Chatting creative arts podcasts

Chatting creative arts is a podcast addressing important issues in the arts.

Julia Brennan, K-6 Creative Arts Advisor discusses each artform with a variety of guests including leading arts educators and teachers, artists and industry professionals.

A special collaborative episode with the Early Learning Matters podcast. This episode explores the importance of creative arts in the early years including early childhood and the first years of school.

[upbeat music]

Jacqui Ward

Welcome to another Early Learning Matters podcast, and we've also got a combined podcast today with the Chatting Creative Arts team. So, this podcast is focused in on creative arts in the early years, and that's talking about the importance of creative arts in the early years, including early childhood in the first years of school. My name is Jacqui Ward. I'm the Early Learning coordinator at the Department of Education, and I'm joined by my colleagues, Julia and Gai. I'll leave it to you to introduce yourselves.

Julia Brennan

Hi, my name is Julia Brennan. I'm the K-6 Creative Arts advisor for our Department of Education in New South Wales and today I'm with Doctor Gai Lindsay who's a lecturer in the early years degree at the University of Wollongong. Her PhD thesis explored the visual arts beliefs and pedagogy of early childhood educators. Welcome Gai.

Gai Lindsay

Thank you, it’s great to be here.

Julia

Would you like to tell us a bit more about your research Gai?

Gai

Yes absolutely. So, I guess the background of my story is that I taught preschool for more than 20 years and I was a preschool teacher and director. I had been trained in both primary and early childhood, but my whole career had been in the early childhood space, mainly in New South Wales, but a little time in Western Australia as well. I guess what led me into doing my research, it wasn't something I'd ever had an ambition to do, I hadn't thought I would ever be a university lecturer.

But I'm somebody who has a passion for the arts in early childhood pedagogy, but again and again I used to see examples of practice that made me ask lots of questions. I used to see educators saying the arts were really important, but at the same time putting up lots of identical stencil type activities on the wall in the name of art. And I guess that career experience, my professional experience, was what opened the door to doing research because I just really felt frustrated that while educators were saying the arts were important, it wasn't playing out in what I saw in practice. I’d so often hear my colleagues and other teachers and early childhood educators saying all but I'm not the creative one, I'm not the artistic one on our team and therefore people were floundering a bit.

So, I talked to a colleague at the University of Wollongong and said what can we do about this? Obviously, there's some sort of a glitch, and so that's what's really opened the door for me. Initially it was a masters by research, because again I hadn't pictured myself doing a doctorate. So, I started that and then the findings just really showed that this was an area that needed further exploration and deeper exploration. So it led into me doing a PhD while I taught at the uni, and then now I'm in a full time position as a lecturer in the early years team. So yeah, it's been an interesting and very unexpected journey for me.

Julia

Wow, thank you, Gai for sharing that with us. It's amazing and very inspiring.

So, we've heard a lot about the last, the most recent parts of your career, but how did your arts education journey start before that?

Gai

Well, I guess like all of us, it starts when we're very young with whatever experiences we have in early childhood. I actually do remember my very first experience. I went to one of the first preschools in Toowoomba where I grew up a place called Little Glen. I remember it was in a big old Queenslander house. I don't remember much else about it except for this room where I got to go and do finger painting. So that's a really early memory for me and I guess throughout my primary and high school education, I was always drawn to the arts, both visual arts particularly, but also music. I've always played keyboard and flute and been a singer and been in choirs. But certainly with the visual arts it was just a language that I wanted to speak and that I wanted to learn better and communicate with and play with.

And so for me, that desire to communicate through visual tools and methods was sort of ingrained in me from early childhood. Not that anyone in my family practiced any visual arts so that wasn't an influence. But it was just something I was always drawn to and when I was making art, or enjoying the arts, or going to an art gallery, it just took me to a place that was fulfilling and peaceful and what Csikszentmihalyi calls being in the zone; that flow theory idea of just being in the right place and doing what I was meant to be doing. So no, I haven't had any formal arts training apart from what I did in high school. But then self-taught since then really, doing online courses and different experiences, and I guess just not being afraid to play with materials and try them out and experiment with them, which is what we want for children I think.

Jacqui

Absolutely, that's great. Thanks Gai. I've had the privilege to listen to you speak a few times and find what you say inspirational and am interested to hear about your research. I guess you've covered a little bit there about what it has meant to you personally, but I'd be really interested to see how the arts have influenced your life professionally. Because I know you talk about engaging with the arts and the work that you did as a teacher with children right through to your PhD. Would you like to share a bit of information about that?

Gai

Yes. So professionally, I think this connection of the arts to education, it's been incredibly fulfilling to do some deeper thinking about that and to draw upon some of the foundational theorists in this space. Going back as far as Froebel and Rousseau, who talked about learning by doing, and then, coming into John Dewey’s work, learning through play, and that play-based holistic curriculum where the arts are at the centre of everything. I love Elliot Eisner’s work, in terms of the way he said that the arts should be more centralised in our education systems, he really drew upon Dewey’s work in a lot of his thinking.

So that idea of going more deeply into why the arts are important for us has really driven a lot of my motivation in this space. And certainly looking at the Convention on the Rights of the Child has been extremely inspiring for me, because when you look at that, and you hear that learning, that connecting to your cultural and your artistic life is considered to be a human right, that all of us should be experiencing and that all education systems should be honouring and upholding. That is my biggest motivator. To think that too many children go through the schooling system and become adults; like the students who come to me at university, saying that they're not confident with the arts languages, that they don't see themselves as having the capacity to communicate through the arts. And I just think that's a travesty that we have to do something about because artistic expression and experience; that human drive to communicate in multiple ways, isn't limited to literacy. It's not limited to reading, writing, and what we say with our mouths. It's actually an experiencing. Engaging with the arts is that beautiful human experience that nobody should miss out on and I think the world is much poorer when the human beings on this planet are so narrowed in their thinking, instead of expanded and arts centred. I'm probably waffling on, I get a bit excited about advocating for our rights to be whole people, not part people.

Jacqui

Yeah, that sounds amazing.

Gai

People grow up to be part of people who yearn for the arts. People yearn for the arts. I mean, you look at what's going on in lockdown, during this pandemic. And when people are shut down, they gravitate to the arts and ironically, it's the artists in our communities who are being so poorly cared for at this time and yet they're the ones we're tuning in to watch the movies they make and their music and their visual arts work which is just proliferated throughout the pandemic internationally. People are reconnecting with their love of crafts and their love of making. I think that's one positive maybe that's come out of the pandemic.

Julia

And you think too with those early images of that first lockdown in Italy last year and what were people doing? Going onto their balconies to sing to each other.

Gai

Yeah, exactly and it's that yearning in that that spiritual connection to what we're meant to be; that the arts really foster. That yearning inside us to be more than literal; to be imaginative and to be creative and to live out our full potential as human beings. And I think in our education systems that's something we have to keep fighting for because testing regimes and all of that sort of thing put so much emphasis on preparing for tests and performance in the classroom and so on, instead of remembering that education, for me, is about preparation for life; and that if we're thinking about how do we prepare and foster children's capacity to become whole human beings and thinking, contributing citizens, then the arts should be central to that because the arts welcome critical thinking and reflective practice and creative solutions to problems.

Julia

And collaboration.

Gai

Yeah, yeah. And new ways of looking at things and just playing with ideas instead of feeling like we have to have all the answers or that we have to get the right answer. The arts embrace a notion of exploration and inquiry and play, and I think that's what we need to really be fostering. And that's why I position the arts the way I do. It's not art for art's sake, but it's art as the channel by which we explore our humanity and where we belong in the world and what our theories are of the world. And that's no less true for children and as the adults in children's lives, we have to be facilitating that. We can't assume it's just going to happen by magic.

Julia

Gai, you've kind of answered my next question, which is what you think the power of visual arts are? So, I think we might just sort of combine the next two questions because the one after that was why are the arts so important for young children?

Gai

Well, where do you begin? I mean, there's lots of research evidence that highlights the benefits that exist when children are engaging in arts experiences. I mean, some of the literature says things like, some of the benefits of the arts are; cross disciplinary learning, Elliot Eisner wrote a lot about that, in Australia, Felicity McArdle has written a lot about that. Carlina Rinaldi in Italy has done a lot of work around that idea of cross disciplinary learning. Children can get - the research backs this up to this isn't just my opinion, so this is children gain motivation, enjoyment, critical thinking, problem solving, self-discipline, self-regulation, which we all know from recent research, is the number one quality that guarantees success at school, is the capacity to self-regulate and cope with frustration and all of that.

The arts foster positive attitudes to learning through creative learning experiences, through fostering and valuing children's imaginations. And don't we want to do that? Inspire children to want to learn, so that if we could teach science utilising drawing activities, if we could learn mathematics through music, then I think we'd see a whole lot of children much more switched on to learning than the really didactic, narrow focused learning in silos that unfortunately can happen.

I think it's also important to remember researchers like Dewey and like Robin Ewing, and like Elliot Eisner, who said that the arts foster aesthetic appreciation, awareness of beauty and that delight in appreciating that all-encompassing feeling you get when you listen to an amazing piece of music or lose yourself in an art making process. But it's also about children developing tools for communication and meaning-making, and Eisner also talked about this idea of developing skills for children to navigate a globalised world. So, they say that the jobs children will have in 30 years’ time; we don't know what those jobs are, so we can't actually prepare them for the future, but what we can do is support them to be creative thinkers and problem solvers and persistent and to tackle problems in different creative ways.

But what I found when I was doing my literature searches for my research is that all of those benefits that I just listed and that are talked about by numerous scholars, Anne Bamford actually said that in her review of all of the literature, she said that those benefits only come about for children when effective and quality provisions are made by the teachers who are working with them. And for me that really impacted the way I was thinking about my work and now my work preparing the next generation of early childhood teachers. It's not enough to put out some activities on a table and think that you're going to achieve all of those benefits for children. The teacher, the adult who is making the curriculum decisions, they are the number one key ingredient to where their children are going to get all of those benefits that can come from the arts. And that was certainly at the centre of my PhD research. I really was focusing on what are the beliefs and choices that the teachers were making that drove their pedagogy or that informed their pedagogy and yes, it was interesting, we found some interesting things.

Jacqui

You’ve said some amazing things there Gai, lots of different things that I would love to comment on, but I'm going to move on to our next question there, which is just thinking about, so we've talked about the pedagogy there, could we bring it around to the curriculum and let's sort of unpack a bit about the misunderstandings about the place of the arts in both the Early Years Learning Framework and in the curriculum in early stage one in schools or beyond. What are your thoughts and would you like to discuss a little bit more about the way the arts are framed in those spaces?

Gai

Yes, sure. I mean obviously in the Early Years Learning Framework one would assume that it would have the arts at the core of it and yet the arts are not really mentioned terribly much in the Early Years Learning Framework. Hopefully that might be something that is addressed a bit more in the review that’s happening now. But essentially, when you look at the Early Years Learning Framework, those visual and creative languages are sort of embedded within notions like communication and children's identity, confidence. Multiple intelligences are mentioned fleetingly, but there's actually no specific guidance for educators, and I'm talking about visual arts here, because that's what I really analysed. But in speaking with colleagues doing research in the music space, there are similar issues around the lack of specificity in the Early Years Learning Framework around what to teach.

That's where the ACARA curriculum is actually quite helpful and I often direct my early years students to have a look at that, because at the very least, it's outlining some of the possibilities around the different visual arts domains. It's spelling out what you might do with drawing, with painting, with clay, and so on. And so, I think the issue around our Early Years Learning Framework, and even to an extent that the curriculum for the primary years, is that if there isn't specific support and guidance around what quality visual arts pedagogy might look like, then educators who lack that knowledge are falling back on their own assumptions or their own individual beliefs. And in fact, the educator’s guide highlights that. In the educator’s guide for the EYLF it says that without a guiding framework or some clear ideas about what quality visual arts pedagogy could and should look like then educator’s individual images, beliefs and values about children and what they should be and what they should become; that's what's actually influencing the planned and the unplanned curriculum.

And the problem with that, as I see it, is that then children's experiences will vary from teacher to teacher depending upon the confidence of the teacher. But also, the capacity of the teacher to interpret the curriculum documents and see where the arts actually sit, or where they would fit under the banner of communication. So, if you don't have arts knowledge, then you might read that section of the framework that talks about strategies to support children's communication and only be thinking about verbal and auditory communication rather than visual communication or musical communication or communicating through dance. So, we don't know what we don't think about. We don't dwell or we don't plan for something that we aren't aware of and that certainly did come through in my research with my participants. A lot of them said they knew the arts were important, but very few of them could articulate the specifics about what they had learned at uni or in their vocational training for example. So it was all very broad and not specific enough, and I think that's the risk, is that without that specific domain knowledge, that subject content knowledge or pedagogical content knowledge, as Schulman called it, then we’re sort of operating in a vacuum, and what my research suggests is if people have very little memory of their of their coursework at university or in their vocational training, then when they're looking for something to implement in the curriculum, they'll go to what feels safe. And for a lot of people what feels safe is found on Pinterest, and I'm not an enemy of, I don't hate Pinterest, it serves some great purposes for collecting ideas and sharing and disseminating what can be great ideas sometimes.

But, if educators don't have the capacity to evaluate the quality of an experience, because of what they know about how children learn, because of what they know about the visual arts, methods and techniques, for example, then they'll go to what feels safe because people want a formula. They want to know, they want to feel like they're doing the right thing by children, they want to keep children busy and happy, and they want to create items that the parents will like and all of those sorts of traps that that we fall into if we're not confident in our own pedagogy. Does that answer? I'm sort of waffling again, but it’s complex.

Julia

I think that's really good and it actually is a beautiful segue into where we were hoping to take the conversation next, which is the difference between a learning experience and an activity. So busy work, as you have just identified and also that idea of the mass production of identical artworks that we have all seen and then we get into the process versus product debate, there's so many little things in there. But I think even coming back to that first point about your Pinterest teaching, and I mean I've got friends who are high school visual arts teachers and they tell me exactly the same thing is happening there too. So, let's talk about the difference between a learning experience and an activity.

Gai

Yeah, so for me, and I've got to credit my wonderful colleague in Ireland, Evelyn Egan, who has some great resources online, if you want to hunt for her as well. Evelyn and I have had numerous conversations over the years about this difference between an experience and an activity, and certainly John Dewey talked about the difference way back in the 1940s and 50s. So, he talked about art as an experience, which sort of goes back to what we were saying before about that holistic approach to the arts, where the arts is, well, what I call it is the arts are the glue that should hold the curriculum together, that we should be integrating right across the curriculum.

So, from my research, what I really came to the conclusion of, was that art as an activity is certainly something that happens in early childhood centres and in schools. But what that looks like, for me, is those one-off activities, so it's getting the idea off the internet it's preparing all the materials, often huge labour job for the educators, because you're getting all the bits of paper ready and you're making the template, the thing that the children will copy or the example for them to follow, and it has a beginning and an end. It's often very product focused and it often isn't being built upon what the children already know, the skills they might already have or their interests.

And so when Dewey talked about art as an experience he was talking about that idea, and we certainly see examples of this in quality centres, and I'm a bit of a student of the Reggio Emelia approach, and so their approach to utilising the arts as a language sort of draws upon this idea that it's not a one-off experience. We're building, we’re scaffolding, we’re actually basing our experiences on what children have shown an interest in and then we're extending and expanding that. And I love what Dewey, in his very quaint old American style of writing... I mean, he's appalling to read really, because he's a bit like me he waffles on and on, and you fight to get to the point.

But anyway, he sort of likened those one-off activity type experiences being like food that is not nutritious. So, he didn't actually use the word junk food. I've sort of adapted what he said, but if we're thinking about that, well children love junk food so children love these activities too. So, a lot of educators will justify, we all made a hungry caterpillar out of a piece of egg carton, and some pipe-cleaners and some googly eyes and stuck some crepe paper all over it right? And a lot of people will say, “oh but the children love it, they love it!” Well yes they do, but children don’t know what the alternative is if we don't expose them to the richness of that; and if we don't believe that they're capable of doing a drawing of a caterpillar, researching caterpillars, learning about caterpillars and exploring them through multiple arts methods, on multiple occasions. And so, I love what Dewey challenges us to think about. That material relationships, relationships with the materials and tools that we use when we're making art should never be a one-off thing. hat's like saying I'm going to learn French this Friday afternoon. And then I'm going to learn a bit of Chinese next Friday afternoon. It'll be fun! And then the week after that we'll do a bit of Spanish. How do we expect anyone to develop fluency in a language that has such great value for children, if we're just dipping in and out of these transient, meaningless, product-focused activities that don't even empower the child as an artist? That don't even teach them skills and techniques that can sustain them across numerous experiences?

So, I like to think about developing relationships with materials and you don't develop relationships unless you spent time experimenting to start with, getting to know the material, what language does it speak? What marks does it make? What happens if I do this? What happens if I use it, use this charcoal on cardboard instead of paper etc etc. So when people are sort of saying... Oh, I get really frustrated on social media, because I don't know about the primary school teachers listening, but the early childhood teachers will hear what I'm saying. Because there's some social media groups where people will jump on and ask advice. You often hear people jump on and go “ladies”, to which I want to reply there are men in early childhood too let's be respectful in our language. But the, “Ladies, it's Father's Day coming up,” I saw one of them this morning, “Father's Day is coming up, has anyone got any ideas of what we can do?” And I think people are hungry for ideas, which is so ironic because I could use charcoal with a group of children for three months straight and they wouldn't get bored. Because it'd be developing that relationship with the material and meaningfully exploring the kinds of marks you can make and how you might extend that and expand upon that. And I know in my teaching experience with young children, I just never found they ever got bored.

Jacqui

I think you raise some really good points there Gai, and for me that comes down to a disconnect between even the way we refer to those names then activity-based learning experience, and when you think about it as a learning experience, you're going to think about it in a different way as opposed to an activity to do for Father's Day or whatever it might be. So, thank you for that great exploration on those ideas and concepts. I hope we've inspired lots of educators to think a little bit differently I guess about the way they plan experiences and the way they reflect on the learning that is encompassed within those ideas.

