chance to privilege their own lived experiences and knowledge in ways that they can most effectively do so. I gave up my PhD nine months into the program because I had a mentor who was a patriarchal male from the social sciences who did not understand art /design practice. I also know first-hand the experience of struggling with the language of academia. Criticality can be voiced in different ways.

Bibliography

·  Bradbury, A., 2020. A critical race theory framework for education policy analysis: The case of bilingual learners and assessment policy in England. Race Ethnicity and Education, 23(2), pp.241-260.

·  Channel 4, 2020. The School That Tried to End Racism. [Online]. Youtube. 30 June. Available at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1I3wJ7pJUjg [Accessed 2 July 2024].

·  Foucault, M., 2001. Fearless Speech. Los Angeles: Semiotext(e).

·  Garrett, R., 2024. Racism shapes careers: career trajectories and imagined futures of racialised minority PhDs in UK higher education. Globalisation, Societies and Education, pp.1–15.

·  Orr, J., 2022. Revealed: The charity turning UK universities woke. The Telegraph [Online]. Youtube. 5 August. Available at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=FRM6vOPTjuU [Accessed 2 July 2024].

·  Sadiq, A., 2023. Diversity, Equity & Inclusion. Learning how to get it right. TEDx [Online]. Youtube. 2 March. Available at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HR4wz1b54hw [Accessed 2 July 2024].

·  UAL, 2024. Anti-Racism Learning Hub [Online]. Available at: https://canvas.arts.ac.uk/sites/explore/SitePage/218540/anti-racism [Accessed 15 June 2024].

·  UAL, 2024. Student Diversity [Online]. Available at: https://canvas.arts.ac.uk/sites/explore/SitePage/218540/anti-racism [Accessed 15 June 2024].

2. On Faith in the teaching context

Appiah questions the oversimplified dichotomies frequently encountered in discussions concerning religion. He advocates for a more nuanced perspective that takes into account the intricate nature of religious beliefs and practices. He stresses the significance of comprehending the cultural, historical, and individual contexts that shape religious encounters and expressions.

In her exploration of Islam, Women, and Sport, Haya Jawad investigates the convergence of religion, gender, and sports. Jawad sheds light on the intricate challenges encountered by visibly Muslim women engaged in sports, as they navigate societal expectations, religious observances, and cultural norms. Through her analysis, Jawad challenges prevalent stereotypes and provides insights into the diverse experiences of Muslim women in sports, underscoring the necessity for an inclusive and nuanced understanding of religious identity.

Exploring the intersection of religion and identity, Reki’s article in Hypatia delves into the concept of religious identity and its relation to epistemic injustice. Reki argues that individuals who belong to marginalized religious groups often face epistemic injustices, where their knowledge, beliefs, and experiences are dismissed or invalidated due to prevailing power dynamics and social hierarchies. By highlighting the intersectional nature of religious identity, she calls for a more inclusive approach to knowledge production and recognition, one that acknowledges and values diverse religious perspectives.

Singh discusses the challenges of addressing race, religion, and stereotypes in educational contexts. He emphasizes the importance of creating inclusive learning environments that foster critical thinking and dialogue around sensitive topics such as race and religion. He advocates for educators to engage students in meaningful discussions that challenge stereotypes and promote empathy and understanding.

While I engage with the sources and reflect on the workshop with Gurnam Singh where he spoke of critical pedagogy and collective action to bring about change, I wonder about my own comfort zone and conformity in the present context of my teaching practice. The critical consciousness of the students calling for a ceasefire in Palestine and the responses of universities in the west to student protests. I have no words…

While thinking about how I might practically facilitate nuanced dialogues around faith and intersectionality, I am contemplating the distinction between faith and religion and the role of ritual in everyday life and what rituals might have to offer as part of the practice of everyday life. I’d like my intervention to engage with a ritual to open up diverse experiences, interpretations and positionalities.

Bibliography

Appiah, K. A. (2014) Is religion good or bad? (This is a trick question). Youtube [Online]. 16 June. Available at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=X2et2KO8gcY (Accessed 21 May 2024)

de Certeau, M. (1984). The Practice of Everyday Life. Berkeley: University of California Press.

