|
OER Project Community
  • User
  • All Groups
    • Climate Project
    • Cosmos to Early Humans
      (3000 BCE)
    • Farms to Empires
      (3000-1450 CE)
    • Age of Exploration
      (1450-1750)
    • Modern World
      (1750-1914)
    • Global Era
      (1914-Present)
  • Teacher's Lounge
    Announcements, tips & more
  • More
  • Cancel
  • Replies 50 replies
  • Subscribers 19 subscribers
  • Views 5988 views
  • Users 0 members are here
  • creative learning
  • exchange
Related

Teaching and Learning as a Joyful Creative Process with Dr. Shamini Dias, director of the Preparing Future Faculty program at Claremont Graduate University // June 15 – 17, 2021

Kathy Hays
Kathy Hays over 4 years ago

We are honored to welcome Dr. Shamini Dias as our Exchange Host. Dr. Dias works with graduate education students at Claremont Graduate University where she focuses on integrating ideas from complexity science to explore imagination as a creative, adaptive capacity and a critical aspect of human development and leadership. Her research locates teaching and learning in constantly changing, diverse, and inter-connected contexts that define life today. She incorporates this research to help graduate students develop identities as inclusive teachers who strive for educational equity for all learners. In addition to teaching English literature and writing, Dr. Dias is a teaching artist and works with museums, libraries, and schools to develop creativity and communication skills in people of all ages. 

In Chimamanda Adichie’s Danger of a Single Story, she talks about the danger of only looking at one part of the narrative. The same can be said for offering students only one format to share their understanding of information. It’s non-inclusive. Providing students with the sensory experience of incorporating art, role-play, dance, singing, poetry and other activities as a way to express their understanding allows them to connect with others while building a multi-literacy thinking process.    

There are many opportunities to incorporate creative expression in OER Project activities (Draw Your History, Star Comics, Active Accretion, Alphonse the Camel, Our Interconnected World, Traveler Postcards, and the many graphic biographies to name a few). How do you move beyond traditional instructional strategies to allow students the opportunity to creatively share their understanding?  Dr. Dias has shared two documents (see below) with suggestions on how to get started integrating creative learning practices. 

The Exchange will be “Live” June 15- 17 but go ahead and start posting your questions for Dr. Dias in the comments below. You may want to ask how you can incorporate sensory learning into a specific OER Project activity, or to ask for more information on how providing students the opportunity to express their understanding in multiple forms is beneficial. We’d also love to learn from you on strategies you incorporate to allow students to share their knowledge. How do your students respond? 

Whether you are currently incorporate creative expression in your class, or you want to try new strategies, but this is outside your comfort zone, Dr. Dias can answer your questions. Let’s learn from each other! 

DOCXDOCX

  • Reply
  • Cancel
  • Cancel
Parents
  • SHAMINI Dias
    SHAMINI Dias over 4 years ago

    Hi everyone! I am thrilled to be your host and hope to interact in this wonderful space for conversation with you. I've enjoyed the ideas and questions today. Keep them coming! I know we have much to share and to learn from each other. Some seeds for thinking  - where in your classrooms does joy appear? What creative methods have you used or seen - anything playful or that allows the whole student's self-expression to enter (not always creative as in formal arts integration), and especially, where do you see opportunities and barriers for integrating creative playfulness in traditionally unplayful subject areas? 

    • Cancel
    • Up +5 Down
    • Reply
    • Cancel
  • Erik Christensen
    Erik Christensen over 4 years ago in reply to SHAMINI Dias

    I actually think this is what informed my first question (about assessment). So often, we see students grumble or roll their eyes when they realize they have a quiz or a test. Maybe it's because the assessments aren't very meaningful (at least to their teenage brains!), aren't designed properly, or aren't very authentic. Either way, for many of us assessments have a way of taking joy out of the classroom.

    What if we were able to design assessments that were....well, fun!? That students actually looked forward to - how they can show off their new knowledge in a more expressive way than a fill in the blank or a MC. And so I'll think on that. I certainly believe that there is an opportunity to bring joy into assessment.

    • Cancel
    • Up +3 Down
    • Reply
    • Cancel
  • Donnetta Elsasser
    Donnetta Elsasser over 4 years ago in reply to Erik Christensen

    I absolutely agree, Erik.

    I rarely give "tests" in the traditional sense. I'm all about either showing good writing or verbal communication skills, or demonstrating alternative ways to show what you know.

    • Cancel
    • Up +1 Down
    • Reply
    • Cancel
  • SHAMINI Dias
    SHAMINI Dias over 4 years ago in reply to Erik Christensen

    Donnetta  - YES! So glad to see you moving away from "tests" toward demonstration of learning, "show what you know! - wouldnt that be a great tagline for a class? 

    I love the connection Erik brings to this as well- bringing joy into assessment.

    It might well be how we design assessment - there is a significant difference between a once only pretty high stakes quiz (zero joy) and a take it multiple times, open book to show what you know and I will take the highest score at the end of semester. 

    What do you think of asking students to create visual maps (physical, prezi, mind mapping tools etc)  of their learning as a way of assessing? Maybe having them do peer -review and assessment and revising before final assessment? Or asking students to propose how they would like to demonstrate learning - with of course the option to a default you provide?

    • Cancel
    • Up +2 Down
    • Reply
    • Cancel
Reply
  • SHAMINI Dias
    SHAMINI Dias over 4 years ago in reply to Erik Christensen

    Donnetta  - YES! So glad to see you moving away from "tests" toward demonstration of learning, "show what you know! - wouldnt that be a great tagline for a class? 

    I love the connection Erik brings to this as well- bringing joy into assessment.

    It might well be how we design assessment - there is a significant difference between a once only pretty high stakes quiz (zero joy) and a take it multiple times, open book to show what you know and I will take the highest score at the end of semester. 

    What do you think of asking students to create visual maps (physical, prezi, mind mapping tools etc)  of their learning as a way of assessing? Maybe having them do peer -review and assessment and revising before final assessment? Or asking students to propose how they would like to demonstrate learning - with of course the option to a default you provide?

    • Cancel
    • Up +2 Down
    • Reply
    • Cancel
Children
No Data