So, moving back to, I guess, now that knowledge of self and you talked about the importance of educator identity, confidence, knowledge and self-efficacy for the arts, that concept knowing what to teach and how to teach it, I think is fundamental across a lot of areas that we talk about. Can you tell us a little bit more about why you think this is so important?

Gai

Yes. So, self-efficacy is a concept, like you said, it's that idea of knowing what to teach and how to teach it. But self-efficacy refers to the confidence of the educator to be able to take what they know and translate it into the curriculum that they offer to children. And for me, I sort of intrinsically felt, when I saw all of those issues happening in my practice as an early childhood teacher and director, when I kept hearing people say I'm not artistic, I'm not the artistic one but, but, but, but. I really felt that the core of that was educator confidence with the arts, and that disconnect that had happened for them in their early childhood or in their schooling experience.

And that played out when I was interviewing my participants, I asked them to remember their early childhood experience of art, their primary school experience and their high school experience. And without exception really, every participant could remember a moment in time when their self-belief stopped. Now for a lot of people in terms of the development of drawing, we know that at about the age of eight or nine is when children really start valuing hyper realism; and that's when a lot of people really start judging themselves. It’s quite interesting that it's capacity to draw something like a photograph that we in the west at any rate, my participants as an example of that, seemed to sort of decide that therefore I'm not artistic because I can't draw things that look like. It's either when you're sitting next to Susie who draws horses and you think they’re fantastic, probably if you look back on it she's just learned how to draw the schema of a horse and it doesn't actually look like a horse, but we thought it did, and so we judged ourselves; and find that really interesting with the arts that people are so judgmental of themselves. And so rather than feel inadequate, a lot of people the just disregard the arts and go, oh well, I'm not artistic, or well I can't write my name when I'm three, so therefore I’m not going to ever be literate. Felicity McArdle talks about that in a really great little article called, ‘What if?’, ‘What if art was a language?’ or something like that. Yeah, so can you go back to the question because I think I've done my waffling thing again?

Jacqui

I think you've handled it. We can probably move on to the next one.

Julia

Gai, that was magnificent and it actually just reminded me so much of we see dramatic play exactly the same thing, it stops. We see singing, I mean I just watch my 3 year-old neighbour out in the driveway singing to himself and I know that in a couple of years time that's going to stop and that judgment sets in

Gai

It’s sad.

Julia

And I live with a professional musician who's whole life is built around that never good enough type of thing. I always have to be better. It's just an amazing field isn't it for that?

Gai

Yeah, and the striving is good.

Julia

Striving for excellence, yeah.

Gai

We don't want to say that we want people to be fatalistic and say well if I can't paint like the people who enter the Archibalds, then I can't be an artist. And that's what I talk to my students at uni about actually, is that idea between being a big A artist, an artist who's making their living out of the arts or entering competitions and hanging their work on gallery walls. But I like to translate it back to that idea of, well, we can all be little A artists in the same way Cziksentmihalyi talked about being a big C creative. The Einstein's, the Picasso’s of the world. But we can all be little C creatives, we can all play, we can all experiment, we can all wonder. We can all try something new.

And with my students at uni, I actually do teach them to draw, ironically, because I find that that's the key for a lot of people, that when they actually get taught lo and behold, and can actually reproduce something that they're observing, and they can reproduce those lines just by learning how to look really and learning how to sort of make that connection between the eyes and the right-hand side of the brain and the drawing implement; that sort of unlocks something for a lot of my preservice teachers, and all of a sudden they go “what? In one hour, you taught me something that I never thought I could do. Therefore, this is something that I can learn.” And so I guess I'd really encourage all of the listeners, anyone who's got a yearning for the arts, reconnect with whatever you yearn to do, because there's so much available in this world that we live in now. More so now that anything you want to learn, you can search for it on YouTube.

So don't disregard your own capacity to be a little A artist. Even if you never envisage being a big A artist. I just think enrich your own life first and you will enrich the lives of children. And I don't think children's lives will be enriched unless they're seeing the adults in their lives embracing the importance of the arts personally as well as professionally.

Julia

I actually really love that Gai, because I've often used the big C and the little C creative but never the big A and little A artist. So I'm going to going to steal that if that's alright.

Gai

Go for it. Give me credit, that's all good.

Jacqui

I really liked the idea too of there being a disconnect between skills and just ability. Like it's odd that we think that isn't it? You made such a good point there about writing. It's same thing, you need some skills, don't you?

Gai

Yeah, yeah. And like if we think about teaching children to learn to read, what does the adult do in that situation? Ok, they're teaching specific sounds. They are showing how those sounds joined together. They're making the connection between what spoken and what's written. They’re modelling. They’re reading to children. They’re demonstrating. They’re sometimes even saying stop, try that again. Let me show you how this might work in a different way. And yet with the arts, there's been this post-war idea of not interfering with children's art-making.

So, Lowenfeld and Read, two theorists who were working around about the time of the Second World War, they were really positioning art-making for children as a therapeutic post-war expression of trauma. And so, part of their thinking was to say, well, don't interfere, don't intervene, don't talk to the children or instruct them in anything to do with the arts, or you'll sort of corrupt their natural expression and creativity. And that myth, look it's true in a sense, in a therapeutic sense, it's true that there can be benefit in the adult not intervening if art is being used as a therapy.

But art isn't only therapeutic, art is so much more than that and if we're saying children have a right to learn this language of the arts, then it's our responsibility to actually support them to do that. And so, this idea of not interfering seems to have hung on in our practice. It doesn't apply in any of the other ways we teach young children where we co-construct, model, demonstrate, scaffold the learning etc etc. And yet with arts people go oh you're either born artistic or you're not, and it's not the adults place to demonstrate or model, it might corrupt the child's creativity. I actually think that abdication of the role of the teacher happens because of that lack of self-efficacy. I think it lets people off the hook. Because everyone wants to do the right thing. Everyone doesn't want to corrupt a child’s natural creativity and yet ironically, the lack of involvement by the educator can just do that. It can actually achieve the opposite of what they're trying to achieve, by refusing to teach. So, it's really…

Julia

It’s a delicate balance.

Gai

It’s a balance, definitely.

Jacqui

Now I'm going to say that we should draw it to an end, because I think we've been chatting for ages and I don't know about you Julia, but I could be in this conversation all day long.

Julia

Yeah absolutely.

Gai

And, you know I could! Far out!

Jacqui

I just think it's been amazing, Gai and Julia it's been really great to chat. I think we've covered off on some really interesting things. I hope it inspires and motivates people to think differently about the arts and yeah, I appreciate everyone's time.

Thank you for joining us and just should also offer you the opportunity to say anything else if you wanted to wrap up with any other statements either of you.

Gai

I guess the one thing I would say and it definitely is something that was sort of a recommendation out of my PhD; is focus on your image of the child. Do you think they're capable? Because if you do, then they have a right to experience quality arts materials and quality arts processes from the moment of birth. You do it from the start, because it's that relationship with materials and think about your own identity. I think they're the two major keys. Visual arts knowledge can come because it's at your doorstep. You can find out anything you need to know about the language of art, but it's your own attitude and identity that will determine whether you give children that right to experience the arts in a really rich, quality way. That’s what I’d recommend. Rethink your image of the child and the image of the teacher.

Julia

Thank you so much Gai, that was really really inspiring and fantastic. I've learned so much and I've written down a whole page of things I've got to go and access now and research further. So thank you so much for your time today.

Gai

My pleasure.

Jacqui

Thanks, guys. Bye.

Julia

Bye.

Gai

Bye.

[end of transcript]

[upbeat music]

Julia Brennan

Hi everybody and welcome back to chatting Creative Arts. It's great to have you here today. Today is gonna be really exciting, we're actually working with the most incredible dancer. Her name is Charmaine Seet and we are so so lucky to have her with us today.

I met Charemaine for the first time a few weeks ago actually which was really exciting. Working on a collaborative project together with the Sydney Opera House where she does a lot of work in a project all about bodies as buildings and we've been doing a little bit of work on dance and wellbeing and various other exciting things about the ways that teachers in the K-6 classroom can actually use dance with their students in ways that they didn't even know were possible.

So, without further ado, let me introduce you to the incredible Charmaine Seet. Hi Charmaine.

Charemaine Seet

Hello Julia and what a lovely introduction. Thank you so much and thank you for the invite.

Julia

And it is all true.

[Charemaine laughs]

It it's all true and listeners what you're gonna learn about Charmaine is that she's just this incredibly humble little lady who is just an incredible surprise package with all of her gifts that she has to share.

So Charemaine currently is the director of Seet Dance in Surry Hills, and she works with the creative leadership and learning team at the Sydney Opera House, working on dance programs for their new Centre for Creativity and really working on ways of building teacher capacity in K-6 dance in the classroom and beyond. And also working with students in how they can understand what dance actually means and how it can work in the classrooms. So, thanks for coming and sharing all of your incredible knowledge with Charmaine.

Charemaine

Total pleasure Julia thank you actually. It’s lovely.

[Laughter]

Julia

Well, let's get started Charemaine so. Tell us all about where and how and when all of your dance journey first started.

Charemaine

Ok, I have a really interesting story because I grew up in Southeast Asia and the first moment that I thought ‘I love dance and this is going to be my life’ was when I was in, I guess you're 7 and it was a public school where they had to have a dance event and a show and they needed a tiny dancer [laughs]. And they looked through the whole school. No one was really studying dance, so they looked at me and said, your tiny, you're gonna be in it and I was like ‘Oh my gosh, I'm being recruited’. Had no idea what it was going to be. They needed me to be small so the boys could lift me up in the air [laughs].

And so I was in this production and I was like absolutely gobsmacked by the whole event. I just loved every moment of it and that's when I said I have to find a way to learn how to do this for my life. And that was there when I started to look for dance schools and teachers and such. But I thought it was just a great introduction 'cause I was thrown in the deep end and it was an adventure. An adventure with all these different kids, performing in front of people it was just magic.

Julia

Wow. Sounds exciting, and for those of you who can't see Charemaine. There's actually going to be some footage released of Charemaine doing some dancing at the Opera House. She is a tiny dancer [laughs].

Charemaine

Well, I grew a bit more. [laughs]

Julia

And incredible one that.

So, Charmaine why does dance means so much to you? So, you know you you've obviously shared with us your first, the how it first started, but why does it mean so much to you?

Charemaine

Well, I mean, as you know, Julia dance has been my life and now I'm 55. I've spent my life performing, creating and teaching dance. So, there's a lot to say, but I think it, it boils down to dance gives me a chance to have that relationship with my body and the environment and just my creativity at the same time. It's like every time I dance I can only describe as you know that feeling where you jump into a swimming pool and so on, and you'd like feel your whole body.

Julia

Yeah.

Charemaine

And you know it's gonna happen, but it's always a surprise. It's always a surprise and that's what dancing is for me every day. It’ that jump in the swimming pool [gasp]. And here you know so.

Julia

Oh wow, that's sort of wake-up call that we all get with something. Mine’s coffee at the moment, but…[laughter]

Charemaine

[laughs] Yeah. Yes. Exactly. But you know when you're a kid, those moments are more and as you grow up, you have to kind of find them again, and that for me has been dance has been that for me, yeah.

Julia

That is magnificent. Thank you. So how has the arts influenced your life both professionally and personally?

Charemaine

Wow, well, I mean having pursued dance career, I mean I've had to actually travel the world so that has been a big influence. And travel is not.

Julia

Not recently though. [laughs]

Charemaine

[laughs] Not recently, no.

But you know, just keep looking and it kind of makes you want to discover and kind of look around the world, in fact, for things that inspire and opportunities. So it's taken me around the world and I've met so many amazing people. And professionally that, I can't ask for more really. It's just a really wide and wonderful experience of life.

And then personally, I mean the, you know, wherever you go, whatever pathways you take in your life, you meet people. So I met my husband when I was a dancer, you know what happens. And on a very, very personal level similar to you know what I said before? And life you know as you go through life, you know when you're a kid your experiences are certain thing and dance has been with me the whole way.

It's been my, my thing that is right next to me keeping me sane a lot of the time. You know when I get a little bit crazy or nervous, I use it to you know, balance myself in steady myself. And also, it's that creative outlet so you know I just feel it keeps me grounded as a person.

Julia

Wow.

Charemaine

Yeah.

Julia

That look, that's really interesting 'cause you've talked there about you know wide and wonderful experiences and keeping you grounded and inspiration. So, you've also talked about, not only was it your inspiration, but using things around you and your experiences around you to get inspiration for your dance. So, let's talk a little bit more about that. 'Cause I know in the project that we worked on, we talked a lot about inspiration and we're going to go further into that shortly. But let's just go back to dance education so. How does dance education fit into all of this journey that you've just described?

Charemaine

Well. I've been teaching for many years as a real, well you have as well, I guess, but uhm, I feel like and every teacher will say this I think. That when you're teaching your learning at the same time, I know that's a bit of a cliché, but inside dance education, the one, the dance that I teach, it's a very much a direct transmission event where I dance with a student and the student dances with me and we’re passing information between us and there's no hierarchy of who knows more than the other. Which I think is really important when you're thinking about dance in a creative way because everybody movement is personal, but it's also something that we can read and use our imaginations to, to change and manipulate and turn into an artistic event.

Julia

Very interesting. So everybody is what did you say? Everybody’s journey is important or everybody's component to the dance is important and it's a personal expression.

Charemaine

Yes. And the movement I mean. I think all of us. In some way, we have ways we moved through the world. If we have a body, we have things that move and I think when you're studying contemporary dance, especially inside the tradition of Western postmodern dance, which sounds very high falutin.

But there's always been an exploration of what is movement and what is dance. So even a simple gesture if we think about it and really focus on how we can express something through that movement, it doesn't have to be anything fancy. That becomes dance. So I could just make you know, my arm lift up. But if I put music to it and have a feeling about it, that's dance. I mean it doesn't have to be complicated. And then you can get more complicated if you want. I mean, that's fine.

[Laughter]

Julia

And we're gonna come to that one later too. 'Cause that's coming back to that whole idea of skill that we were talking about before. So, we'll come back to that one. So, I just want to tap into something that we've been working on and perhaps unpack a little bit about what dance can mean for our students.

So, a few weeks ago, we were working in the filming of a project about creative arts and wellbeing. And I've talked about that already, called ‘Tuning In’. And you filmed a segment that to me it was just mind boggling and I can't wait for anyone listening to actually see it because I've just had the privilege of showing Charemaine some of it and I think it actually blew your mind as well Charemaine.

[Laughter]

It's such an incredible piece of footage. Anyway, so speaking of which, if you haven't enrolled, you can enrol through DART learning. It's all sitting there, ready to be enrolled in and looked at it. And you were exploring the role of our surroundings. So, place and space in the process of dance composition, or what traditionally some people might know as choreography. Talk to us about this situation and your inspiration in general. So we’re coming back to that inspiration work.

Charemaine

Yeah, so I think one of the things that can be… it's like a writer having a blank page. What do I do? How do I come up with movement or dance? You know know people come across this moment where they're trying to find an idea and one of the things that a lot of dancers use to create that moment of inspiration is to look around their environment and look at things in the room and really look and maybe observed the shape and maybe even the texture of a thing and try and use that as an instruction or an inspiration.

So, if I saw for example a straight line along a wall I might want to trace that with the movement of a head or an arm. Or even just think I might walk a straight line across the room, you know, so they're like little messages that we can pick up and then build them into a sequence of movement. And that's an easy way of finding movement to make into a dance.

Julia

So just looking around your room and getting inspired by what you see, the lines, the shapes all of those, sort of.

Charemaine

Yeah. Because you can look, you can look at shapes and just use them in that way. Or you can look at something and remember ‘oh someone gave me that’. And remember that person and then think about making a dance with a story behind it.

Julia

Uh huh.

Charemaine

Face that object and so you know in many ways to interpret. And the key is imagination because everything that we're doing here is like using our imaginations to find inspiration and to find something that we can make a dance out of. So there's different ways to read the room and that the way that people turn this is like using the room as a like a music school. You know, on a score of music you might have you know notes that you recognise. In a dance situation you can just create a magical score out of your space where you are in your room.

Julia

Uh-huh, yeah, that's really interesting. Those two keywords from that, a story and imagination. And I've talked to you about this before, that one of the common misconceptions is that you know dance is all about leotards and tiaras, and that kind of thing [laughter] and a lot of us don't realise that dance is actually a really powerful mechanism for storytelling.

And I think that's one of the key things that I'd love our listeners to take away is that dance is really important for all of our students. And I mean all of our students, not just those perhaps that can, or they want to, but all of them. And that idea of the storytelling and imagination, you've just captured really beautifully. So, can you expand on that a little bit more? And why dance is important for all of our students?

Charemaine

Well, I think what you say about storytelling is so important, Julia. It's all about being human and what we have inside and what we've inherited from family, from culture. And I think that when we as people can bring those into our beings and then express them again. It's like a translation of a legacy or a feeling inside or community, and I think those connections to history and story and community. They bind everyone together in a very loving and beautiful way. And it helps people or students to feel connected to something larger.

But also, at the same time to have that individual voice. And an interpretation of what you've received from your family, your world, your teachers, your community. And also, that personal expression really helps us to actually explore who we are as people, and I think that's part of developing as a young person, if you're a student, but throughout life we all go through changes. And understanding yourself, having that great relationship with self, I think is so important.

Julia

Uh huh, so really building up to that understanding of self and using dance as a way to capture your individual voice and express that individual voice.

Charemaine

Yes, that sounds beautiful.

Julia

You said it, not me.

[Laughter]

Charemaine

But you said it again and I really appreciate that.