Jawad, H. (2022) Islam, Women and Sport: The Case of Visible Muslim Women. [Online]. Available at: https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/religionglobalsociety/2022/09/islam-women-and-sport-the-case-of-visible-muslim-women/ (Accessed 21 May 2024)

Reki, J. (2023) Religious Identity and Epistemic Injustice: An Intersectional Account. Hypatia 38, pp779–800.

Singh, S. J. (2016) Challenging Race, Religion, and Stereotypes in the Classroom. Published by Trinity University [Online]. Available at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0CAOKTo_DOk (Accessed 21 May 2024)

Outline for Teaching Intervention

Spill The Tea – a positionality workshop by Smriti Mehra and Claire Undy

This positionality workshop is being developed to further the dialogue that was started by Maia Conran, an Arts Fellow at the Horniman Museum, in response to the 茶, चाय, Tea (Chá, Chai, Tea) exhibition at the Horniman Museum. Through practices of sharing and hospitality, this project proposes not ‘the story’ but ‘stories’ of tea as a social and collaborative process.

Idioms are a quintessential part of the English language, and one of the hardest elements for a student of the language to comprehend. For the English, expressions like ‘tea and sympathy’ or ‘just my cup of tea’ might feel cosy, informal and familiar. For the non-English speaker, these phrases can be confusing, ostracising- a secret code that cannot be directly translated but must be learned. Cockney rhyming slang becomes even more cryptic: a reference within a reference, only understandable to those in the know. ‘Tea’ becomes ‘Rosy Lee’, shortened simply to ‘a cup of Rosy’.

Tea is one of the most common subjects for idioms in English culture due to its omnipresence in the lives of people of every class, from a ‘builder’s brew’ to ‘tea with the Queen’, drunk with a raised little finger. Tea has been folded into an impression of Englishness within popular culture, however the dialogues within the 茶, चाय, Tea (Chá, Chai, Tea) exhibition at the Horniman Museum demonstrate to us that tea is anything but English. 

While we may be increasingly familiar with the human cost of the English tea industry, how we address this colonial legacy in the present becomes an uncomfortable question with no singular answer. Traditionally, postcards are a souvenir of lived experience, capturing something of the ‘foreign’ to share with those back home. These Spill the Tea postcards (named after another idiom, encouraging people to talk openly) offer a tool with which to initiate dialogue, unpacking the appropriation of tea into a popular notion of English culture, and allowing disparate viewpoints and perspectives to co-exist. 

Bibliography

Mani, L., 2022. Myriad Intimacies. Duke University Press.

Mani, L. (2009). Sacred Secular. New York: Routledge.

Meyer, J. H. F., & Land, R. (2003). Threshold concepts and troublesome knowledge: Linkages to ways of thinking and practicing within the disciplines. Improving Student Learning – Ten Years On. (pp. 412-424). Oxford: Oxford Centre for Staff and Learning Development.

  • Postscript*
  • Any further references for this workshop would be appreciated

1. from Considering Disability to Re-considering Ability

Ade Adeptian makes an important point – it is not the disability itself that renders individuals disabled, but rather the societal structures that hinder the participation of disabled. As a black man he talks about explicit discrimination that is now not tolerated. However, battling systemic, invisible discrimination when it comes to jobs and other opportunities is much harder.

Artist Christine Sun Kim underscores the difference moving to Berlin, a more inclusive city, made to her life. Where debt was not the precondition of living somewhere. What struck me was what she said about not having the privilege to be misunderstood as an artist. That as a deaf artist she always has to explain what she means. I have never had to consider this – this is my privilege. It also makes me think of the work I make – non-fiction video essays that do not contain dialogue as I do not speak the language of the people whose stories I tell. In my work, what you see is what you get. But sight is also a privilege.

Chay Brown recognises his own privilege – being white and being able to pass as a cis-male with a hidden disability. He makes an important point about inclusion. That the most accessible events are organised by people who understand access from their lived experience.

Ade, Christine and Chay talk about discrimination by design – cities, education, professional opportunities.

From my own experience having lived and studied in India for most of my life, I know that invisible disabilities are not diagnosed nearly as much as they are here in the UK. Many students I taught at the undergraduate level in Bangalore had been through twelve years or more of schooling without ever knowing they had dyslexia. Lack of access is an issue for large portions of the population. For those that have the resources and access to medical facilities, this is often not taken up as there is a lot of stigma attached to the names that diagnoses deliver –  dyslexia, asperger’s, anxiety, depression, schizophrenia, autism, ADHD to name a few. This might explain why the proportion of international students who do not disclose disabilities is so high.

