Loading...

Dancing the Data

by Carl Bagley (Volume editor) Mary Beth Cancienne (Volume editor)
©2002 Textbook XII, 202 Pages

Summary

Dancing the Data and its interrelated CD-ROM, Dancing the Data Too, show the ways in which educational research and the visual and performing arts can embrace each other to engender a culture of feeling and meaning and in so doing evoke new ways of knowing, learning, and teaching. It draws on the artistic mediums of dance, collage, poetry, music, and drama and invites the reader to engage with the educational research endeavors of the contributors as they seek to move beyond the traditions of established approaches to represent and reflect on their work in artistic forms. Dancing the Data seeks to open up conversational beginnings with teachers, researchers, and students, and to tempt them to discuss and reflect on the ways in which established methodological and pedagogical boundaries might be crossed and new ways of seeing and doing valued and explored.

Details

Pages
XII, 202
Year
2002
ISBN (Softcover)
9780820455259
Language
English
Keywords
feeling meaning teaching performing arts research
Published
New York, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt/M., Oxford, Wien, 2002. XII, 202 pp., CD-ROM

Biographical notes

Carl Bagley (Volume editor) Mary Beth Cancienne (Volume editor)

The Editors: Carl Bagley is Director of the Bachelor of Arts Honors Degree (Childhood and the Arts) in the School of Education at the University of Durham, United Kingdom, where he also teaches. His research interests and publications are in the field of qualitative methodology and educational policy and is co-author of the book School Choice and Competition: Markets in the Public Interest? Mary Beth Cancienne teaches in the Creative Arts in Learning Division at Lesley University, Cambridge, Massachusetts. Her research interests and publications are in the fields of curriculum theory, qualitative methodology, and teacher education. She explores movement and dance as a vehicle for theorizing, researching, and teaching.

Previous

Title: Dancing the Data