[Laughter]

I think one of the things Julia, if I could expand a little, uh, the thing about individual voice and it comes back to what you said about tiaras and tutus et cetera. And how we see these templates of dance around us that seem to exclude others and I think that's why emphasizing your individual voice is very important, because the dance at each of us makes is going to be completely unique.

And that's what we're looking for in contemporary dance, as an ideal, in a way. What can I bring that's new and unique to me and then share that with the world?

Julia

Beautiful thank you. So, everybody needs to hear what you've just said. Everyone needs to hear that.

So, I'm assuming that people have heard that now. Is it possible for a teacher, is the $6 million question here. Is it possible for a teacher with limited experience to teach dance? If your answer is yes, which I'm hoping it is, but no pressure how? How can you do it if you don't have much experience?

I mean the example that I quoted before about the work that we did in the tuning in wellbeing and the arts project. I already said that you blew my mind with the creative way that you looked at something so simple that I've walked past a lot of times, a pattern in concrete. I've never stopped to think I'll one day this will be a dance piece.

What you did was so engaging you just took something so simple as something that's around us all the time and you made it really engaging in a really accessible lesson. So, tell us about how you go about doing things like that for. Remember, we're talking into our teachers here who may be our little nervous about taking this plunge.

Charemaine

Sure. I understanding being nervous because you know, if something seems like it's hard to do or complex, that can make us feel you know, little reluctant or nervous about it.

I think what you said is exactly right Julia. It's really being open to our environment and being open to own sense of creativity. I think as teachers often, we're really good at being good at our job, and sometimes that makes us feel, you know that we're not good at another thing. Like you know, creativity or dance that we've never done before, but it's that moment of trying to be an explorer again. What am I? What can I do? All of us have it and all teachers are super creative. That's you know, absolutely the case. It's just tapping into that creativity. And maybe feeling that ‘Yeah, I can do this. I have confidence that I know what I can do with my body and what I do with my body is absolutely a dance if I want it to be’.

I know that sounds a bit like woah if I say it's a dance, but I really mean that if we just stand in space and look around us as you felt I did the other day. I'm just saying if I can just feel how this environment gives me ideas and be open to that, what I offered to the student is that openness, showing them that my imagination is running free and I'm not gonna edit it. I'm just gonna try it. Experiment, put some music on, move around, get those ideas going and that's all it is. That is, what dance is. I don't think it's much more complicated than that.

Julia

Wow.

Charemaine

And I think it's.

Julia Brennan

So. Sorry. [Laughs]

Ok, so if that's the case, what are some examples that you've used when working with teachers to build their capacity in dance, in the classroom? We're not talking about in a dance studio, we're talking about our K-6 classroom teachers. You can tell us about some of your best lessons or best moments, or whatever floats your boat.

Charemaine

Yeah. I mean one of my favorite lessons to do with people who I've assigned to like activate the imagination can movement is to get them to think about the environment around them in a different way.

Like I'd say, imagine you're standing in a forest, you know and go through like a storytelling thing. Close your eyes and try and smell the forest and walk around and all this and get you know the feeling of what's around you. And I try and get them to think about the sensations as well. Like you know, is it cold? Is it hot? Whatever sensations you can feel. Then I say now imagine you put that inside your body. How does that make you move around the room now?

And it's like you know it's a bit like a meditation in a way. But it's also a kind of an exercise for imagination to be able to be open to that feeling of ‘I'm not sure, but I'm ok to be with the not sure’. So that's one scenario, I really like.

And then I also do lessons very much what like what you saw, which is I just give you really clear tasks. Ok, I want you make three movements that respond to three geometric shapes. So, let's say there's a square, there’s a triangle, there's a circle. And when I say respond it’s like you could trace it, you could be it or you could like do something that matches it. And then like line them up into a sequence. And then you might then take that and change the way you do it. Maybe go slow, maybe go fast, maybe make a few people do it at the same time. Maybe make them do the different movements of the different shapes at different times. So you can play with design, design of movement. And it's quite, you know, an easy exercise to start with.

Julia

Ok, so your sort of layering the pieces up, so you might start from an inspiration, and then you might repeat it. Or you might add two pieces together, or you might get a group to do it and then an individual to do it. You’re just experimenting with the one thing that came from a simple inspiration.

Charemaine

Yeah, I mean, I think that's the keyword is experimenting and I think one of the things that sometimes stops me and I don't know if anyone else relates to this is that I keep checking in and thinking, oh, that's not very good in my mind and I want to try not to do that and try and open myself to the experiment and the possibility and maybe doing something new that I've never done but accepting it as something that has possibility. Rather than thinking it has to be super accurate or super skilled and things like that.

Julia

Uh huh, we’re going to talk about that. That's my next question for you. Before we do that, though, I don't know if this has occurred to you a lot, but just hearing you talk really reinforced it to me. The links between dance and drama. And the movement, an embodiment idea, and you're also talking about using the music to get ideas and all of those sort of things. So, I think you know the connections between our art forms are just extraordinary when you put it like that.

Charemaine

Oh my gosh yes. I think it's they have used. In the past they were always connected. You know you know what I mean Julia. Like they've always been together and I think only in the recent history for us it's if they've been sort of separated into two areas and becomes specialist activities. God in drama movement is so integral, you know. In dance as well knowing what your intention is and knowing what you're trying to express is also super super integral.

Julia

Yeah.

Charemaine

So they're related absolutely, and.

Julia

Absolutely.

Charemaine

The other thing also I think talking about.

Julia

Sorry to interrupt you.

Charemaine

No, you're alright. I was just gonna say the thing about dance as well. There's that personal experience of embodying or trying something out and making a dance and self-expression. But there's also the sharing part of it. Like when you dance and someone watches it, or someone that learns it from you. I think that is really powerful as well. That sense of sharing it with someone else. So, you are sending them a communication of sorts. You know that's not just talking so that you're sending them something that's more in that magical, unspeakable, artistic realm.

Julia

Yeah. Which is sort of that was the theme of our wellbeing piece, wasn't it. That we were looking at building relationships through dance, not only relationships to place in space, but relationships to each other. So, you've really tapped into that beautifully.

I want to just come back to something that you've mentioned. It's the whole idea of is dance for everyone. Is it necessary for a classroom to have these classroom teachers to have these high-level dance skills as are necessary for the students to? You know, we know that our syllabus expectation is not that we would have high level dance skills. It's about giving students the opportunity to experiment and explore and really try out different things in line with dance elements. Do I need to have really high-level skill for dance in the classroom?

Charemaine

Well, Julia, I think what you have tapped on is like the idea that you have to have a lot of technique and skill in like how you move your body. And I think from a contemporary dance point of view, which is where I'm at. Every person's body has a unique movement to it and so I don't feel like skill comes into it in that sense, in terms of how we move our bodies.

And then there's the other like area of skill, which is do I know how to make a dance and to make meaning out of movement? That sounds very complex and like maybe a little esoteric. And I think in that sense too, I think it's really about, how far imaginations can go and how open we are to just experiment again, that is a skill we all have as humans. Trying something new, being open, using our imaginations.

So, building a dance is as easy as ‘oh I wanna tell a story and this is how I'm gonna do it’. And there's so many ways. There's a million and trillion ways to do it and every, every way is right. Every way is right. I always say this to my students ‘There's no wrong in this room there's only experimenting there's no wrong so just keep going’ you know.

Julia

So in a nutshell, the answer is no, we don't need to have high level dance skills in our classroom.

Charemaine

Absolutely. [Laughter] Or you could say absolutely you have all this skill you need right now.

Julia

That's right, you have all this skill that you need in your mind.

Charemaine

That's right.

Julia – Yeah alright, well Charemaine. It's been magnificent talking to you today and I have absolutely felt so thrilled to get to know you. It's been just fantastic. I've learned so much about dance education from working with you and seeing you in action and talking to you today again. So, thank you. Charmaine before we go just a last little piece. What advice would you give to teachers who are struggling to make a start with their creative arts journeys, particularly in dance?

Charemaine

Ok, I think I hope this is helpful. I would say when you start with your lesson or with your group of students. Look around the room and you'll see probably a lot of people have a lot of dance in them already. That hasn't you know, they don't think it is dance. So maybe start by saying let's all talk about what dances we know and start to share what dances they know.

They might think. Oh, I do like you know, just cultural dance, but that doesn't count here. Or they might think I do hip hop or I dance on Tik Tok and that doesn't count. But once you start sharing all the different dance ideas that people have in their lives. And people do have them. It's not like people don't dance, they dance all the time. They just don't think it's dance sometimes.

And then start to gather together the resources and then look at what is in the room and work imaginatively with that. I think that's a great way to start off. I've done that a lot myself. And it also then starts to open the students mind to what dance can be and what is valued and what is not valued is not something that we should take on. We should start creating value in ourselves and value what we have. So, I hope that's helpful.

[Laughter]

Julia

Look, look that that is great. I was. Absolutely lost in the zone of what you were talking about then and imagining all the things that I could do if I was in my classroom right now. Doing some dance with students. It's really inspiring and a lovely way of looking at our students being able to express themselves and tell their stories in a in a different way. It doesn't require me using oral methods or writing it down or anything like that. It's about using your body to express until those stories. Thank you. Thank you.

Charemaine

It has been an absolute pleasure. Thank you so much. Appreciate it. Appreciate it. Thank you.

Julia

Ah. We'll have to do it again sometime. Now for those of you listening, don't forget to subscribe to Chatting Creative Arts, and I will look forward to another inspiring guest very soon.

Thank you again, Charmaine Seet, for being with us today. It has been such a joy to work with you and to have a chat with you this morning. So, thank you and we'll talk again soon everybody. See you later.

[upbeat music]

[end of transcript]

[music]

Julia Brennan

Welcome back to chatting Creative Arts at my name is Julia Brennan and I am Creative Arts advisor for K-6 in our great state of New South Wales. So, I'm really glad that you've all joined us today. Today's conversation is going to be truly inspiring. We're working with two early career teachers from Anzac Park Public School.

We've got Ruby Kerr and Olivia Havelka and they are both stage one teachers who are talking to us about the incredible work they've been doing in creative arts and concept-based curriculum, and we're really excited to hear about the new and innovative ways that they have been approaching their students learning. So welcome ladies, it's great to have you here today.

Olivia Havelka

Thank you for having us.

Ruby Kerr

Yeah

Olivia

Pretty excited to be sharing all that we've learned and some of the great stuff that you've helped us do with our school Julia so keen to share.

Julia

Right, well I am so excited for everybody to hear about the incredible work you two are doing. It's absolutely amazing, so thank you for being here.

Alright, let's get cracking. So first of all, let's find out a little bit about your background, your context, all of those sort of things. So, tell us about you, your school, your passions in education, where it's taken you throughout the years. Off you go, ladies.

Ruby

Uh, so I'm in my fifth year of teaching, and I've been teaching it Anzac Park for two years now and then. Before that I was at another school and so I think I'm really inspired by innovative pedagogy and that's great. 'cause it links really well with what Anzac Park it has as a focus and its tide in really well with all of these programs and things that we've been working on

Olivia

I have been at Anzac Park for four years. I was really attracted Anzac Park’s vision for learning, and especially over the past few years in our school plan, we've really focused on developing as a new school that vision for learning and making it clear. So, we've had a big focus on STEAM education on conceptual programming here at Anzac Park Public so within our innovative learning environments so utilizing those spaces has been a big focus for us in our classrooms. We've also looked at developing 21st century capabilities.

And within our new school plan, we have a focus on synergy which further develops and focuses on those global competence, which serves linked beautifully to our Creative arts conceptual program that we worked on with Julia really developing those critical thinking creative thinking skills.

Julia

Wow, thank you so much for sharing all that incredible information with us. It sounds like a really innovative space that you're working in and I have to say that. At first, I was a little bit in shock, arriving in your school by just how innovative and inspired everybody was with this concept-based curriculum. So, I can't wait for you to unpack it a little bit more with us.

Well please explain to us how it's actually really worked with your arts programming, so that's going to be great. But before we get to that, just tell us why the arts means so much to you. I mean, this is a question that I ask anybody that I interview in a podcast 'cause I think it's really important to get all of our different perspectives on why the arts is important and why it's important for our students as well as our teachers.

Ruby

I think it's really important. I feel like it gives students a chance to be free and to experiment and to test their ideas, and it feels like quite a safe space. It doesn't feel like yes, there's like elements, or there's things that you teach them and skills like that, but it's not as strict as other KLAs and so it really allows them that opportunity to be creative and to explore things in a safe environment. It helps with like developing those global competencies as well of creativity and critical thinking and collaboration. Yeah, which just builds and develops them to be global citizens too.

Olivia

And it's a element of risk taking that you're saying, Ruby. I think it's that perfect environment where they there is no right answer and it's that that experimentation. It's all about that process and. Uhm, I think it helps them to develop an understanding of the world that it transfers pretty beyond the classroom. So it's yeah. It's a great thing that we're, you know, looking at and how we can do that conceptually in our programs.

Julia

Ok, excellent thank you. That is an absolutely lovely answer and I love hearing it from you too, especially because I don't think either of you would have said before we started working together. But you were specialists in the arts or it was your number one passion or anything like that. And now here in the way you're talking, it just sounds like it's really grown in you that you you've got that same love that I know I have and I know lots of people out there do too so. Thank you for sharing that with us.

Olivia

Yeah, and I think that we've also through this process almost inspired our teams as well and it's in and through this process it's actually informed. You know, our term four programs as well, and I think that from my perspective from our year one team, I know that they've built their capacity in in planning conceptually in the creative arts as well.

Ruby

Yeah.

Olivia

Yeah, so the benefits.

Julia

Wow, that is amazing. Who could ask for a better answer than that? Thank you. So ok, you've you've sort of alluded to this, and there's probably a lot of people out there going ok. What does this whole conceptual thing mean? And tell me, tell me more so your school runs a model of programming around core concepts, key concepts, big ideas. They're called different things everywhere. Tell us a little bit about that.

Olivia

So yes, so Anzac Park Public School, its conceptual programming is one of our key drivers for learning, so each term is framed around a big question. So this underpins all our concepts within each key learning area. This helps us to develop that deeper level of understanding that transfers across the concepts that we should be seeing from our students at different levels throughout the school. So planning and programming conceptual programs allow students to develop a richer and more transferable knowledge because we're not focusing on those content outcomes, but we're looking at those skills and that that generalized understanding that goes beyond the classroom and transfers beyond different key learning areas.

Julia

Ok so every term you've got a big question to structure your learning around, what's the big question this term, for example?

Ruby

So at this term we are looking at how to parts work within a whole, so that's our big question and then we have the different concepts. So in Creative arts and English we'd be looking at narrative in science and technology we're looking at Sci Tech, our systems sorry, and in PDHPE we're looking at inclusion so it looking at how these different elements work together to create a whole or how parts of a story or different elements of a story work together to tell a whole narrative or how different art forms can express that narrative. Uhm, so they all come together with that big question.

Olivia

And this allows us to create a more conceptual and generalized program that links both key learning areas together, helping them to develop that understanding of narrative at a deeper level.

Julia

Love it, love it. So we did some work together on the concepts of representation and context. What was the big question when we did our work? Remind me.

Ruby

We were looking at how do we know, exploring how our context and different representations effects what we know or like guides us as to how to represent things, so that's what we were exploring when we did our term 3 program.

Julia

Ok, that all makes sense so. What are some of the key concepts that you will be delving into for your big question this term? I know you told us but just can you just unpack that a tiny little bit?

Ruby

So I went through the CAPA and English concept of narrative, so we're looking at different ways stories are told the parts of a story and how they contribute to the overall meaning of a story, and we're looking at different in creative arts, different representations of stories and how we can use the arts to tell stories. In science and technology we're looking at systems, so how we're looking at how like the natural resources work together and how that contributes to like our environment and things like that.

Olivia

And how that system links to sustainability. So it's all about how the world systems connect and how and our place in those systems.

Ruby

And the PD

Olivia

Yeah, sorry you go. Sorry no keep going, keep going.

Ruby

PDHPE, looking at inclusion so that idea of making sure that we are inclusive and that we do fit into that hole and that we're or allowing for opportunities for people to fit in and be included.

Julia

Wow, ok, thank you for explaining that. There's so much to that, but I love the way it all connects together. I mean in in itself you're talking about parts and wholes. Well hello, we've just got parts and wholes with learning haven't we with what you're describing that's just amazing. So ok, you've told us about what these concepts are. You've told us about your big question, but there's probably people out there still going, ‘I don't completely get what concept-based curriculum is.' Can you explain from your perspective what concept-based curriculum is?

Olivia

So concept-based curriculum it moves away from the subject or that content specific program that looks at one insular area or content area. And it instead emphasizes big questions or big ideas that span across those different subject areas. So, in so for example, say we were looking at our concept of systems in science and technology. We have that generalized understanding of systems and how they connect to each other and our place within them. And we have syllabus outcomes that linked to that within that program.

So, if we if we think about a a conceptual programming as using the analogy of a house. Our foundations are the know the student knows what they, what they are going to come out of that program knowing so there's those content syllabus outcomes. Our walls are our skills, so those are things that keep them up right there and then understanding you know how to do those certain things and then the roof is that concept. It overarches all of our skills and our content and knowledge and it it creates that that base for the for the program yeah.

Julia

Ok, so tell me that again, 'cause I'm actually gonna draw a house and some of our listeners might want to be doing that too. So let's start all over again.

Olivia

So yeah, we have our foundations and our foundations are our knows they're our, our content outcomes. They're our pieces of information and knowledge that our students need to know.

Julia

Ok, so the foundation like the slab under your house is the knows, the content, the things that we need to know as a result of the work we're doing.

Olivia

Yes, and then our walls and our foundations are our skills. So what do our students need to be able to do. And this all of this helps us to structure our planning of our programs, our knows, our do's and our understands. And our understands would be that that generalization about the concept.

Julia

Ok, so your roof?

Olivia

Yep.

Julia

Is your understand, that's your concept.

Ruby

Yep.

Julia

And that also is your big question?