Teaching in the UK, I find that diagnosis is more complex when students come to study with English as a foreign language. When writing is not fluent enough to offer clues or the heavy reliability on AI to clean up writing – though this might be true for students across the board. As a year-one leader previously, I made it a point in individual tutorials with students early in the year to talk about the access they have to the services at UAL – offered confidentially to tackle problems they might be struggling with and that tailored support with difficulties will help their performance – this is in addition to the talks from the various departments as part of their orientation – academic support, language support, disability and mental health support. I would also highlight the importance of accessing support early in the undergraduate program rather than having to deal with it in a crisis or later on when the demands of the course get more challenging.

A student I taught in year one developed a disability at the end of her first year which led her to be wheelchair dependant. It is only recently she received a motorised wheelchair. I gave her online access to as many seminars, lectures and workshops as possible and worked with colleagues to offer her workshops in the studio as she is unable to access the darkrooms. This is now being addressed and building works have begun to rectify this. She has also highlighted that Careers and Employability at UAL needs to support disabled students with jobs all through the course of study.

Bibliography

Crenshaw, K. (1990) Mapping the Margins: Intersectionality, Identity Politics, and Violence against Women of Color. Stanford Law Review 43 (6), pp.1241-1299

Art21 (2023) Christine Sun Kim in “Friends & Strangers”- Season 11 | Art 21. Available at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=2NpRaEDlLsI&ab_channel=Art21 (Accessed 20 April 2024)

ParalympicsGB (2020) Ade Adepitan gives amazing explanation of systemic racism. Available at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KAsxndpgagU&ab_channel=ParalympicsGB (Accessed 20 April 2024)

Parapride (2023) Intersectionality in Focus: Empowering Voices during UK Disability History Month 2023. Available at: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_yID8_s5tjc&t=4s&ab_channel=Parapride (Accessed 20 April 2024)

Sins Invalid (2020) What is Disability Justice? Sins Invalid. Available at: https://www.sinsinvalid.org/news-1/2020/6/16/what-is-disability-justice (Accessed 23 April 2024)

Adopting and Framing a Feminist Pedagogy in my Practice as artist, as teacher.

As an undergraduate student at the Srishti School of Art, Design and Technology, I was in a yearlong lab called Communication for Social Change. We travelled to various parts of India to meet different practitioners working with marginalised communities within villages as well as metropolitan cities. We came to understand that the main objective of communication for social change was to give voice to the voiceless.

The idea of giving voice to the voiceless is rooted in the field of anthropology and ethnography, which emerged in the late 19th and early 20th centuries as a way to study and document the diversity of human cultures and societies. One of the earliest and most influential proponents of this idea was the anthropologist Franz Boas, who emphasized the importance of understanding cultures on their own terms and giving voice to marginalized or oppressed groups who had historically been excluded from mainstream academic discourse. Boas and other anthropologists of his time recognized that Western society had often suppressed the voices and perspectives of non-Western cultures and marginalized groups within their own societies. In response, they sought to create a more inclusive and diverse approach to anthropology that prioritized the perspectives and experiences of those who had been historically marginalized.

While the intent of this methodology is well-meaning and still widely practiced and taught in various disciplines, framing it in this way reinforces the hierarchy it seeks to address by situating power in the same framework that it exists.

Trinh T. Minh-ha speaks of allyship which equalises these positions while acknowledging the differences in positionality.

“When you decide to speak nearby, rather than speak about, the first thing you need to do is to acknowledge the possible gap between you and those who populate your film… You can only speak nearby, in proximity… which requires that you deliberately suspend meaning… This allows the other person to come in and fill that space as they wish.” Minh-ha, Artforum

In “Whose Story Is This?”, Rebecca Solnit explores the relationship between storytelling and power. She argues that the act of telling stories is inherently political, as it shapes our understanding of the world and the power dynamics that operate within it. She argues that those in power have historically been the ones to control the narrative and determine whose stories are told and whose are silenced. This has resulted in the erasure of many voices and experiences, particularly those of women, people of color, and other marginalized groups. Solnit calls for a shift in power dynamics and an expansion of the stories that are told and heard, to include a wider range of perspectives and experiences.

