WILEY

KNOWLEDGE FOR GENERATIONS

WILEY - KNOWLEDGE FOR GENERATIONS

United States Change Location

cart.gif CART |  MY ACCOUNT |  CONTACT US |  HELP    
Cover image for product 0787982849
Artistic Ways of Knowing: Expanded Opportunities for Teaching and Learning: New Directions for Adult and Continuing Education, No. 107
ISBN: 978-0-7879-8284-3
Paperback
96 pages
October 2005, Jossey-Bass
US $29.00 Add to Cart

This price is valid for United States. Change location to view local pricing and availability.

This is a Print-on-Demand title. It will be printed specifically to fill your order. Please allow an additional 1-2 days delivery time for paperbacks, and 3-5 days for hardcovers. The book is not returnable.
  • Description
  • Table of Contents
EDITOR’S NOTES (Randee Lipson Lawrence).

1. Knowledge Construction as Contested Terrain: Adult Learning Through Artistic Expression (Randee Lipson Lawrence)
The chapter challenges rational ways of knowing and textual forms of teaching and learning that predominate in adult education. A case is presented for incorporating the arts into educational programs.

2. Music Works: Music for Adult English Language Learners (Kristin Lems)
The value of music for helping adult second language learners master listening comprehension, oral pronunciation, and reading and writing skills is described. Attention to the learners’ cultural context is emphasized.

3. Lessons from the Anhinga Trail: Poetry and Teaching (Anne McCrary Sullivan)
A poet educator describes uses of poetry in a graduate research course, and as a way of accessing knowledge in a national park.

4. Autophotography in Adult Education: Building Creative Communities for Social Justice and Democratic Education (Keith B. Armstrong)
Autophotography, an artistic strategy combining autobiography with photography, is discussed in the context of a participatory residential learning community.

5. Mental Illness Through Popular Theater: Performing (In)Sanely (Steven E. Noble)
The author describes how popular theater helped people with mental disorders move from marginalization to social inclusion, and at the same time educated the community about the myths and realities of mental illness.

6. Music for Community Education and Emancipatory Learning (Kevin Olson)
This chapter is an historical review of music in adult education for social change, community development, and group identity and solidarity in a variety of contexts. Implications for music in educational programs are discussed.

7. Scrap Mettle SOUL: Learning to Create Social Change at the Intersection of Differences Through Community Performance Theater (Bette Halperin Donoho)
The author describes her experiences as a participant observer in an urban community performance group, dramatizing the stories of community residents to bring about awareness and social change.

8. Weaving the Tapestry: Tying Themes and Threads Together (Randee Lipson Lawrence)
This chapter integrates and synthesizes the themes presented in the various chapters in this volume. Although the authors work with a number of art forms in varied contexts, there are many commonalities.

INDEX.