Improving the uptake of arts education for student wellbeing: A collaborative autoethnography that highlights potential areas of focus

In a challenging world, the spotlight on children’s wellbeing has strengthened. There is extensive research about the ways in which well-designed arts education programs positively impact children’s wellbeing. Despite this, arts education continues to be marginalised in schools. When researchers wit...

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Main Authors: Dinham, Judith, Baguley, M., Simon, S., Goldberg, M., Kerby, M.
Format: Journal Article
Published: 2024
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/94546
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author Dinham, Judith
Baguley, M.
Simon, S.
Goldberg, M.
Kerby, M.
author_facet Dinham, Judith
Baguley, M.
Simon, S.
Goldberg, M.
Kerby, M.
author_sort Dinham, Judith
building Curtin Institutional Repository
collection Online Access
description In a challenging world, the spotlight on children’s wellbeing has strengthened. There is extensive research about the ways in which well-designed arts education programs positively impact children’s wellbeing. Despite this, arts education continues to be marginalised in schools. When researchers with arts education and leadership experience teamed up to consider the intransient nature of the resistance to arts education in primary/elementary schools, they conducted a collaborative autoethnography (CAE) to see if this offered new insights. The iterative process of sharing and interrogating personal stories to distil collective meanings (themes) highlighted four features of education programs that provide sustained support for children’s wellbeing: centering in a discordant world; effective leadership; experiential processes, engagement, and trust; and harnessing the transformative potential of the arts. The CAE also pointed the team towards conducting future inquiries about the currently under-researched role of the school principal in instigating cultural change that sustains meaningful arts education.
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spelling curtin-20.500.11937-945462024-04-22T00:26:00Z Improving the uptake of arts education for student wellbeing: A collaborative autoethnography that highlights potential areas of focus Dinham, Judith Baguley, M. Simon, S. Goldberg, M. Kerby, M. In a challenging world, the spotlight on children’s wellbeing has strengthened. There is extensive research about the ways in which well-designed arts education programs positively impact children’s wellbeing. Despite this, arts education continues to be marginalised in schools. When researchers with arts education and leadership experience teamed up to consider the intransient nature of the resistance to arts education in primary/elementary schools, they conducted a collaborative autoethnography (CAE) to see if this offered new insights. The iterative process of sharing and interrogating personal stories to distil collective meanings (themes) highlighted four features of education programs that provide sustained support for children’s wellbeing: centering in a discordant world; effective leadership; experiential processes, engagement, and trust; and harnessing the transformative potential of the arts. The CAE also pointed the team towards conducting future inquiries about the currently under-researched role of the school principal in instigating cultural change that sustains meaningful arts education. 2024 Journal Article http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/94546 10.26209/ijea25n2 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/4.0/ fulltext
spellingShingle Dinham, Judith
Baguley, M.
Simon, S.
Goldberg, M.
Kerby, M.
Improving the uptake of arts education for student wellbeing: A collaborative autoethnography that highlights potential areas of focus
title Improving the uptake of arts education for student wellbeing: A collaborative autoethnography that highlights potential areas of focus
title_full Improving the uptake of arts education for student wellbeing: A collaborative autoethnography that highlights potential areas of focus
title_fullStr Improving the uptake of arts education for student wellbeing: A collaborative autoethnography that highlights potential areas of focus
title_full_unstemmed Improving the uptake of arts education for student wellbeing: A collaborative autoethnography that highlights potential areas of focus
title_short Improving the uptake of arts education for student wellbeing: A collaborative autoethnography that highlights potential areas of focus
title_sort improving the uptake of arts education for student wellbeing: a collaborative autoethnography that highlights potential areas of focus
url http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.11937/94546