Through her writing, Solnit challenges the notion of a single “true” story and instead emphasizes the importance of multiple perspectives and the value of a diversity of voices. This echoes Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie in her TED Talk titled “The Danger of a Single Story,” which has since become a seminal work on the importance of diverse and complex storytelling.

Solnit argues that by acknowledging the power dynamics at play in storytelling, we can work towards a more equitable and just society, one in which all voices are heard and all stories are valued. The very significant shift here lies in the power of listening. Everyone has a voice and everyone has stories to tell. Power dictates whose stories are listened to. It is this power of listening that I would like to develop and adopt as practice.

References:

Adichie, C. N. (2009, July). The danger of a single story. TEDGlobal. https://www.ted.com/talks/chimamanda_adichie_the_danger_of_a_single_story

Boas, F. (1889). “On Alternating Sounds.” American Anthropologist, 2(4), 47-53.

Solnit, R. (2019). Whose Story Is This?: Old Conflicts, New Chapters. Haymarket Books.

Trinh, T. T. (1991). “Outside in Inside out.” Artforum International, 29(2), 96-119.

Trauma Informed Teaching

My Reflections on Catherine Borshuk’s article, Managing Student Self-Disclosure in Class Settings: Lessons from Feminist Pedagogy”

Catherine Borshuk is a feminist professor who believes and teaches that the “personal is political.” She argues that while it may be challenging to deal with students’ self-disclosure, balancing the two is possible through the use of feminist pedagogy.

She stresses the importance of developing an approach to managing self-disclosure in the classroom. Her approach relies on “feminist pedagogy, and highlights classroom dynamics and ideas about welcoming the whole student into the classroom.” 

She quotes Shrewsbury, who in a seminal piece of writing, stated that feminist pedagogy is a form of interactive teaching and learning. This approach involves continual self-reflection, active engagement with the subject matter, and a collective effort to overcome prejudices and discriminatory attitudes towards gender, race, class, sexual orientation, and other forms of hatred. Moreover, feminist pedagogy also involves interaction with the community, established institutions, and social movements for progressive change (1987, p.6).

While Borshuk teaches psychology I wonder how this might relate to teaching Fine Art – as an educator using this methodology with limited knowledge of psychology and the skills to deal with addressing trauma.

The challenges she identifies of applying feminist pedagogy to her courses of biography and beliefs are helpful. While students share anecdotal experiences through their art based on traumatic personal experience, getting students to collectively identify their beliefs on the issue could be helpful to frame the personal experience in a broader political and pedagogical inquiry. However, my concern is whether bringing traumatic anecdotal experiences up for discussion bears the risk of re-traumatization when beliefs on the issue differ in the classroom. Or that the issue is discussed in a way that the student could feel quite disconnected as the conversation moves away from their direct experience.  

In briefing students before they embark on projects, would it be better to advise them to think carefully about making work based on personal traumatic experiences? The point is not to get them to avoid the topic in question but to get them to think about how they might address the issue it brings up without directly implicating their own trauma in the work. This might help honouring the personal while maintaining boundaries for themselves and addressing confidentiality when it comes to sharing the work more publicly. Removing themselves directly from their personal experience would inspire them to engage in what Borshuk terms, “cognitive restructuring.”   

It will be helpful to emphasize, as she says, “the ubiquity of such experiences, rather than as pathological, marginal or deviant. And having these experiences validated through readings and classroom learning can be affirming to those who have struggled with issues of mental illness, poverty, or violence (Phillips, 1998).”  Using ‘we’ in taking about these experiences is inclusive and empathetic.

References:

Borshuk, C. (2017). Managing student self-disclosure in class settings: Lessons from feminist pedagogy. Teaching Sociology, Journal of the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, Vol. 17, No. 1, 78-86.

Phillips, B. D. (1988). Teaching about family violence to an at-risk population: Insights from sociological and feminist perspectives. Teaching Sociology, 16, 289-293. 

Shrewsbury, C. M. (1987). What is feminist pedagogy? Women’s Studies Quarterly, 15, 6-14.

Compassionate Assessment (notes from the session with Neil Currant)

Compassionate Assessment is not about lowering standards.