Ruby

It's not, so we'll have it. There's usually a generalization for each concept that we're exploring, and so we'll develop an overall understanding we want the students to have at the end of a program, and so we start by looking at that 'understand' and then looking to see what do they need to do and what do they need to know to get to that deep level of understanding. So, for our program that we did in term 3, our understand was that the context of artists and audiences influence the representation and interpretation of subject matter. So that was the overall roof of understanding we were trying to get them too.

Julia

Ok, say that again for us nice and slow.

Ruby

Say that the understand that we tried to get them to in terms 3 was that the context of artists and audiences influence the representation and interpretation of subject matter.

Julia

Mmhmm ok, so basically representation and content in context will be influenced by an artist and an audience.

Ruby

Yep.

Olivia

Yes.

Julia

Yeah ok cool alright keep going sorry to interrupt you there.

Ruby

No you're alright. So, then we've got that understanding. You need to breakdown what do they need to know or what do they need to do to be able to get to that understanding. So, if you're thinking about your know, we were looking at, we had quite a few, but one of them might be that subject matter is represented differently through particular techniques, and this may affect audience opinions, so that's something that they need to know.

And we're able to show them a range of different artworks and how they've represented the same subject matter in a variety of ways. And we have those discussions where we look at them and say what we think and what we connect with and why are we connect with it to start to understand how audience interpretation can be different depending on the individual.

Uhm, and then so that would be a know. A do would be that we're letting them represent their experience, experiences, ideas, interests, and feeling. So, they know it, they've looked at other peoples’ examples. Then they have a go at doing it themselves. So that's the walls there. Starting to represent an experiment with those different art forms that we were looking at in the program.

Julia

And that builds their understanding. So, you've talked us through the know, the do, and the understand. So there those really important aspects aren't they for us when we're doing conceptual programming. Thank you .

Ruby

It helps us as teachers also our understanding of where the program is going, and it also helps us in the planning and understanding of the learning intentions and success criteria of each lesson to have our know, dos and understands clearly mapped out at before the program starts.

Julia

Ok, now you just brought up a really valid point there, and it's not one of the questions I was going to ask you, but I think it's quite important that people know that this doesn't just happen instantly. We together did quite a lot of planning, and you guys certainly did a whole lot more after I abandoned you. But there's a lot of planning that goes into this. It doesn't just happen.

Olivia

Absolutely and it's an opportunity for as colleagues for us to discuss the concept in more detail and see how do those syllabus outcomes relate to the content, relate to that big question and how can we create a program that is conceptual but also engaging and age appropriate.

Julia

Yes, beautiful and the age appropriate is fantastic as well. So you know you've sort of started talking a little bit about this project that we worked on and we started doing the work for this with Wilcannia Central School and that was super exciting 'cause we had two very diverse contexts to be referring to and we were able to really tailor the work to those different contexts, which was beautiful.

Uhm, so we focused on two concepts that we took from the English textual concepts around representation and context and we combined them to fit in with your school scope and sequence and also because they organically connected to your context as well as Wilcannia's. And we're really focused on ways in which the students learnt from the ways of artists. So, an artist isn't just a visual artist, it means a musician or painter, a dancer or choreographer, actor, any type of performer, as well as a visual artist.

Uhm, and how an artist represents their context as well as the students own representations of their contexts. So, we really reinforced that representation can take on why a wide variety of forms and also that a context can be a place, a space and event to situation, your community, society, and so on. Can you tell us about some of the key things that we wanted our students to know, do and understand about the arts in general as a result of this project.

Ruby

I think I've gone through like the specifics of the understand and the know and the do that we've had in the program. I guess, overall, we just wanted to get students to understand that there are multiple ways to represent subject matter. That they should know that they can, that some subject matter some ways they might prefer to represent subject matter than others, to be able to think about why they make those decisions and to be able to express them to know that artists do approach things in different ways and that it's ok to experiment and to show their context or their place in a way that they believe is effective or that they believe is appropriate, or that is engaging for an audience.

Olivia

And taking on, yeah, their role as the artists and what that means and what that looks like you said Julia, the artist is not just the visual artist, but they, I think from the program they really develop their understanding of their role as an artist, not just being in visual arts but as a dancer, as a musician in different ways.

Ruby

Yeah, I feel like, yeah.

Julia

You'll see them as being an audience for their own work, and others work too.

Olivia

I think a big strength of the program was the quality pieces of art that we shared with our students and had them to appreciate. I think compared to programs I've done in the past that the quality of resources that we had was incredible and they were able to really see art that that I don't think they would have seen in any other situation so being able to expose them to this quality art and unpack it with them was highly valuable.

Julia

So when you say art, you're not just talking about pictures on a wall in a gallery, you're talking about, you know we were looking at musical works and we were looking at dancers. And what else did we do? Oh, we, we did some drama as well. You know there was a big mixture of different art forms and we really tried to show that in each artform we represent things and subject matter and events and places and spaces and all of those things that you were describing earlier.

Olivia

Absolutely, and it was nice to even have, like you said in some lessons that we would be touching on, you know a musical piece, but bringing in visual arts and combining those those art modes within one lesson, so they're able to create that, you know, develop those skills, but also have that understanding that our concept of context and representation moves beyond just visual arts, but connects all of the art modes together.

Julia

Absolutely. Beautifully said. So, you know, we obviously believe in this program, but in terms of your assessment and evaluation and all of those kind of things, how successful was this project? Have you got some moments that emerged from this to teaching and learning journey that you might like to share with us?

Ruby

Yeah, I think we should note that we did this project during the home learning period, so this program we put together was in term 3. But I think we did not. Sorry, I think we did do a assessment at the start and at the end of the program and it was asking students to represent a body of water. So, like a river or pool or beach in a way of their choice and those initial pre assessments, showed that students were very literal in how they represented, and I think almost all of my class shows visual arts and just drew a picture of like a beach they know, or a pond or something in their area.

But we did the same assessment at the end of the program and students demonstrated that they could, they were either trying to represent it in multiple ways, or I notice there was a greater spread on how students were representing things more students were turning to dance and music. And they are also moving away from always being so showing it in such a real sense, but experimenting with abstract forms.

Julia

Ahh.

Olivia

I think also onto that though, yes, the program was done while learning from home, but I think that the concept of context and representation. I don't think there could have been a better one to do at home because it provides the students with that opportunity to share their context in different ways and with their, you know, parents and family support to being able to share their context and have those rich and personalized discussions with their parents about their learning. It was it was the perfect program to do at home and then allowed them, you know, freedom to sort of use their space, especially considering we focused on places and spaces as our key area of focus. Being in their own home space was a great place for it to be.

Julia

So you've touched on something there that I think a lot of critics of concept-based curriculum have mentioned about assessment. So how did you assess the student learning through this concept-based unit? I mean we've heard just there about how we had a standard thing at the beginning and the standard assessment at the end. Were you doing some formative assessment along the journey as well that informed the way you progressed?

Ruby

Yeah, so we had a meeting we had kind of check in points throughout the program where we were looking at how students were going at representing their place. Their chosen outdoor space or place in a variety of art forms. So, we'd created a rubric that we were using and going through and seeing how they were going throughout the program and how they were progressing.

Julia

Ok, and we were also looking at critical and creative thinking along the way too. So how did that sort of play into it?

Olivia

We threaded it through our check-ins throughout the term, so we're looking at yes critical and creative thinking and linking that within our learning experience as well so they were explicit opportunities and success criteria where we would address those and it did come into our responding tasks for lessons throughout the term.

Ruby

Yeah, I think the creativity ended up being more of a focus with the home learning domain that we were in. And it would like we were, across year 2 at least, we were really celebrating students that were thinking outside the box, which was what we were trying to build students capacity to do. So having opportunities to share works from across the grade and see how they're all different, but they're all amazing because they've all represented their place.

Olivia

And that that was also interesting about our partnership with Wilcannia Central School. We were able to develop a seesaw account where we would share different artworks, musical pieces, or dancers from the two different school contexts. We were able to look at and and reflect on the on those different pieces of work, which was a nice opportunity to share.

Julia

So exciting and I love too that you're just having those regular check-ins and you're looking out for some specific things around creative thinking as well as all of your arts things that you were trying to achieve and also the understanding of what that concept is. There's so many layers of assessment that you built into it, which is just amazing and so exciting for our students and for their learning.

Alright, so you two would probably describe yourselves as being proficient, but perhaps not experts in creative arts. I'm making it pretty big assumption here.

Ruby

Yeah, I know, right.

[Laughter]

Julia

So based upon the learning journey that you have been through, all we have been through together since I can't even remember when we started. I know it was cold. That's about all I remember [laughter]. It was probably about a term ago or probably 2 terms ago. Now is it possible for a teacher who has limited experience to teach creative arts and how?

Olivia

Absolutely, it absolutely is. I think that with an understanding of you know that that conceptual programming and then that quality creative arts pedagogy with a mixture of quality resources. It's absolutely possible for our teacher with limited experience to teach a quality conceptual Kappa unit. I think that, you know it allows students to exploring experiment, allowing students to explore and experiment is an integral part of any quality Creative Arts unit and giving them the opportunity to, like Ruby said earlier, to explore that in a safe environment is the number, is the I guess the foundation for any quality program in that respect.

Ruby

I think it like pushes you to stop thinking about 'I want my kids to do this artwork' and just replicate an artwork. I found doing like having a concept, you're looking for examples of how that concept is shown in different art forms and you're you are encouraging that creativity to a higher extent than I've ever done before.

I noticed in my classroom at the start of the year, everyone had the same artwork like in visual arts everyone had drawn the exact same thing. The colours might be slightly different, but it was so structured and I was like, 'yep, I've done colour, I've done line' like I've done all of these great elements or qualities in art. But now like they're having that opportunity to choose what media they want to use. And just like, we're doing narrative at the moment and we listen to a story. And then they just had to go at representing it. And there was no like parameters placed on them and they were amazing what they came up with.

So, I think it's honestly easier to teach it conceptually than teach it how I was doing it before, 'cause I was so worried about things not looking right. Now it's like it's so much fun just letting them experiment and have it go.

Olivia

Yeah, it's about. It's about the process, isn't it?

Ruby

Yeah.

Olivia

I think when you create a unit that's about that process and about that building of understanding and not about that perfect product that has the same default on your wall or to share. That's when it becomes something magical.

Julia

Magical, that's amazing. I've just been writing down a some of your keywords. So you talked about elements or concepts like line and colour and shape and form and those sort of things what we would call micro concepts and they're kind of pretty much your lower level things that are important and we do need to know those things in our art, but they shouldn't be the drivers for what we do and you've just pointed that out so beautifully Ruby that was fantastic. I love the word magical. I'm going to adopt that one.

The quality of the resources, now Olivia, you said something about having quality resources. That doesn't mean that you your school has to go and invest in a $10,000 xylophone. You're talking about just being able to have things that are accessible that are actually really promoting that sort of deep thinking. Is that what you meant?

Olivia

Absolutely. I think having that base of things for them to you know, experiment with you in the classroom, but also quality pieces of visual arts, music, dance, drama to appreciate. I think you've really opened up my eyes Julia to where I can be looking for those pieces. And you know, thinking about, I know, I remember that you found one Mondrian artwork that I'm familiar with, but I wouldn't have necessarily thought to bring it into my Creative Arts program.

So just thinking about the different types and where we can find them. I know we had a conversation about I think it was one of our art galleries in New South Wales and you had seen an exhibit and bringing something new and current into the classroom was really exciting and a great way to engage our students in the current world of art.

Julia

That's really exciting today. And like you're saying, oh, you know, I learned all this stuff from you. I have learned a lot from you ladies too. In it's been a real shift in thinking and it's absolutely fantastic. Two other words that you said were explore and experiment. I love those, doesn't get any better in the arts, does it?

The safe environment thing absolutely so important and I love that you focused on the importance of process and not on having that perfect product. So the students are still learning so much through going through this whole process and not just relying on, ok, every lesson we've got to come up with a product. Doesn't have to work that way.

Olivia

Absolutely.

Julia

Thank you, thank you for opening up our eyes to that. All right look just to finish off today, could you offer our primary school teachers, our K-6 teachers out there any advice on how to go about approaching their creative arts in their classroom? Maybe just one little snippet from each of you.

Ruby and Olivia

[Laughter]

Julia

Anyone listening to this can't see the pressure in their eyes right now.

[Laughter]

Olivia

I think for me it would be starting with that conceptual understanding and what do you want your students to come out of this program understanding about the world around them? Then moving in and choosing some of those artforms and not just having one or two, but even three or four combined to help them develop that understanding. And as a teacher, like I said before, focusing on that process. If it doesn't need to come out with a perfect product, but allowing your students to experiment with being my number one hot tip.

Julia

Love it, Olivia. What about you Ruby?

Ruby

Mine’s pretty similar, I think, really focusing on experimenting,. allowing students to have fun and not being so worried as what the end product does look like. Allowing that time for them to test out their ideas and see what works and what doesn't.

And if you don't have an artwork on your wall at the end of the lesson, like or if there aren't artworks on your all your walls at the end of the term, who cares? 'cause I'm sure the students have had a great time working on building that conceptual understanding, and they've learned something, and it's probably improved their creativity overall. So don't worry about getting things done all the time.

Olivia

It's probably developed some of their global competencies and 60s.

Ruby

Yeah.

Julia

You two are an absolute inspiration for everybody. They're looking at each other going no we're not, but they actually are.

[Laughter]

Thank you so much for your time today and really sharing such a unique perspective and your incredible context that you're working in and also about your learning journey. Thank you for being so vulnerable through this entire process. It's just been amazing to learn together. I really appreciated your knowledge and willingness to take on new ideas. It's been absolutely brilliant, so thank you, girls. Well ladies, I should call you sorry.

[Laughter]

Olivia

Thank you, Julia. You provided us with an invaluable experience and we're so grateful and I know that our teams are too.

Ruby

Yep.

Olivia

And our students.

Julia

Well thats super exciting. All right, well everybody thank you so much for joining us today for Chatting Crative Arts and make sure you subscribe and keep listening to more exciting information about creative arts and I look forward to chatting with you all soon. Thanks everybody. See you later.

[upbeat music]

[end of transcript]

[upbeat music]

Julia Brennan

Hi everyone and welcome to Chatting Creative Arts. I'm here today with the amazing Dr James Humberstone and I'll talk to you a little bit more about him, but today we're going to be having a little bit of a session on composition in the K- 6 classroom within music in the creative arts K L. A. (key learning area). So welcome James, it's lovely to have you here today. James is the senior lecturer in Music education at the Sydney Conservatory of Music, so, thank you so much for being here today, James.

Dr James Humberstone

Thank you, pleased to be here.

Julia

Great, well today we're going to be talking a lot about the use of organising sound or composition in the primary classroom and really debunking the myth that surrounds this whole idea in primary classrooms and really unpacking how teachers can use composition in the classroom. So, thanks for sharing your expertise with us today, James. So, to start with James, let's hear a little bit about your music education journey, where it started and where it's taken you through the years, all of those kinds of things.

James

Yep, lovely. I went to a little public primary school in the northwest of England with a whole 17 children in it in the countryside, and a very musical headmistress who used to sit at the piano and get us to sing along to Andrew Lloyd Webber musicals. I started playing piano when I was seven, I took up trombone when I was about 12, but I was always really interested in the idea of writing music composing and so before I even really had the skills to write down what I was making up, I'd be making up stuff as a kid. And I was really lucky. I played in the county youth orchestra, which would be like the equivalent of Arts Unit stuff, or Sydney Youth Orchestra here in Sydney, and the conductors would say, if you want to write something we’ll play it.

And so even as a teenager, I was really lucky to have supportive music teachers around me who would say, you know, yeah, bring your music we’ll play it, we'll put it on. And I followed that. I went off to university to study composition, done a bunch of composition degrees since, and I also always had technology as a hobby and actually that hobby got me my first jobs in music, doing music software stuff. I used to work for a little British company called Sibelius, making some music notation software and literally just doing the tech support and stuff. And I worked there for about 10 years, building education features in the end for that. So, I've always been interested in music technology and composition or something together.

And finally, I would say that I always promised that I would never become a teacher because both of my parents were teachers, they're both public school teachers in the northwest of England and I used to watch them when the national curriculum was coming in, filling in forms all weekend and preparing and marking and working incredibly hard, and I always thought that that will never be me. But shortly after I moved to Sydney in the early 2000s, a friend said would I come and cover his teaching at a school teaching composition specifically for a term. And I went in and did that one little term of just you know, one or two days a week teaching music improvisation, composition, two kids. And I just loved it and I found why my parents have been teachers and I felt the calling.

So, so even though I had already been studying composition for years, then I went trained as a teacher and I also did my PhD, I actually did a Masters of teaching and a PhD at the same time because I'm an idiot. And I taught for 12 years. I've taught at a private school in Sydney where they had things like you know, composers on staff, but I also did a lot of guests teaching all over the world. I’ve taught composition of music technology in China, for instance, New Zealand, all over the place. And then in 2013 I moved to the Sydney Conservatory which for me at the time, I think when I made that move was really to allow more space and time for writing music, but since getting there I think I've really discovered that actually my teaching practice and my music education practice radicalizing music educators if you like, is actually just as important part of what's important to me in my life.

Julia

Wow, that's amazing. I love that you call Sibelius, ‘a little’ music publishing company or whatever you call them. Quite extraordinary. Well, you hear that pattern of the person with parents, teachers, resistance all the time and then it always happens, we all cave in, don't we? It’s that joy that we can share with Children.

James

Exactly.

Julia

So why does music mean so much to you? Tell us a little bit about how it's influenced you professionally and personally?

James

Yeah. Yeah. Well, I mean, I think I would start off by saying music means so much to everyone and I can say that both, you know, just as somebody who loves music and does music every day because I sort of lived this privileged life. But also, the research shows us that music is incredibly important to us when we're children, when we're growing up, it's part of the culture or the cultures around us that we grow up in. So therefore, its home music is part of our sense of home and family. And then we reach adolescence and start forming our own identities and music is central to that formation of our young adult identity. So yeah, I'm a professional musician, I know lots about music, but in many ways, I feel like it's important in my everyday life. It's just the same as everyone else.

