ICTs for creative practice in drama : creating cyberdrama with young people in school contexts


Autoria(s): Davis, Susan Elizabeth
Data(s)

2010

Resumo

This study explores young people's creative practice through using Information and Communications Technologies (ICTs) - in one particular learning area - Drama. The study focuses on school-based contexts and the impact of ICT-based interventions within two drama education case studies. The first pilot study involved the use of online spaces to complement a co-curricula performance project. The second focus case was a curriculum-based project with online spaces and digital technologies being used to create a cyberdrama. Each case documents the activity systems, participant experiences and meaning making in specific institutional and technological contexts. The nature of creative practice and learning are analysed, using frameworks drawn from Vygotsky's socio-historical theory (including his work on creativity) and from activity theory. Case study analysis revealed the nature of contradictions encountered and these required an analysis of institutional constraints and the dynamics of power. Cyberdrama offers young people opportunities to explore drama through new modes and the use of ICTs can be seen as contributing different tools, spaces and communities for creative activity. To be able to engage in creative practice using ICTs requires a focus on a range of cultural tools and social practices beyond those of the purely technological. Cybernetic creative practice requires flexibility in the negotiation of tool use and subjects and a system that responds to feedback and can adapt. Classroom-based dramatic practice may allow for the negotiation of power and tool use in the development of collaborative works of the imagination. However, creative practice using ICTs in schools is typically restricted by authoritative power structures and access issues. The research identified participant engagement and meaning making emerging from different factors, with some students showing preferences for embodied creative practice in Drama that did not involve ICTs. The findings of the study suggest ICT-based interventions need to focus on different applications for the technology but also on embodied experience, the negotiation of power, identity and human interactions.

Formato

application/pdf

application/pdf

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/33156/

Publicador

Queensland University of Technology

Relação

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/33156/2/Susan_Davis_Thesis.pdf

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/33156/3/Susan_Davis_Citation.pdf

Davis, Susan Elizabeth (2010) ICTs for creative practice in drama : creating cyberdrama with young people in school contexts. PhD thesis, Queensland University of Technology.

Fonte

Drama; Creative Industries Faculty

Palavras-Chave #drama, creativity, creative practice, learning, digital technologies, ICTs, Vygotsky, activity theory, arts education, pedagogy, engagement, cybernetics
Tipo

Thesis