What does a grade mean? Do we award better grades to encourage students or do we we lower grades as a wakeup call?

There needs to be an element of trust – for students to take on challenging feedback.

Social Justice – Equality vs Equity. There needs to be Fairness in Procedure.

We were each asked to think about an instance in our learning of receiving a very negative grade and one of a very positive grade. Both these elicit strong emotional responses. A grade = learner identity. Can we aim for balance in our assessments as educators?

Types of Assessment: Continuous Assessment, Group Assessment, Formative Assessment, Summative Assessment, Inclusive Assessment

How does assessment trust that the student has learned? Does time not play a factor in this? A student might need more time to internalise what they have learnt. Perhaps this realisation comes much later. How does this get accounted for if at all?

How do we build more trust in students? Perhaps we start with being honest about the illusion of objectivity in assessing art and it’s subjectivity.

Assessment as ‘done to them’ vs ‘done with them’. Responsibility can empower a student.

The system is Unforgiving. How do we consider forgiveness in assessment?

The aim is for us to be more Responsive as educators. How do we flex and respond to their process? Allow freedom in – choice of topic – format/media

Authentic Assessment – what is the purpose of the tasks we give students? it is more than checking their development.

To be aware of written feedback and how it is received.

Assessment is a Social Practice 🙂

Compassionate Assessment and international students. Why do we view language as a deficit model rather than the opposite?

When in doubt – go back to Learning Outcomes – moderation and marking – have team conversations about assessment.

Resources* “Mindsets Work” by Carol Dweck “Belonging through assessment: Pipelines of compassion”, QAA Collaborative Enhancement Project 2021 https:/belongingthroughassessment.myblog.arts.ac.uk/

Positionality Workshops – year 2 (in development) 

Maia Conran (Course Leader of BA Fine Art Photography) and I recently applied and received funding from the EDI fund at UAL to further develop our Positionality Workshops for year 1 into years 2 and 3. 
– To develop and support a regular discussion group for students to whom intersectionality and considerations of positionality are key concerns.  – To provide focused opportunity to deepen the enquiry and thinking, providing a space within the course where the complexities of positionality can be discussed at an advanced level. 

Developing the program further will support students to extend positionality into their practice and critical thinking. In photography, specifically, the examination of how you look at yourself and the other is a key concern of the medium. These workshops therefore speak to the fundamental concern of our practice: how we look at what we see, in a nuanced, considered and compassionate way. We will start by running 4 sessions in year 2. 

These seminars below have been developed by Olga Saavedra, Maia Conran and myself.

Seminar 1 – Belonging  

An object is initially a perceptible presentation in definite ways and with specific tones of feeling; it depends in some but not all respects on the interpretation of the perceiver and their culture’ (Ballard 1976). 

In this session we will reflecting on the role of material objects to evoke memories, stories, and reflections of the self. You are asked to bring an object that has value to you. The aim is to encourage begin to explore how objects can help us to connect or disconnect our stories of belonging. Belonging in a broader and critical way (to oneself, to art institutions, to a country, to a family, in general in relation to places, the ectomorphic space etc.) 

Main text  

Ballard. (1976). The Nature of the Object as Experienced. Research in Phenomenology, 6(1), 105–138. https://doi.org/10.1163/156916476X00069

Second reading 

Mozeley, Judge, S. K., Long, D., McGregor, J., Wild, N., & Johnston, J. (2022). Things That Tell: An Object-Centered Methodology for Restorying Women’s Longing and Belonging. Qualitative Inquiry, 107780042211141–. https://doi.org/10.1177/10778004221114125 

Seminar 2 – Owning Positionality – Allyship

“When you decide to speak nearby, rather than speak about, the first thing you need to do is to acknowledge the possible gap between you and those who populate your film… You can only speak nearby, in proximity… which requires that you deliberately suspend meaning… This allows the other person to come in and fill that space as they wish.”‘ Trinh .Artforum 

In this session we will be exploring TRINH T. MINH-HA insights about Speaking Nearby and in relation to the work of Candice Breitz artwork: Love Story 2016, a seven-channel video installation. 