You know, it's a huge part of my identity, it's a huge part of my life now, I get to actually, I've got the skills to play it and to make it. I've just finished working on a show for the Brisbane Festival, which unfortunately because of the covid stuff happening hasn’t been fun, but I get to actually write music for a living as part of part of what I do, and that's great. But when it comes to, you know, why does music mean so much to me? I think it means so much to me for the same reason that it does everyone. It’s just a huge part of who I am.

Julia

That's great, That's really interesting. You just talked about two things that I thought were very interesting to pull out; the sensory awareness that you have had as part of this musical journey and also the building of identities. I mean, you and I we both discussed this before, we've got teenage daughters and I'm just starting to see how all of the social connections are based around the musical identities of all of these girls, that that's what they're forming their friendships around, and it's fascinating to watch. Tell us a little bit more about that.

James

Well, I mean, it is really interesting. There's a fantastic study, anyone can download it and it's very, very easy to read from youth music that came out in 2019, they’re a charity in the UK and they do a lot of projects working with young people and a lot of them are disadvantaged people or young people who have been disconnected from society a little bit. But what they did was that they went and interviewed over 1000 young people in the UK and from all different socioeconomic status backgrounds. So, they got a real wide gamut and also, you know, looking at people who have music formally in their life who have piano lessons or whatever that thing is, people who, who don't, and in fact that, you know, maybe don't have any music classes at school at all, It's just entirely part of their informal life.

And what they found was that music is the most important, the equal most important thing in young people's lives. This is from the age of nine through to 17, it's equal to gaming. And many of us who are nerdy music teachers were very, very pleased to find out that were as cool as gaming. But of course, it's because of that identity formation.

So, when you think about what young people form their identity around and typically we tend to think of adolescence. But it begins much earlier than that, it begins in primary school, for sure. Um you know, you have little fashions to do with television shows or nowadays it would probably be streaming shows, that kind of thing. You know, then you've actually got, you know, pop music self and stuff like that, and all of this stuff gets intermingled and as you say, it becomes part of friendship groups and part of group identities and individual identities and you know, I have, yes, my teenage daughter has had a sort of, you know, a double upbringing and that she's done the classical music thing, she's sung in Sydney Children's Choir, she's performed in the opera, all that kind of stuff, but she has normal teenage friendship groups, they revolve around particular music.

I've noticed recently, you get these online influencers and even when those people are making videos about maybe there's a Minecraft streamer that that Minecraft streamer will have a dedicated music style or music interests. And so, the kids who are into that Minecraft streamer or whatever it is, are also into the music that that person shares or uses as, so it's just so important for kids and it's really easy for us as adults to poo poo it, but I don't know why we do that because it's just as important to us as kids. And how we feel. I heard the other day when I was shopping in

Woolworth's, a song that I can remember was on the compilation ‘Now That's What I Call Music 4’ and I can't remember who it was by, but I'm wandering down the shopping aisle in Woollies singing along to this terrible pop song from the 1980’s and it's bringing back all these visceral feelings of what it was like to be a 10 year old kid growing up in that funny small little village in the northwest of England. So, you know, is this stuff goes really deep and we shouldn't dismiss that with young people. We we can tap into that. It's incredibly powerful. And you know, you'll hear a lot of people saying our kids don't like music, kids don't like music in schools, it's boring, blah blah blah, but kids love music full stop. Kids love music and we can yeah, we can really tap into that.

Julia

Absolutely. I’m going to pick you up on one little word that you used in there that I know you use frequently but just so anyone who is listening to this can understand what you’re talking about. You used the word ‘musics’. Can you tell us what you mean by that?

James

Well let’s not go and read all the books on music philosophy. I mean, really, what the sort of people who are doing the most exciting and interesting stuff in music education have been interested in since the 1960s. This isn't even new anymore. But what they've really been interested in is kids developing, learning about music and all of the other lovely learning that goes on with that, that we might talk about a bit later. But learning through doing the music. So, if it's listening, not putting the poor kids and you know, lines and giving them worksheets to fill in and all that kind of stuff. But actually, moving and talking and discussing and playing along with or singing along with. And also, that when we talk about music in the classroom context as well in children's lives context, that we're not just talking about one music as we define it.

In fact, we've got this, we're really lucky, New South Wales. We've got this wonderful inclusive syllabus that asks us to teach from lots and lots of broad variety of musical cultures, ones that our children already know about and then also to broaden their appetite for different music and musical cultures. And that's why we say ‘musics’ because we really want kids to be involved in all of the different kinds of music or all of the ‘musics’ and also all of the ‘music-ing’. So that's all of the different ways of making and being involved with music. And of course, anyone out there who's, who's terribly fussy about their grammar might say ‘no James, music isn't a verb. There's no such thing as ‘music-ing’. But in music education, philosophy there is.

Julia

Absolutely. Thank you, James for clearing that one up for us. So, you've sort of touched on this. But let's go a little bit deeper. Why is music so important for our students?

James

Yeah. So, the first thing I think it's really important to acknowledge and it's… this is a big part of some kinds of advocacy in education, that there are extrinsic benefits to studying music. So, when I say extrinsic, I mean things other than making music. So, you know, you can go and look at the studies on things like improved behavior, spatial temporal reasoning, confidence, self efficacy, improved mood and socialization, all that stuff. And I want all of the school principals who listen to this podcast to really care about that because those are cherries on top for why we do music. But that's not why music is important for our students and not why we should be teaching music. We should be teaching music because music is just fantastic. It's an important part of being human.

There isn't a modern musical culture or an ancient musical culture that doesn't have music. Music is such a huge part of self expression. And we want, we're trying to, let's think about what is education for, is education for getting high NAPLAN results and all that kind of stuff? Or is education preparing our kids for life? Now, I would like to argue that we can prepare our kids for life and they might get some nice NAPLAN results on the way, not the other way around. And music, music allows kids to develop self-expression through music, musical self-expression to have regular moments of joy in their lives, which by the way, they'll have at home. So, we might as well bring them into the class anyway through music. It allows them to musically explore who they are and how they are in the world. And again, I think that really links to what education is for, you know, taking young people and preparing them to preparing them as Dewey said, to turn out outwards and face the world and be part of the world. And on that front, all of the team, doing bits of music.

When we're in a musical group we’re automatically part of a team, but we're not just part of a team in terms of buzzwords of collaboration, the teamwork is for making something beautiful that can't be made by its individual components. So, you're teaching kids that together, they can do something which is actually totally out of their grasp on their own. It's not just, okay, we're all going to build a build out of paper straws between these two desks, where the two smart kids do it and they push the other four kids out of the way, all the too bossy kids or you know, whatever. And obviously we need to learn geometry too. But when you do with that musical thing, then you're actually having that aesthetic moment, those purely musical experiences and they are, as I said before, they're just as important for adults and we shouldn't sort of pooh pooh them when we see kids having those.

And so, we have those experiences, we learn music and we do music for the joy of music and for those musical experiences and we understand those musical experiences as knowledge themselves. And then if we get any extrinsic benefits, you know, we can point to the studies where they say, oh yeah, look, those are standardised tests in literacy and numeracy happened to go up in those schools who did a lot of music. Yeah, That's great. That to me, that's icing on the cake. Um, but yeah, music is important for our students because music is an important part of being human.

Julia

Wow. Um, yes. And that, that, look, that's huge. You've covered a lot of stuff in that last little answer. Can I just go back to one thing that you said that may mystify some people, you mentioned an aesthetic moment. What do you mean by that?

James

Yeah. So, I think, I think one of the things that's happened with music education is that back in the 1960s when we were formalising what's become to be, our kind of modern curriculum, the arts felt a real necessity to justify its place. And so, what we would tend to do is that we would say, well, music is very good because it can improve. You know, it can improve the standing of people. It can teach them how to be, you know, good well behaved, that we can make them sing songs about how to be good citizens and that kind of stuff. We can teach them what beautiful is. So that that left us then with a very kind of classical music-based music education and a very strict Western idea of what is beautiful.

Whereas to me, when you are actually ‘music-ing’ to use that word again, when you're actually in music playing with music, having fun with music, making music, listening, talking, discussing playing around with improvising, composing, then you are having aesthetic experiences. You're actually, you're actually getting understandings of those musics and those musical cultures which really contribute to your understanding of the world around you. And there's a lot of research about culturally responsive pedagogy which is something that came out of America to try and encourage teachers to engage with their students when they were teaching students who had a different cultural heritage to themselves.

But actually, every musical, I think every music class has some culturally responsive pedagogy in it. Because music gives us these opportunities to really connect with our students and connect with them through what I called aesthetic experience. But what I mean is that that buzzing moment when you're actually doing music.

Julia

‘The buzzing moment when you're actually doing music’. Beautiful. Thank you. I'm writing that down as we speak. I love it. So, a lot of people might be listening to you talking James and feeling inspired and thinking, wow, this is fantastic. But I might have limited experience in what I can consider to be able to teach music effectively. How do I get over that? Is it possible for me to teach it if I don't have much experience in music? How do we go about it?

James

Okay, so I'm going to turn this question on its head. Uh I really want to speak, I want to speak directly to the music, sorry, to the, to the teachers out there, not just the music teachers out there, to everyday classroom teachers, you know, what does that limited experience actually mean? Because there's nobody in the world who actually has limited experience with music. So, let's understand what we mean when we say that we're actually talking about what I'd call old fashioned music education. That old fashioned music education, which involves lots of writing notation on the board and lots of doing music theory and getting out instruments and being a conductor of the instruments and being able to sight sing off the score so that you can correctly teach the thing right to the kids in front of you. And of course, all of that stuff is incredibly useful if you want to do something like run a traditional concert band and those kind of things and schools have those and that's fantastic. So, I'm not for one second saying that those aren't fantastic things to be able to do.

But what I want to say, is that they are not music education for every child. And when we're in the classroom, we need music education for every child, not just the one whose parents want them to go and get a trumpet or a violin, not just for the ones who want them to be able to read and write music as good as wonderful as those things are. So, we have to turn the question around, we have to say, what should music education for every child look like? And as soon as you do that, you understand, you don't have limited experience because, you know, children, in fact, you know, your children and that is we know that the best thing that any teacher of any subject can have right, knowing the children, the human beings, the people in your class.

So, if you know your children, and you know your music, and you know their music, you don't actually have limited experience anymore because you've got that connection with them now. At this point you're saying yes, but I still don't know how to actually teach the music class. Yes, I know the kids. So, then I say, don't be afraid, you know, get rid of those notions of the high musical literacy being useful. Yes, musical literacy is a thing, we can all learn it, we can all go and do some extra professional development if we want to and add that to our teaching, but it's not what we need for the experience of doing music for every child in our music classrooms. So, sing the songs, you know, sing the songs that they know or that they would like to sing, ask them what they want to sing. Obviously you might be a little wary of some of the music that they'd like to sing. That's okay. These things can happen in negotiation with our kids. They do all day anyway around other things like, you know, the latest tv show or video game or whatever. Don't be afraid.

There's this terrible cultural thing in music education where if we're not playing it ourselves on the piano or reading it off a score, we're not doing it properly. That's rubbish, play the track off Spotify, use a backing track off YouTube. Don't worry about having to have things written down. If you can listen along to a song and tap the beat of the song, you've already got enough stuff to start making music, especially in the earlier stages. Immediately remember that most musical cultures around the world. And I'm talking about more than 90% whether traditional or modern commercial, do music by ear.

So, if you love music and you know the right music to put on in your classroom, start there, start with the kids start tapping a beat around, start trying to work out what notes are on the baseline. If you've got a random instrument in the class, something, get the kids to help you muck in and do it alongside them. And don't necessarily think that proper repertoire means classical music or folk songs out of those old school books. And again, I'm not being anti classical me, I'm a classically trained composer, so obviously I'm not being anti classical music, but the syllabus doesn't ask us to just teach classical music and folk songs. The syllabus asked us to teach a wide variety of musics that I'm saying ‘musics’ again.

Okay, so, so start with the culturally relevant repertoire, the repertoire that you like, and, you know, your kids will like because you know them well, that's incredibly valuable teaching resources, what's in your brain and your knowledge of issues and start with the music that they like and then work out from there. And if at that point then you sort of get into that dead end where you feel like you're doing a lot of the same kind of stuff, then that's a great time to start talking to creative arts advisors or get online and find other people and find what they're using.

You know, if you teach, if you teach Year 3 or you teach year 6, you might find that there's a specific number of songs that are just in the zeitgeist of the moment. You know, it's there's always two or three songs that every teacher is doing and they have worked out some fun way of, you know, turning it into a body percussion thing or stuff that doesn't require any theoretical music literacy is just a fun active way of doing it, but involves actively making music.

Julia

Fantastic. I'm actually working on teaching strategies guide as we speak, strategies that can be used across any sort of repertoire. So, fantastic. I love your idea of starting with something culturally appropriate for not only yourself, but also the students in your class and then basically getting out of the way.

James

That's right.

Julia

Yeah, that's right. So, James talked to us more specifically about composition as an overarching process. We know that in the case of the K-6 syllabus it's referred to as organizing sound and we know that that changes when the students get to stage 4. You and I recently had a conversation about research by Elliott and Silverman describing this process as ‘finger painting sound’. Give us your thoughts here.

James

Yeah, so, I mean, organizing sound is a wonderful term. We're very lucky to actually have that and not composition early on because it gets rid of a little bit of that idea, but similar to this idea of, you know, of having prior experience. I think the problem with, with composition as an idea for lots and lots of teachers and by the way this is exactly the same in high school with specialist music teachers, generally they hate teaching composition and the reason is because when we think of a composer and composition, we think of two things. Firstly, we think of a genius, usually a dead white male, but some kind of genius who thinks up these ready-made pieces of music. That's the first thing.

And then the second thing is that they write them down on a score for other people to play. And that's a very fixed idea of what composition and being a composer is. So, we have to kind of blow that up first. I'm a composer. I never, ever sit down with a fully formed piece in my head and write it straight down on a score. So as a composer, I'm sitting in my studio as we speak and I've got a bunch of different musical instruments around me. I've got my old trombone behind me and I've got a guitar, I've got several keyboards, I've got piano upstairs, and I will sit and tinker and play around with those. I love the I love the idea of tinkering because it sort of gets us across all of the different arts, doesn't it?

Julia

Yeah.

James

That's why the idea of ‘finger painting sound’ is a nice idea because when we finger paint, we dip our finger into the paint and then we pull it along the paper, we don't sit there saying what is the fully formed picture that I'm going to create going to look like. Now I can't possibly put my finger in the paint until I know exactly how this is going. And also, when we start making it, we don't think this isn't a Renoir so I must stop do we? We just finger paint. There's quite often this thing with teachers where they will say, you know, I can't teach composition because I can't write music like Beethoven. Well neither can I, you know, I make a living writing music and I can't write music like Beethoven and like, you know those geniuses only come along once in a while. But I can write a lot of music and a lot of people think a lot of my music's great. So that's enough.

So, with kids you've got to give them the same permission that you'd give them with that finger painting. So, give them a limited number of colours. What's the musical equivalent of a limited number of colours? A different number of sounds that don't have to be traditional instruments. If you've got traditional instruments for sure, give them some chime bars or some xylophones or whatever you've got in your classroom, some percussion instruments. But if you've just got, you know, voices and tables and chairs around you, you can those can be your materials and allow kids to make a cacophony. It's actually okay, you look at your average Year 3 finger painting. It's not great, it’s really not great, but it is expressive. It does usually show evidence of thinking and evidence of following some kind of artistic model because kids copy that's what kids do. Right?

So, we can do this with music, give them a limited number of paints, three or four paints, in this case sounds are enough. Give them a model. So, give them a song to play along with or give them a rhythm to imitate and then say get to painting, play around with those sounds start tinkering and that's actually what composers do. Anyway, we've just got this kind of highfalutin idea of what it really is, but it is just playing around.

Julia

I think that is just such an incredibly powerful thing that you've said. And I hope that message gets across to anybody listening here that we can all do this. And it's really a very simple process and it's about allowing our students the freedom to just explore or an experiment? Thank you. All right now, you've talked to us a little, a fair bit about composition there. And just in the interest of time, I'm going to push on a little bit further and drill down into notation because you touched on notation.

We know that the syllabus expects us from as early as stage one to begin recognising that relationship between sound and symbol. We know that symbol systems are then interwoven into our outcomes the whole way through. Can you unpack your thoughts a little bit for us on notation and how a teacher, who perhaps going back to our reference earlier to the limited experience, might be reading that outcome and thinking, ‘I don't actually know how to use commonly understood symbols to represent my works or the students work, how can I possibly teach that?’

Can you give us some strategies or unpack your thinking on that?

James

Yeah. So again, it's another place where in New south Wales we’re really, really lucky because our syllabus is really open on this. So, you mustn't be precious about this. You mustn't think I'm not doing notation. Again, if it isn't the written score, as I said, more than 90% of the music out there in the world is made without ever making a return score. So, don't make that your benchmark even if you want to actually get there at some point. So, what could a notation be if you're doing a song? A notation could be the lyrics, even know what the notes are called on the score. I've seen kids writing, drawing, pictures of keyboards and writing numbers on the different keys and things like that and equivalent things on guitars. Of course, we know the classic graphic score. And there's lots of good examples of graphic scores around the internet that you can have a look at. So, we can then kind of use the idea of, you know, linear time. So, pitch being high and low on a on a sheet of paper and time going from left to right.

I would say, don't discount technology. If you've got some kind of devices that students can use at school, you will have access to some kind of ability to record music into them, whether that's music through a microphone that your kids make and then they can see the wave shape of it or whether it's midi instruments, which means that you may be using an on screen keyboard or something like that and it can actually save the data. Now, I know I've heard teachers say, well, that's cheating. If you just get the computer to do it and create the notation, then that's cheating. But it's not cheating at all, get the students to interact with that. What happens if they cut it up and move it around?