Reference  

“SPEAKING NEARBY:”A CONVERSATION WITH TRINH T. MINH-HA by NANCY N. CHEN 

http://www.situatedecologies.net/wp-content/uploads/Trinh-Speaking-Nearby-1983.pdf  

https://www.tate.org.uk/art/artworks/breitz-love-story-t15721

Seminar 3 – Discussion of an Unknown Object 

In this session we will base our discussion on the unknown objects. How we interacted and understood them. How we can develop a sense of place and belonging through creative interactions with the objects. The aim is to develop further our understanding of how objects can help us to connect or disconnect our stories of belonging.  

Reference  ???

Seminar 4 – The Object Lesson and Positionality in Collaboration 

This section will be a reflection based on a discussion of the Object Lesson a picture book by Edward Gorey. It will be based on previous seminars in positionality and in relation to collaborative work. It will aim to explore how the self-is being negotiated when creating collectively. It will focus on shared authorship.
Exercise:  
We will use the “Exquisite Corpse collaborative Exercise” with the aim of reflecting on the benefits of collaboration. This will be played through drawing and through text. 

Reference.  

The Object-Lesson(1958) picture book by Edward Gorey 

The Exquisite Corpse Project (2012) by Ben Popik: A comedy about five writers who are challenged to each write fifteen minutes of a movie, after having read only the previous five pages of the script. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z3fXT63Zs8M 

Positionality Workshops – year 1

Colombian Hypnosis – activity from Theatre of the Oppressed.

Groups of 3 – 1 leader 2 followers – Leader puts hands out – the 2 others bring their faces close to a hand. The Leader is the puppet master. The followers need to move themselves with the hand. Hands and faces are not to touch. Each person gets a chance to lead for 60 seconds.

Discussion questions with faculty: What did it feel like to lead? What did it feel like to follow? How powerful do you feel with students? How powerless do you feel with students?

Discussion questions with students: What did it feel like to lead? What did it feel like to follow? What kind of leaders did you experience? What does that say about power?

Rank Awarness – activity from Process Work Psychology.

Groups of 3-5. Distribute one playing card from a deck to each person. Suites don’t matter. The group is to collectively make a dinner plan. Each person is to negotiate this plan from the rank of their card and influence the decision making from this given rank.

Discussion questions with students: Interpretation of rank is different for each person. What is high? What is low? Implicit Rank affects how you negotiated the Explicit Rank you were operating with. What are you conscious of? What are you unconcious of/blind to? What identity/ranks affect you?

Workshops with students and staff were very productive. What came up repeatedly in role play is how generous higher ranks played out with Kings and Queens and high Aces offering to fly their group to Sardinia or pay for an expensive meal out to their favourite restaurant. Questions to take away and think about more were about the reality of how ranks play out in our lives – When we have more, are we generous? Or is it easier to pretend to be more giving when we don’t have much? How do we experience rank in similar situations with friends/colleagues/peers? Perhaps we disguise our ranks with people who have more. How have we experienced empathy for our ranks in similar situations?

Point of View – inhabiting a different positionality (in development).

I could give them a choice from 3 fairly current newspaper articles.

They start by reading the chosen article and writing down their response to it.

In groups they pick different positionalities to explore the article. I would identify and choose different people presented in the article and they would randomly pick one. They are then asked to develop a response to the situation in question from the role of the person they picked. 

They then share their different Points Of View.

They are then given time to think about whether their initial position on the article has shifted in the process. Do they empathise with the situation any more or less?

The aim of the exercise it to get students to try and inhabit a different point of view – to view a situation by stepping into someone’s else shoes. Can they find empathy in another position? Cognitive restructuring (Borshuk. C, 2017)

Reference: Catherine Borshuk, Managing Student Self-Disclosure in Class Settings: Lessons from Feminist Pedagogy, Journal of the Scholarship of Teaching and Learning, Vol. 17, No. 1, February 2017, pp. 78-86.