What happens if they copy it out onto onto a piece of paper hat? When one student looks at another student's work, how do they see the relationship between the musical blobs on the computer screen and what's going on? So, all of these different entryways that don't actually require any prior experience are genuine legitimate music notations. And actually, they relate really well to what's happening professionally in the music industry around us at large.

Now, if we want to move towards music notation, that training is available out there. If you want to go and learn a bit of music theory yourself and you want to draw a treble clef and five lines on the board, then you can and you can go and learn those things and you can teach kids how to know notate simple melodies and simple chords and things, but you need to remember the syllabus does not say teach all of the kids to read and write scores. Notation is a fairly loose concept and just like musical repertoire. We want kids to have broad experiences. So as my aisle mate, Richard Gill used to say, ‘sound before sight’. Don't let the notation get in the way of making music.

And so, if you ever find yourself, you know, you think I've prepared this great activity and you get into doing it. But actually, your poor kids are sitting there with pencil and paper and all sitting having arguments about how to write something down. Well now the sight has got in the way of the sound. We're too worried about, about notated and we're not making enough music. So that's the trick. That's the chicken. If you get to that point, you know, you've tipped too far over and then bring it straight back to making music. And how many times has that stopped a musical education journey for people? I know that for myself personally, that mind started very much like that with the tradition, teacher showing notation and I thought I can't do this, this is too hard. I don't have formal education in this.

Julia

Yeah, that's right.

James

And it's really important to remember that music is an embodied art. We don't just make music with our brains, we make music with our whole bodies. And actually, there aren't very many musical cultures in the world where people sit still, even when they're listening to music in most musical cultures, people move as part of experiencing music. Listening is a very active thing, with the concert hall being a relatively recent invention. It's only really for one kind of music and maybe the congregation role as well in a church. So not that there's anything particularly wrong with that, but that's just one kind of musical experience in most kinds of musical experience. We move our whole body and we use our whole body.

So, if you take kids early on in their musical adventures in their musical explorations and you make them sit still and write things down, you're actually taking away an important part of the musical experience. So, again, we've just got to be really careful. And it is something that's happened in the history of music education, that we've put a lot of importance on the literacy of music because we're kind of trying to justify our place in the curriculum against maths and things like that. But actually, again, that brings me right back to my early point, really, music for itself is just a really important part of being human. That's enough.

Julia

Absolutely. And that whole argument about the literacy component with music is just so counter intuitive. Um, when it comes to advocacy, we're doing ourselves a disservice.

James

Yeah, I agree.

Julia

All right, look, James, I'm going to start winding you up now. I know we could talk for hours and I know that. So what advice would you give to teachers just inspire teachers who perhaps are struggling to start the music education journey? Some tried and true tips or messages that you could give? Those you might give to well, I guess you might give to your students?

James

Yeah. I mean, I think I already really got to the most important thing, which is to know your class, you know, and and the nice thing is that we know that that's what teachers do. I often say the one thing that's gone missing from from our classrooms over the last 20 or 30 years is teacher autonomy, but we actually still have a lot of autonomy. We have. We do have time and space to get to know those wonderful, many humans in front of us.

And so, you know, that would be my same point for beginning those musical journeys is begin with the kids in front of you. You know, that doesn't always have to mean, oh, now I've just got to do lessons full of Taylor Swift, it doesn't mean that, but it just, you know, because you've probably got some, great, great things that you want to bring to them as well, but engage them, you know. We already have a lot of arm wrestling to do with kids in the, in the classroom.

A lot of education experts talk about the crowded curriculum and, and you know, lack of student agency, but music and I would say the performing arts in general actually is just the best time in the week for you to really connect with kids on about the stuff that's important to them, to give them space to express themselves and just give them little glimpses into what I talked about before about, you know, allowing these young humans to turn out and face the world. I think that's really the key thing.

Julia

Look, thank you so much for your time today, James. It’s been wonderful talking to you as always. And we look forward to hearing about your adventures in the future. I'm sure I've written down a whole page of the next chapters in our podcast series. So, I think there'll be lots to look forward to another time. Thanks again, James. And for anyone out there listening, make sure you subscribe to Chatting Creative Arts. I look forward to talking to you again. See you later, everybody.

[upbeat music]

[end of transcript]

[upbeat music]

Julia Brennan

Hi, my name is Julia Brennan and I'm Creative Arts Advisor for K-6 for the New South Wales Department of Education and welcome back to our podcast series today. I'm talking with the amazing Kirra Weingarth who's an Indigenous educator at the Art Gallery of New South Wales. Welcome, Kirra.

Kirra Weingarth

Hi Julia, great to be here. Thanks for having me.

Julia

It's such a pleasure. I'm really excited to talk to you today. So Kirra is an Indigenous artist who delivers daily tours of our incredible Art Gallery of New South Wales in a variety of capacities, including being an Indigenous educator. She works with students from Kindergarten right through to Year 12 as well as with adults and is super passionate about working with, and interpreting Aboriginal and Torres, Strait Islander artworks and spreading the word about her experiences in this space. We are so grateful for you finding the time to meet with us today, Kirra and for sharing your experiences even more broadly to all of our teachers across New South Wales and beyond. So, thanks again for being here.

So Kirra, let's start right back at the basics and find out a little bit about your arts education journey because I always find that really fascinating and I know our listeners really appreciate hearing a little bit of the background of people that we talk to. So, tell us a little bit about your arts education journey, some of the amazing people you've worked with, who you've taught and all those sorts of things.

Kirra

Yeah, Yeah. Okay, so I studied visual arts in Years 11 and 12 and then after I finished high school I initially began studying interior architecture, but after two years of doing that, realised I needed something a little less mathematical. I transferred to a design degree at the University of New South Wales. My focus areas were ceramics and object design. I really loved the freedom that working with clay gave me. And towards the end of my studies in my honour’s year, I became really interested in academic research and writing. Then shortly after that, I applied for my role at the gallery having like nearly no knowledge of the arts world.

So, it's been quite the transformative journey for me. And I guess I'm really inspired by my colleagues and the incredible artists that I get to work with every day. And we're all kind of really connected by this shared passion for the Indigenous arts and culture. I'm really lucky to be surrounded by such strong and talented people. We've recently rolled out a program with the gallery called Cultural Competency, and I've learned a lot too from listening to leaders in the arts talk about important Indigenous issues and conversations. And I just I guess I've just learned so much from looking at all of the art and learning about the experiences and stories of those artists.

Julia

Well that's fantastic. What an exciting story, Kirra. Wow. So how did your arts journey start right back at the beginning? Where did that sort of come from?

Kirra

Well my dad's an artist, he's a painter and I guess I've always kind of been artistically interested in, you know I was always painting and drawing in high school and then doing it in the HSC was pretty thrilling. But then it kind of went to the wayside you know as I said through studying architecture which was a really gruelling degree and it sort of took me away from that artistic and creative side. But reflecting back on it now, I wish that I had incorporated more of my art practice into my architecture practice. That would have been really interesting.

Julia

Well it's never too late.

Kirra

Yeah. Maybe one day.

Julia

So why do the art mean so much to you? How have the arts influenced your life professionally and personally?

Kirra

Well I guess for me growing up I didn't really have someone, particularly my dad to teach me what being culturally strong meant or really how to articulate my Indigenous identity. Being from the stolen generation, it was a really difficult thing for him to influence and teach me in that way. So, working in the arts has really, I guess given me the opportunity to learn about myself and cultivate that strength. And I guess it's given me a sense of pride about my Indigenous background and also a confidence that I didn't have previously to working in this space.

Julia

That's a wonderful story. Thank you so much for sharing.

Kirra

That's okay.

Julia

It was so heartfelt, it was beautiful.

Kirra

Well, yeah, I guess I’m also coming up to working three years at the gallery and I guess this role and being in a community of other Indigenous educators and practitioners, it really helps you find your voice. It's certainly not a role I sort of foresaw myself doing particularly as it involves, you know, public speaking on a daily basis, which prior to working at the gallery was something that I was really terrified of. So, I wasn’t really sure what possessed me to apply for the role, but it was a really brave decision for me.

Julia

And how lucky are we all that you did?

Kirra

Oh, yeah. Well, it's a slow journey. But it's amazing I guess, when you've come from a kind of culturally fractured background and your work really helps to facilitate finding your way back to being connected to your cultural heritage.

Julia

Beautiful. I feel like you've almost summed up my next question, which is what do you think are the powers of the visual arts? Well, you've given us a nice feed into it anyway.

Kirra

Yeah, it's I guess it's this really sort of multi-dimensional space. Well that's how I see it anyway. For self-expression, activism, healing, preserving culture and understanding history. I particularly find Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander art so powerful because it does all of that. And you know, our shared history within Australia is so fractured. It's incredible to see how so many ATSI artists tackle bringing hard conversations to the surface, and really bearing the weight of that history on their shoulders. And I think we can really look towards ATSI (Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander) art advocating truth telling. But there are also, there is so much joy that you can find in all our stories, and we all need that source of escape and optimism.

Julia

Absolutely

Kirra

I feel like that's what it's given me anyway.

Julia

Yeah. And what you've touched on there too is so important and I hear that over and over again is how the arts have really shaped history and also like not only documented history, but also shaped history and captured so many incredible moments and shaped thinking throughout time. It's just incredible.

Kirra

Absolutely.

Julia

You've again reinforced that. So why? Based on that conversation, I mean, I can get it, but just maybe can you tell us a little bit more about why you think the arts are so important for our students?

Kirra

Yeah. Well, I guess reflecting on my own experience, I think the arts allows us to learn about who we are and it offers something that other areas of and forms of education don't. It's a space for expression, you know, often without talking. And through art making, there's this sort of unusual time for silent reflection, to experiment, to process. For many of us talking about who we are and what and what we want to say can be really difficult. So, communicating through those visual mediums, I think provides students with this opportunity to harness their voice and making art can be this vehicle, I guess, or this avenue for learning about your story or your history.

Julia

Absolutely. The arts are just so amazing for that. I know I'm preaching to the converted with you, but gosh, it's so, it's so important for our students, isn't it?

Kirra

Yeah, definitely.

Julia

So, Kirra, you mentioned to me when we first met that one of the most important things for you is challenging preconceived ideas about what Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander art could be. And we discussed the video study that's on the Department of Education Curriculum web page entitled ‘Beyond the dots’, and how important challenging the traditional thinking of Aboriginal art is. In fact, my recollection is that you said one of your goals was challenging preconceived ideas. Can you tell us a little bit more about that?

Kirra

Yeah, sure. I think, you know, there still exists the many inaccurate assumptions associated with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander art and we do work hard at the gallery to sort of address and dispel those when they come up. And the ‘Beyond the dots’ video is a great example of expanding outside of those pre-conceived ideas and looking towards really reflecting the enormous cultural and artistic diversity in and across ATSI art. I guess one of the dilemmas with the dot style painting within the classroom is that it sort of sets up this idea that this is the predominant visual language of ATSI art under one umbrella, You know, and it's often what is so synonymous with what people imagine or associate ATSI art. So, I would sort of suggest teachers challenge that idea. That you know, dot style painting is the generic Aboriginal painting style. But to also be really informed and critical about where teachers are locating information about artists.

Teachers can feel confident that the information on the gallery has this sort of consistent credibility and while it's good to be mindful of the, you know, the responsibility of talking about Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander art culture in the classroom also, not to be afraid either. You know, to remember that it's this really enjoyable and special area of art and to just have fun with it.

Julia Brennan

They are just such wise words. That's fantastic. And the art gallery website is somewhere I send people all the time if they’re confused about whether something is appropriate or whether you know how to use things that the gallery website is just packed full of ideas and we know that it's appropriate for a classroom, which is great. Thank you, Kirra. So how do we encourage our teachers to engage with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander art in a culturally appropriate way?

Kirra

Well, yeah, I guess the first thing is sort of just like starting the dialogue and maybe asking questions that can be uncomfortable. I guess following on from that first question, there are obviously culturally respectful protocols and ways for talking about Aboriginal art inside the classroom, outside the classroom. And I know there might be hesitation around doing the right thing, which is why looking at those larger cultural institutions, you know, like the Art Gallery of New south Wales and others across Australia.

The information that they have about artists obviously have gone through those processes. For example, you can look at their biography, you know, artwork citations, which provide key information and they also indicate how an artist would like their work to be talked about and how they would like to be acknowledged, what Country they're from, what Nation. These extensive resources are obviously on the website as we talked about and as you mentioned, and they've been developed in consultation with community and with artists so I would definitely recommend utilizing those. But other than that, also reaching out to your local Aboriginal community or land council and involving them in the conversation can be really useful as well.

Julia

That's great Kirra, thank you. You've just summed up a lot of queries that I've heard over the last couple of years. So that's really terrific to have that advice from you. Thank you. So, I want to hear a little bit more about Aboriginal art. So, you know, we've discussed how we often see and hear teachers talking about dot paintings, limited colour palettes, copying artworks or just not doing it at all. I love the artworks that draw inspiration and tell stories without copying, for example. Can you share with us some examples of powerful Aboriginal art that you've seen or inspired by, things that you may have seen from primary teachers or students or schools?

Kirra

Yeah, I guess in terms of looking at powerful outcomes of art in response to Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander art, there does need to be this emphasis on a clear line between inspiration and copying. That’s why I think art making activities should always focus on those key ideas in artworks so that students can then sort of utilize those to express their own experiences. So, tying the idea and the practice of an artist back to the personal experiences of the students is going to really emphasize those ideas and make it more sort of subjective. Particularly I guess I love the outcomes that have come out of the Gallery’s Home Program, which I'm not sure if you know about or I've seen?

Julia

Absolutely we do!

Kirra

So for those that don't know, it's a program that runs every year and we work with, you know, it's selected Aboriginal artists from New South Wales and the students learn about those practices for the term and at the end of the learning model, they make artworks in response to those key ideas of each artist. But I guess there's so many, you know that we also do Jammu Junior and Jammu regional things that happen in the gallery in the moment and in response to art.

Julia

And all these things are available for teachers to look at on the website?

Kirra

Yeah, there's definitely this is and so much under the umbrella of the Home Program that you can access activities and watch videos from artists themselves talking about their practice. So, I would definitely recommend having a look at that.

Julia

All right, thank you, Kirra. So, you also mentioned when we first met that a priority for you in your role at the gallery was to disrupt that binary between traditional and contemporary that's often used when we're talking about Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander art. So, can you tell me a little bit more about what you mean by that, please?

Kirra

Yeah, I guess this definitely comes up pretty often when you're talking about Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander art. Often it's really easy to sort of categorise ATSI art as either traditional or contemporary. This is definitely something we work hard to address at the gallery. And one of the ways that we sort of do that is by not using those terms or that language at all, because the art will always be both. And I guess also, there are ways to echo those ideas, but in different ways.

For example, when teachers discuss this with their students, they could say something like this artwork echoes traditional practices through cultural innovation or contemporary media. Ultimately, the goal is to sort of discourage categorising Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander art into either. As they do come with those sorts of assumptions. Instead we really just want to emphasise and talk about the work through the intentions of the artist.

Julia

Okay, that's really wise advice. Thank you. And I'm thinking about that in my own practice and using that language differently. So, thank you. Let's talk a little bit about your role at the gallery as well. So, what, what's the average day look like for you when you're at the gallery? I mean, obviously right now we're in the middle of covid land and we're all at home, but when you're in the gallery, what do you get up to every day?

Kirra

I give the daily tours every day at 11 and before then and after that, I'm working across a range of different programs, like the Home program, like Jammu Junior, Jammu regional, the Cultural Competency, Regional Exchange. But I'm also really lucky, I guess that if I need a break from my desk, I can go and feel uplifted by going into the worlds of the artists that we have hanging on the wall. So, it's really, I guess lucky to be able to kind of work in that space to get, you know, if you need a break, you can kind of go and get lost in someone else’s world for a while.

Julia

Oh, you are so fortunate. What a great job. I guess, you know, for us at home, we can at least jump onto the website and be looking at things. Worst case scenario.

Kirra

Yeah well, I guess it’s always there.

Julia

That's right. I think a lot of people actually don't realize that most of the artworks from the gallery are actually accessible online, which is really, really great, particularly for our teachers out there.

Kirra

Yeah, absolutely.

Julia

So Leanne Carr, who we've spoken to before, who's the Education Manager at the gallery, she gets a bit sick of hearing me talking about my fan- girl issues with Jeffrey Smart. I'll often shift a bit, but I always end up coming back to that one little spot. So, who's your favourite artist and why? Tell us a bit about that, Kirra?

Kirra

Oh God, I mean, that's, that's a tough one. I don't know if I could just say one of them. There's definitely some, you know, pretty powerful female Aboriginal artists that I do always come back to though; Esme Timbery, Julie Gough, Nonggirrnga Marawili, and Judy Watson. They always kind of blow my mind with their beautiful works.

Julia

Well, there's some inspiration for us to check out. Thank you. So Kirra, just before we finish up today, have you got any other inspiring stories or experiences that you'd like to share with us? About your life as an artist, or your work or your work at the gallery, or both, sort of just a bit of an inspirational thing to finish this up with today.

Kirra

Yeah, well, I guess you know, the arts have definitely transformed my life in such a positive way as I've already kind of touched on. But I guess what I find really unique about my role delivering the daily tours is that you get to meet people every day that you would never normally interact with and from my experience, the tours do have a really strong impact on people.

Often, we're talking about things that a lot of the general public didn't grow up learning about in school. And so, when they're kind of exposed to that really honest discussion around our history and Aboriginal history in particular, people become so moved and they're so touched and they often really want to continue the conversation after the tour ends. So that has a really huge impact on me, being able to connect with people in such an intimate way.

Julia

That's beautiful. Thank you. You've summed up the arts so beautifully and your experiences in your life so beautifully and it's just so, so inspiring to hear about your journey and what this all means to you. And I'm sure there's so many people out there listening that will be thinking, you know, that's me, or that's something I could do, or I can see that in that student in my class. So, thank you. Kirra, thank you so much for your time today. It's been absolutely magnificent getting to know you, hearing about your journey and all your experiences. Thank you so much for teaching us so much about your work as an Indigenous artist, and also about the incredible work that you're doing in the gallery with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander art. I look forward to chatting with you again in the future.

Kirra

Thanks so much, Julia. It's been a pleasure talking to you and thanks for having me.

Julia

Pleasure, hope you'll come again soon.

[upbeat music]

[end of transcript]

[upbeat music]

Julia Brennan

I'm here today with Dr John Montgomery from NESA (NSW Education Standards Authority) and he is here to talk to us, not about so much his role at NESA, but just about his life and him and the universe and creative arts in general. So welcome, John, it's so exciting to have you here today,

John Montgomery

Julia, thank you. I've been looking forward to this. It's great just in these covid days just to have a chance just to chat about stuff that really matters and stuff that is just not work. So, it's great.

Julia

Fantastic. Thank you, John. And by the way, my name is Julia Brennan. I forgot to introduce myself and I am the K-6 creative arts advisor for our wonderful department. So, John before we go… a little bit of the stock standard stuff. Tell us all about yourself, your current role, the impact your role has on teachers and students across New South Wales.

John

Yeah. Currently I'm the inspector for creative arts at NESA. I’ve been in that role since the beginning of 2019 and actually have to say really thankful that I've had a year in the saddle before the 2020 horror year hit us and had to scramble really, really fast, particularly in the HSC space to try and make the HSC still operate and work in the performing arts space for everybody. But it's such a privilege to be in this particular role and particularly this particular time when we've got the curriculum reform now well and truly underway and to have that opportunity to support that process with the input of so many, including yourself, stakeholders into that space that I think will be really exciting to produce something that we can not only be proud of, that can really assist our kids to have a richer arts education in New South Wales for generations. So that's just pretty wonderful.

Julia

Fantastic. And I love your ambition and I love the determination that I sense from you every time I talk to you to make this right. So that's fantastic. And I'm so glad you're at the helm. So, let's step back a little bit in your life journey. So, tell us a little bit about your arts education journey, where did it start? All those sort of things? Because I don't know this about you and I'm super excited to find out.

John

You know, I think family is always a big part of that. So, I guess I came from a fairly arts rich family, both my mom and dad sang, and my sisters are music teachers and my brother and I played in bands and so we kind of had that family context. But you know, I think it was the teachers in my life that really kind of sparked that passion and fire and opened up a whole world of artistic endeavour that I didn't know was there. And I think back to my kindergarten teacher, Mrs Crouch, who I think was my first crush. She just had this beautiful voice and she'd bring in a folk guitar and I can still see her in her, you know, her long hair and strumming away and sending us all to sleep at sleep time with her beautiful voice. And I think that sort of awakened in me a sense of the power of music and the wonder of the world of storytelling.

And then Mrs Cox, who was my second class teacher, who was happened to be a concert pianist and had a piano in the room and played Shostakovich to us and all sorts of other, incredible, wonderful things and introduced us to a whole world, again that was so rich and wonderful. And this is in a little public school in rural Cooma, in the Monaro. My mum and dad worked on the snowy scheme and so I grew up in cosmopolitan Cooma, which had a population of people from all over the world at that time, which was pretty wonderful. And I didn't realize how wonderful it was until I left Cooma.

And then I guess one of the most influential teachers was my third class teacher, Mr cox, who it was brilliant.

Julia

Related to Mrs cox?

John

Yeah, they were, they were a dynamic duo those two. And uh, he was in all the amateur local theatre and was a great actor and he brought that into his teaching as well. But he was so ahead of his time. So, this is like, I dread to think how long ago it was in the early seventies [inaudible] and he was, he was teaching his multimedia like back then he was with, you know, super eight film and SLR cameras producing, uh, producing little short films and I guess the equivalent of power points, they call them slide shows back in those days. But you know, as kids we would collect images and put video and audio tape and music behind presentations as little 8, 9 10 year olds learning this incredible world of multimedia in the early seventies that just made schooling so rich and wonderful.

I guess high school years Brian Buggy was my music teacher. And far out, did he open a world for me! That was just incredible. I mean, we do musicals every year and I was, I just couldn't help myself, had to be first in the front of the line when the new musical auditions were going up and wanted to be involved in everything that was going on. And so, I think I always knew that my life would be richly involved in the arts and I did an audition for NIDA at one point. So, you know, if I could have done that as a profession and they took me, I probably would have headed down that path. But I think it was also the teachers in my life that inspired me to head in that direction and to do for others what had been done for me to open up a world of appreciation and of enrichment through, through a rich education.

Julia

It is such a common story, isn’t it? Such a common story! [inaudible] That's the same with my journey. It was Miss Dodds for me in year four who sent me on this arts trajectory. So, it's just amazing. And you hear this story over and over again. No pressure teachers out there, listening.

John

That’s exactly right. Yeah, yeah. Indebted for life, they're just wonderful, wonderful human beings,

Julia

Yeah, absolutely. You've just made me think of something. I was looking at the 1983, I think it is music syllabus the other day. And in there there's a comment about that, you'll love this, one of the things that teachers can do is tape It says a cassette recorder or open real tape recorder can be used to record creative efforts. Cassette players can be easily and effectively operated by quite young children.

John

And they're right. [both laugh] It was great to have the world of imagination and the power of image and sound provided for us with a little outback public school um so richly and wonderfully and you know, there's no, that still happens today. You know, teachers aren’t held back by access to things. They use creativity to provide their kids a world of imagination and wonder regardless of what's in the storeroom.

Julia

So why do you think the arts means so much to you? Obviously, this person has changed your life for these people. These teachers have changed your life. Why does it now mean so much to you? Like how has it influenced your life professionally and personally?

John

Yeah, wow. That's a really hard question. I don't know the answer. I think maybe part of it, it's in your DNA and you just can't help yourself. Some of us are just deeply connected to the artistic expression of life and the richness that comes with that. And it just hits us powerfully and we just can't help ourselves. I remember when I was really little, I think I was in year four at school and my older brothers and sisters were at the high school and they did the school musical, it had just been on the West End the year before, Joseph and his Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat. And I went along and saw it and it was the first time I'd seen like a musical and particularly kind of a rocky kind of a one. And the boy that was, he must have been, Jamie Mountain, he must have been, you know, I think they called it sixth form back then, year 12, and he did the Elvis pharaoh [inaudible] and I thought, I could do that. So, I made my own version of it just from seeing it once. And, you know, enlisted all my friends at school and went up to my teacher in year 4 and said could I put on the show for the kids after lunch and she said, yes, that's fine, which we did it and I thought it was so trippy. They sent us around to do it for all the classes.

Julia

Isn’t that gorgeous!

John

So, I don't know, it's kind of in your DNA, you know, you can't help yourself. And I guess I'm, from a pretty early age, I realized I actually am Bottom from A Midsummer Night's Dream. [inaudible] you have to be in it. Yeah, so whether it's professional or personal, it's just part of me and it wouldn't matter what element of my life, you know, whether it's with my kids and my family, or friends or my professional, what I do professionally, it's just always embedded and soaked into part of my identity, I guess. It's too important not to be.

Julia

So, can you share with us one of the golden moments of that little arts journey of yours?

John

Oh, gosh, actually, you know, I did spend some time as a principal of a little school out at Bourke, back in the late 90s, early noughties. And we had this idea of producing a play and putting on a play that captured some of the essence of what it was to be a, you know, a bushy shearer and set it in an Aussie pub and have a pub band. And anyway, there happened to be out at the time that I was out there, a locum doctor from Sydney. I don't know if you know Jeremy Cumpston, he was an Australian actor. He was, I've forgotten the name of the show now, but he played a nurse with Georgie Parker who played a doctor. And the irony was that Jeremy is actually a medical doctor and he was an actor playing a medical nurse. But anyway, he was very generous with his time with me and we sort of collaborated on creating this piece and we cast it with people from Bourke and toured it to regional New South Wales and Victoria and then to Sydney metropolitan. We did over 50 professional performances of this, this thing that we put together. And it was just from, you know, I guess what I'm saying before, I can't help myself, you know, wherever, whatever context you find yourself and you find those like-minded creative souls, you get together and you do something and but it just went off, I couldn't believe it was, went so well and that we were asked to come back. And that's the closest thing I guess to being a professional playwright and producer and director that I've had in my journey and being school principal, I could give my time off work to do that,

Julia

That’s fabulous. Tell us about that. Your days out at Bourke. Tell us all about them.

John

So that was quite an experience so that there's about 60 kids at this school when I arrived. Um And uh the interesting thing was that um the school didn't actually have tenure on the land it was on, it turns out that the school was on land, that the agreement that it was on that land was a handshake agreement between the school council chair and the farmers who owned the land. And so, it was not actually fulfilling its legal obligations. So, I had a lot of work to get the school even, so we had to get some land that we had tenure on, move the buildings we could move, build a whole new campus. Um and we were just really, really fortunate. We had some incredible teachers during that time that school existed. I don't know if Colin Buchanan? So, Colin was a teacher out there at that time. And um we had some, you know, really, really adventurous people that were happy to come out far, far west. The school got up to over 100 kids within a couple of years and um had Professor Gordon Stanley, who was the new chair of the then Board of Studies, actually come out and visit our school.

And we, I don't know, I think both my wife and I just had this attitude of, “well, why not?” So we, you know, we took the kids and some of them who struggled terribly with literacy and said, let's do Shakespeare with them and enrol them in the Shakespeare festival. Our kids won the Shakespeare festival. We took them on an excursion to go to the grand final, which was in Sydney and most of them hadn't been beyond the levee bank. And then when the first time they saw the ocean, they got really scared because they’d never seen a lake so big and just blown away by the whole experience.

But it was such an experience for us, we learned so much from that context and our kids had such a rich experience of that kind of outback mud holidays and the simple things in life and, and you know, how do you cope with 50-degree heat and what happens when the lake dries up and all the carp end up on the bank? You know, just the richness of, of culture and history of that place leaves its print on you. Um, and the incredible spirit of the people out there in the hardship that they go through and the way that they overcome that, I have such respect for and for teachers and others who go out to those places to serve. More power to them. And we can do more to engage um support for them, particularly now that we have the power of the internet more accessible than ever before. And we can't forget about those people that are doing it really tough in those remote regional areas.

Julia

Yep. So, you've told us a little bit about some of the amazing people that you've worked with and taught with, um have you got a sort of a, I guess your strength or your area of expertise, you've often said to me is drama. So, is there a favourite actor or a favourite person that you've worked with or something like that? That you could talk to us about?

John

Gosh, I could give you a Hugo Weaving story.

Julia

Go for it! I love Hugo.

John

Hugo remembers this. Hugo actually did a movie, a feature film with my, my niece Emma Long who was in a movie called Peaches with Jackie Mackenzie and Hugo, um, and my niece said “oh you went to school with my dad, you, my uncle my uncle John, you know, you know John Montgomery who was in Man of La Mancha with you” and Hugo said “uh yeah, no I don't know John.” [both laugh]

Julia

You are so famous!

John

I know. Gosh. I obviously left an impression on Hugo. Hugo actually was incredible. He, there is I think such a thing as star power. He was incredible the way that he captivated a moment so that at the end, I don't know if you know well the musical Man of La Mancha, but at the end there's this beautiful death scene where uh Don Quixote tries to revive himself and regain um his strength and re-join and redouble down on his mission and his quest and then collapses and dies in the arms of Dulcinea. Um, and when the first time the cast, you know, I did have one line in the play, but anyway. [both laugh] Just to put that in there. I was with Hugo at one moment. But anyway, but that that that magical moment the first time the cast saw them and so Hugo perform that, I can remember so vividly. We had to then do the reprise of to Dream the Impossible Dream and we were so choked up by the performance. None of us could get a could hardly sing. [pretend crying] [inaudible]

Julia

That is a beautiful song.

John

It is. I remember Brian Buggy just being so cranky because “I taught you how to sing this song. What's wrong with you people?”

Julia

I was just starstruck, I promise.

John

There’s a Hugh Jackman story I could tell you as well but maybe that's for another time.

Julia

Definitely. We'll catch up on that one afterwards. So, what's the power of drama then? You've explained about an actor and the effect that that had on you? What's the power of drama?

John

Gosh, look, I think one of the things that is unique to the artform of drama is that it does create for people a safe space where they can explore um you know, both vicariously and experientially, um others shoes, others worlds, others viewpoints and lived experiences. And that really opens up the way to develop more of an empathic way of knowing. Um a way of seeing that many people’s view of the world can be quite myopic and we need to consider that the lived, our lived experience is not the same as everyone’s lived experience and that we need to be far more compassionate with understanding people who have different views and see the world differently, and want to, want to present their views as ones that we should consider and accept. And it helps us, I think, to come to that discourse and that conversation without a shotgun in our hand, wanting to defend our own particular world view or point of view, but come to it with more compassion, wanting to understand before being understood to feel things a little bit more intelligently as well as know a little bit more intelligently. And I think drama helps us enormously to be able to do that.

Julia

Absolutely, couldn't agree more. Um, so I guess in that same vein, and why should teachers out there who are perhaps reluctant to engage in drama, why should they do it? I mean, not just drama, I guess, the arts in general.

John

Yeah, look, I think the arts enriches us, our whole being. It engages our mind and engages our body. It engages our soul, our spirit and gives us a way of discovering and developing wisdom in discourse and collaboration. We, we, as an artist, even if you're working on your work alone, you still have an audience that will engage with your work and critics who will, you know, dissect your work. Um you know, you you'll so we live in this world of influence where we continue to be thrust into this discourse of wisdom and we get to um stand on the giants of those that have come before us and learn from them. And I think this was what's so important. It provides our students a way of entering into that discourse themselves and develop and find their own voice and that's both metaphorical and literal I guess. But it's through that they develop confidence, they developed their identity, their connections their knowing. I'm not talking about the four C's here. Although we do the four C's better than any other KLA I think.

Julia

You’re a little bit biased though.

John

I'd stand on that, but I think, I am probably guilty. But I think the arts is far more than a tool or a utility to be thrown at industrial problems because we're great creative thinkers and critical thinkers. Though it is bloody brilliant at doing that, that's a by-product. That's not the reason why we should enrich our kids through education in the arts. It's because of the things that I mentioned before, about entering into a rich discourse of life wisdom um and finding their voice and their place in that discourse and to build on the knowing of before and of others and to uh take, write the next chapter in the lived experience of the human condition.

Julia

Fantastic. Thank you. So, what, what about that, say, a teacher out there who's listened to what you just said. Uh and they're thinking, well, there’s no way I can do that. I don't have any experience in any of this. And I've just heard this guy talking about, oh, he learned from Hugo Weaving or whatever. I don't know anything about this. How can I get started? Like what advice would you have to a teacher out there who might have limited experience?

John

You know, I think, I think at its core drama is play. And I think, you know, in Hamlet Shakespeare, says “the play is the thing.” I think, I think as teachers, we at our heart facilitate learning through play. Um and it's even better when we participate in that play with the kids as well. And I think that at its core, that's really what drama is. So, it's nothing to be frightened of. It's kind of like, waters that you might stand on the edge and think, gosh, might be cold when I jump in, but then when you jump in the water, you find out this is awesome, this is actually, and there's a whole ocean here, I can explore.

Julia

That is beautiful, I love it. That’s a beautiful analogy.

John

I think don't be, don't be afraid to stand on the edge and miss out, jump in and you can't make any mistakes and if you enter with the spirit of play, you've already, you've already won, the kids will so appreciate that,

Julia

Yep, the students will be 100 percent on board with that.

John

And if you need some resources, talk to Julia because she's got heaps on her website.

Julia

Well, I do actually. Yes, that's a very good point. Thank you. That's a really nice promo. Well done, John. [both laugh] Tick, no. So, John, what pathways are open to students who have an interest or ability in the arts? So, you know, a lot of people, I think, um, will think, oh, there's, there's no future in doing the arts, there's no hope, you know what, there's no jobs, there's no money, blah, blah blah. You hear so many negative stories out there. Tell us all about what you know from your perspective, about what, what possibilities are out there for people in the arts.

John

Look, I think this is where the curriculum reform is really our friend because one of the imperatives of the curriculum reform the seniors is to strengthen those pathways across the curriculum. And one of the things that is already a mechanism by which that operates in the New South Wales curriculum, are things called University Developed Board Endorsed courses. And they're basically university modules that are provided as part of the HSC curriculum that students can do. But not a lot of people know that they exist and they're not frequently done, but they can become mainstream through the reform. Where there's this opportunity for these university developed board endorsed course modules um, to be, and that they could form part of this untimed syllabus approach, possibly as well, where the universities who are becoming more and more adept and some of them are world leaders in online delivery, can provide this learning to students anywhere they are, whether it's in a remote area or a regional area, metropolitan, even internationally, students can have access to the expertise that comes from those tertiary providers. But even more excitingly with that can come micro credentialing that recognizes prior learning and gives them an experience of, and a direct pathway with a leg up into higher learning and into the industry. And as much as, you know, the, we don't teach the arts to be necessarily to make everyone, uh, the first violin in the Sydney SSO [Sydney Symphony Orchestra] or the, you know, um next Hugo Weaving. We, we do want to see that that industry opportunity is there for those who have a calling into that industry and want to pursue that.

And um, and in fact, in the area of media arts, in photography, digital media, um that field, film and television and that field is employs more people than all the other arts put together currently. And there's such a demand for people that have expertise in that space. So, I do see that there is a genuine vocational pathway here as well as to higher learning and, and experiences for those who are gifted and passionate and have that as their calling and like us can't help themselves.