Microteaches: Objects & Artifacts

‘Interaction with artefacts deepens students’ learning.’ (Schultz 2012, p.185) 
Your task is to prepare and deliver a 20-minute learning activity for your tutor group, based around an object. You can approach this activity imagining your tutor group are your students, or as they are (a group of teachers from different disciplines and with different levels of experience); it’s up to you. 
‘Object-Based Learning’ may be used to develop any of the following (not an exhaustive list): Observational skills
Visual literacy (ability to ‘read’ objects, to find meaning from them)
Design awareness and knowledge
Team working
Critical analytical skills
Drawing skills
Communication
Aesthetic judgement
Understanding of key concepts (e.g. branding, style, ethics)
Research skills and confidence
Inspiration  

Kasia Idzi – Zines Show – Discuss – Share Kasia shared with us some examples from the UAL Library zine collection. We discussed the zine as an object.  personal point of views – difficult subjects – can be offensive – amateur – low-fi – analogue – humour – lightness – urgent (immediate voice) – alternative voices (not mainstream) – punk – relatable – disruptive – reflective – collages – text + image (or one of the two) She also gave us a handout for us to access these ourselves from the UAL Library Resource online. Having done many online Library inductions I found this way more effective in person. Effective – Enriching – Educative

Joanne – Plant Based Interactivity Demonstration of Conductive = Programmable Interactive Installation – touch the plant and the plant says, “stop that”. Conductive materials can be programmed using Arduino – water, metal, plants, conductive inks, yarns and fabrics. Joanne made this so accessible and simple to understand. This was definitely a ‘wow’ object. *Resources – bareconductive.com – Ain’t I a Woman, Bell Hooks

Sarah Masters

Bow Tie Instructions – Learning through Doing

This was a very calm session that felt very nurturing. We all had a go at a complex skill (me helping Sebastian  and Joanne (because you can’t tie a bow-tie with one hand). She spoke about the relevance of the accessory in the film industry. I had never imagined people would be looking in this detail for continuity issues in film. There have been complaints to OFCOM about ties being tied right in one shot and from the left in the next! 

Sarah Leontovitsch  

Writing Alternative Text – Learning through Doing

Sarah started this exercise by giving us a postcard each. In pairs we had to describe the image to our partner for them to guess what it was. We were then asked to read the back of the postcard for contextual information on the image. By not being able to see the image and having to guess what it was from the description put us in the position of knowing what it feels like when you don’t have access to the visual. It made us empathise with this position. How does context change/alter the description. What does it add?  This was a very powerful exercise as without context we see and describe things as we relate to them. We then had to make an attempt at writing alternative text.  Not easy. It takes effort to make something inclusive. Parity in descriptions takes practice and training.

Michelle

Zines – Learning by Showing and Making

She then showed us how we could make a simple template for a zine and either draw/write on the template or use existing material to make a zine. I used a page from a magazine and it was amazing how beautifully you can read parts of the advertisement once folded. This is definitely an exercise to build on in class with my students.

Sebastian May

Speed Making This was one of my favourite microteaches! Sebastian’s object was a cup that he has had for a very long time. It once used to have his name on it but now it’s just white with a gold rim. Chance or Choice We were asked to pick one or more of the following ways to respond to the physical object: dance – storytelling – photograph – film – curation – collage – screen-writing – poetry – decoupage – wild card (your choice) The outcomes were fascinating! Carole made her zine using inspiration from the cup. Asuf made a film which was a self-portrait from filming the inside of the cup, Laura wrote a lovely poem in Estonian and Michelle wrote a curated note for the cup if it were to reside in a museum. 

I used photography to make notes to myself about the cup using other objects as prompts. Drink less coffee – Talk to a friend while drinking tea – Carry your own cup to eliminate disposable cups. What a wonderful way to remember that it’s easy and quick to make work with a simple prompt. There was an exhibition of artworks around one object right in the room that was created in 20 minutes!

Laura Linsi

Thresholds in Spatial Design – Mindfulness – What contributes to how you feel? I examined the threshold between the stairs and the corridor leading to the 14th floor of the Tower Block at LCC. *Resources – Figures, Doors, Passages – Robin Evans – Niriguchi – crawling entrance to a tea house

Asuf Ishaq

Asuf brought in a candle holder he bought from a souvenir shop at a historic site in Pakistan. We discussed the origin the object (or rather we made calculated guesses about where it might be from, where iit might have been made, what was the significance of it to the site and what it means to him. We all drew the object. My drawing was not good but that was not the point of the exercise so in that spirit I share it here. Drawing made us contemplate the form of the object. I observed that the form had an interesting logic to its form. The object was closed when there was light and would open when there was a need for light – contrary to the movement and response of a flower.