Julia

That's right, you're right. It's infectious. So, once you get in there. All right, you've talked about a whole lot of serious stuff and it's fantastic. And I always enjoy our conversations. We always manage to turn something highly intellectual into a bit of fun as well, which is fantastic and a real strength of yours. But, before we go.

John

Now I’m getting nervous

Julia

Drumroll. Have you got any other sort of inspiring stories or experiences that you might like to share? I do happen to know that you're quite the guitarist slash songwriter as well, John. So, I don't know. You might want to indulge us with a song, or, I don’t know, you can waltz into some Shakespeare. I don't mind, but

John

I can’t say I'm bottom too and then not hop up and do something I guess, can I? I’ll just get my guitar.

Julia

No pressure, John. But come on, make it quick. So, what, this is going to be an original composition, is it?

John

Yeah, this is something I've just written recently. This is a covid song. Yeah. It's a bit of a folksy little thing. Um, it's called Let Kindness Shine. So, it's kind of, you know, saying, you know, life can be tough, but let's keep being kind to one another. So, I'll play you out to that and hopefully I get the words right.

Julia

We will come back in afterwards. Okay, off you go.

John

[guitar playing] How you traveling lately, little darling? through time shifting sands. Have you stopped to smell the roses lately? Still making other plans? Friends and family, such a joy and pleasure. But also, much pain. Paradoxical mystery darling. It's always been. Isn't it time to slow down. Just breathe in this moment in time. We'll pull the beauty, the treasure. So ain’t it time to let kindness shine, let kindness shine. How you traveling lately little darling, through time shifting sands? Have you stopped to smell the roses lately? Still making other plans. Friends and families, such a joy and pleasure, but also much pain. Paradoxical mystery darling, it's always been. Isn't it time to slow down, just breathe in this moment in time? A world full of beauty to treasure. So ain’t it time to let kindness shine? Let kindness shine. How you traveling lately, little darling?

Julia

[clapping] The crowd's going wild. [inaudible] That was magnificent. Thank you. Who would’ve known? You present this nice, serious, very intellectual front and then you've got that in the background going on. That's magnificent. Well done. Alright, well look, John, that's um that's enough for today. Really loved having a great chat with you. It was absolutely fantastic. So, thank you, Dr John Montgomery, lovely to have you today. Um and ladies and gentlemen who’ve been listening to this podcast, if you've enjoyed today, make sure you hit subscribe and we've got many more coming and there's many others that you can listen to. So, look forward to chatting to you again next time. See ya.

[upbeat music]

[end of transcript]

[upbeat music]

Julia Brennan

Hi, everybody and welcome back to chatting creative arts podcasts. It's really great to have you all here again today. And today I am talking to the incredible Ananda Horton. Hi, Ananda.

Ananda Horton

Hi Julia.

Julia

Ananda is a PEO [principal education officer] with the primary curriculum team here at curriculum early years and primary learners and she is an absolute expert in formative assessment, plus, a self-confessed Dylan William fan girl. [both laugh] So, we’re super excited to hear Ananda’s thoughts all about assessment. Now, obviously, our focus is creative arts, but Ananda’s focus is definitely on formative assessment just all round, so it would be really interesting to get her perspective and then we can use that to shape some of our thinking about assessment in creative arts. So, Ananda, welcome.

Ananda

Thank you.

Julia

Lovely to have you today. Now, I think maybe if we could just start are you telling us a little bit about your interest in the arts and arts education first and foremost, because obviously that's why we’re here. And just tell us a little bit about your opinion of the arts and why it means so much to you as well.

Ananda

Okay, thanks, Julia. So creative arts is a real passion area for me. And, interestingly enough, spending a lot of time on formative assessment with my class practise and with school leadership and then coming into a team that was very curriculum focused was quite an interesting pathway for me. Curriculum, what I love, there's a sentiment of our curriculum and a really rich curriculum and what it provides for students. What I love about that is this notion of providing students with an opportunity to view the world in different ways, through different lenses and through those disciplines. And for me, what the creative arts offers our children is such a rich and unique way of looking at the world. My husband is a really established sculptor and so, for many years, I've listened, you know, to him talking with colleagues and…

Julia

Are you talking about the famous Dave Horton here?

Ananda

I am! [both laugh] And I find it a privilege to hear conversations and explorations of life and the world through the art, through the eyes of artists. And I think it's a really important element of our society, to view things and to talk about things in different ways. And I was incredibly proud when my son chose three, drama art and music for HSC. I couldn't have been more delighted. I just find the value of the arts is just so important and particularly now when we have so much happening with technology. And, oh, you know, just changing workforces, changing technologies, changing social medias. The arts more and more has its place to shine, I think.

Julia

Absolutely. And, you know, you're really focusing there on a lot of, well being aspects that the arts does so, so well. That's great, thank you.

So, I guess you've sort of explained, really why the arts does mean so much to you. But how do you feel like it's influenced your life? You've talked about your family, but not so much about you. So tell us a bit about you and how the arts has influenced you.

Ananda

Um, well, like for me, for me as a teacher it brought much joy. I just loved exploring with students through visual arts and music and dance and drama, so it brought a lot of joy for me, working with students. But for me, who I am as an individual, I think it's been, it's been a really powerful component of my life. Some of my earliest memories were going to the art gallery with my parents and some of the earliest memories I have of my dad, you know, reading me verses out of really rich, like War and Peace. He used to read me these fragments from war and peace and just really encouraged this behaviour to stop and think and listen and observe what's around you. And I think it was Elliott Gruner’s painting of the cows on the very fresh meadow that's hanging at the Art Gallery of New South Wales was one of those pause moments, you know. Look at this. Really look at this and really look at how fresh this is and what the artist has been able to capture here. So, it's been a very nourishing part of my life. Music in particular, huge. You know, most of my life could be characterised, like most people, around what music you’re listening to at what time and how it helped you get through, you know.

Julia

It's amazing, isn't it? And it can send you back in time and place to where you were when you first heard that. You know, it's amazing, really

Ananda

Yeah, I had a strong, a strong, you know, I was fed strongly with The Beatles from before. I can even have a memory.

Julia

Well, it's a great place to start. Their lyrics are just incredible. Every time I hear them, I hear something new and amazing and the fact that you still remember those melodies.

Ananda

Absolutely. And I think you know, a routine that I have with my family is before covid, The Bootleg Beatles come out each year and we go with my sons and with my parents. So it's this beautiful intergenerational experience of live music and the joy of the Beatles, and I think that's what the arts can bring. You know, this kind of real connection and real joy.

Julia

Yeah, thank you for sharing those intimate little stories that's lovely. So well, we now know that you're really passionate about the arts, but I also you happen to know that you're very passionate about formative assessment. So, can you explain why you think formative assessment is so important?

Ananda

I will do my best. [Julia laughs] Formative assessment, I think when I really came across it and really started to understand it. It was like a huge light bulb went off for me. And I think every teacher makes decisions and works incredibly hard to do the best that they can for their students. And coming across formative assessment, it just really energised me because I could see how challenging my practise and really adopting these new strategies and understandings about learning was really pushing me more and more into a really authentic look at what students could do. It was just taking me, it was just taking me so much closer to really feeling like I could see what my students, and all of my students, could do, yeah.

Julia

Thank you. Well, you've just told everybody that formative assessment changed your life and you told me that, I don't know, a couple of months ago I guess. And I found that really intriguing. So, what can you tell me about that experience and the ways in which you were guided through this process?

Ananda

Yeah, sure. So, for me, when I mean, I was leading a maths initiative at school and we really wanted to dive into differentiation, and I reached out and was talking with an advisor at the time, and she said, “look, it's really hard to point you into really rich examples of differentiation,” she said. “But I'm going to give you a book to read.” And she gave me, she told me to read Dylan William’s Embedded Formative Assessment, and I was like at the time, thanks.

[both laugh] It’s not quite what I was asking for.

Julia

I believe you did that to me as well, so there you go.

Ananda

I like to spread, I do like to spread the experience. But it was palpable, the change it had on me particularly, like obviously, as a teacher to begin with. And it was really, it was the cognitive shift that took place. Teaching became more tiring, because I was looking for these opportunities throughout my day in a way that I never had before.

These opportunities to really understand the evidence of learning. What could I elicit from my students? How did I know? I didn't really understand before I engaged with this. I didn't know that standing up with my intentions for their learning was different on how they were receiving it, so I could think that I was being clear and explicit and that my lesson was very clear, but formative assessment gave me this lens where it was, it was, let's look more carefully. Let's listen more carefully. Let's provide the students with a different opportunity to engage with me and to share their learning. And through that process of learning about formative assessment, it became a honed skill of then knowing, well, where's their next learning going to.

And so it made me unpack, learning on another level, as well. And it was interesting insights, like how powerful language is and the terminology, you know, equipping students with the language for their learning was a critical element for them to be able to share with me their learning in their own words and what they were really taking from the process and from the experiences that I was giving them.

Julia

Can you give me an example of that? Just unpack that a tiny little bit further.

Ananda

So, I guess on a practical level, I think maths comes to mind in the math syllabus and in particularly stage one has particular terminology. And I always found that interesting working with beginning students because it was always something that you had to kind of draw people's attention into, the breaking down of the language, so that young children were beginning, you know, at an entry point with their understanding and then the terminology in maths changes over time as their sophistication with those concepts changes. And so, you know, it’s, formative assessment is very much around language. So, when you're talking about learning intentions with these, I mean kindergarten was a joy for me, talking about learning intentions with kindergarten, you had to make sure that you were drawing on the right terminology from the syllabus. But then you also, it was a skill in breaking it down with the students so that they could really understand it, and then they could say, it was honestly the most joyful thing, we created a video to share with schools in our area around formative assessment, and I had some little people in my class that I was talking to, to kind of illustrate, you know, the learning intentions and the learning, and it was beautiful timing. When we're videoing, one of the little people said to me, “Mrs Horton, I got my learning goal. I can say you know, six different ways.” You know, and they could just clearly naturally explain it to me and the sense of joy that they had achieved it. So, it was a real indication to me that they understood what it was that they were pushing for. And they were pushing themselves inside to be able to achieve that and then they had that language to then explain to me what it was that they had learnt and what they were getting joy from.

Julia

Interesting. Very, very interesting. So, your eyes are just lighting up when you, you know, when you talk about Dylan William, when you just talked about that beautiful kindergarten child then, I mean our listeners can't see your face, but your face was aglow and I just got so excited hearing about what you were talking about then. So, take us back a little step further about Dylan William. So why is he so important to you? And what should we all know about his work? So, you've given us a beautiful mathematics example. Can you give us a few more perhaps?

Ananda

So, well, Dylan William is, it was, he was the original researcher that I engaged with and as I said to you, it was a light bulb moment. It was a real shift in my teaching practise. And to be honest, it's actually changed the way I am professionally, because I, over time I look for these opportunities for growth and I look more carefully and listen more carefully to try and find the evidence of what's around me and what's happening and then try and bring that into my next directions and things. It's very much become a way of being for me. But he just, he pushes my thinking. I've seen him, I will take any opportunity I can to go and see him present. He pushes my thinking, and I just feel a lot of confidence in the research that he does and the research that he draws upon. And so that's why I have really enjoyed taking the journey with him and like obviously with his work. [Ananda laughs]

Julia

Yeah, he did actually point out recently, when I heard him talking, that drama was possibly the most important key learning area. [inaudible]

Ananda

Yeah, it was fascinating research that he was drawing upon where they backward mapped the skills that employers were looking for from students leaving you 12 and the subject that mapped to most of those skills was actually drama. And so, it's engaging with his work, he also does fantastic work about leadership in education, and leading for real change with students and so I find it very challenge, it challenges me. But the main, the joy of what it unlocked for me was profound and really, at a very basic level, it unlocked my understanding of how to work with and teach children. It gave me confidence to really feel that I understood what was happening for those students. And I mean, one of the most beautiful phrases I’ve heard from Dylan William is that formative assessment is really essentially about making the students voices louder and the teachers listening stronger and in a really simple way, that's what it is.

Julia

Yeah, that’s beautiful.

Ananda

I love it. To me, it just captures it at its essence, it's not about a checklist. It's not about keeping all of those responses that the children might give you. It's about drawing what you can out of what you're looking and listening to and experiencing with your students and then having a deep understanding of your curriculum, your syllabus and the understanding of how those skills build. To then know what to do with that. And I think it was that power, like it was the strength that it gave me, because I felt at any point in time a teacher, a parent could come to me and they could, they could ask me something, and I knew. I knew I had extensive processes in place, that even if I couldn't speak to it right at that point in time, I could lift out my anecdotal notes and all of my processes that I had and the moments of pause that I had in their workbooks. I felt so connected to the students learning that I felt any parent that came to me, I could draw upon something and tell them exactly what that student was doing at that time. And it really, really helped me unlock the celebration and the small wins for the little people in my class who were taking [inaudible] to learn because I can actually see that granular level, you know.

Julia

Yeah, that's great. And you actually have described to me in the past those incredible changes that you've experienced in your students results, but also in the relationships with parents and school leaders. So, I think you’ve answered that a little bit there. So, is there anything else that you could add to that or?

Ananda

No, I just found with staff that I worked with, with formative assessment, I think it really resonated for people that it was about their personal teaching journey and investing in the time and reflecting on their practise and chipping away at these automated behaviours that we have as teachers and challenging in small steps people. It resonated for teachers that it was, it was building and strengthening their long-term teaching practise. It wasn't something that was going to be pushed around with a change of syllabus or with a change of strategic school plans. It was really investing in your time as a teacher and the impact that you have with your students, and that really resonated for people. That kind of, it's an investment into something that, you know, travels across educational change, and it sits at the very heart of our students, and that's why I think people really, really resonated for people.

Julia

Absolutely. That's fantastic. Thank you. So, I think I'm just going to bring it back a little bit to the arts in a sort of a way. Can you give us a visual image? I've got one in my mind that I think of when I think informative assessment. But have you got something in your mind that could drive our thinking about, you know, formative assessment over the years, that sort of thing, something that might help people out there to remember what formative assessment is, how it works, that kind of stuff.

Ananda

That is very challenging because, I guess, for me it's that sentiment around it makes the students voices louder. I know that's not visual, but for me, that really cuts to the heart of what formative assessment is. And I think it keeps us focused on one of the critical, one of the critical, changes for me, or observations where, I know this isn't a visual. Or maybe it could be a visual. Before my formative assessment journey really took hold, once I started to open up that understanding of formative assessment and really start to think about, hey I thought I was being explicit, but in actual fact, I think I was just clearly telling the students something. But I wasn't really digging deeper into something that was explicit. And I wasn't checking if their understanding was matching my understanding. And I really felt like before I was working so hard. I was trying so hard. But in some ways, I was a little bit more like a circus master. I was more of an activities. [inaudible] It was more that I was delivering, and they were fabulous activities like honestly, some of the most joyful things that I've done were done with the best interest, with, I was addressing the syllabus. For me, formative assessment moved me from that kind of curation of activities and learning sequences and it just took me to a whole other level where I could just go that little bit deeper and it was really reaching into that student voice and their connectivity to the learning that we were doing. So, it really shift me from a kind of activities focus. And as I said, it wasn't educationally bankrupt or anything. Just, you know, it was I was working hard. [Ananda laughs]

Julia

No, I don't think anybody would go in there thinking that they're doing the wrong thing, but it's just shifting that focus a little bit. I mean, a few people have said a few little things and I've captured those quotes, like everything we teach is assessable or is assessing and then the imagery of an aeroplane flight where an aeroplane can't go all the way around the world without doing a few stopovers on the way. Check ins, that sort of thing.

Ananda

Yeah. Yeah,

Julia

Those sort of images have always really helped me [both laugh] I’m a very visual person. Alright, look Ananda, we're going to wrap it up now, but I'm going to finish with one little, last little question. So, the two worlds have collided. Firstly, why the arts are so important for our students. And then with that in mind, what we can take away from what you've shared with us about formative assessment. So, is there anything else that you'd like to share with us just as a parting thought before you go?

Ananda

Well, I mean, I kind of, I find the challenge of formative assessment in the arts is a really interesting challenge because we’re not, we're talking, we're talking about that engagement with the learning while students are progressing through the process and it's not the end product. And the end product can give you evidence of learning, but it's all of those little moments along the way that help us to understand. Like if you're lifting out the student voice throughout their learning, if you're making observations, you are watching the students as they are engaging through the process and building the language, and it gives. That's a rich source for your understanding of how the students are going through their creative arts lessons. And I guess that's the challenge because quite often our engagement with creative arts is seeing an end product. You know it's going to a play or it's seeing music on a stage or it's seeing an artwork. It's finished. But it's that powerful stuff that's happening as people are in the throes of that creation.

Julia

Yep, and you’ve absolutely summed it up. And that's something that we've talked about in other podcasts actually. The product versus process thing with the arts is huge and a lot of people will rely on that end product as being their assessable item without sort of thinking about that whole process along the way. Lifting out the student voice, I love that, that's beautiful. And getting back to that aeroplane, it's all those little things that are going on along the way. All those little stopovers. It's not about that end destination. It's about all the little stopovers in between and that whole process, not just the product. Thank you for explicitly pointing that out. If we get nothing else out of this, that's [inaudible]

Ananda

Well, what a shame people have to get to the end to hear it. [both laugh]

Julia

Everything else they've learned along the way is also magnificent. On that note, speaking of fantastic things and finishing up, thank you so much for sharing your journey on formative assessment with us, Ananda. It's been fabulous to chat with you today.

Ananda

You are welcome. Any chance I get to talk about formative assessment, and when I get to talk about the arts, it's just a happy place for me.

Julia

[Julia laughs] Fantastic. And anybody listening today, please make sure you subscribe to these podcasts, so chatting creative arts, you can find us on Spotify and they’re super so keep listening and there will be more coming about formative assessment and assessment in the arts in general and just the arts in general. So, thank you again Ananda Horton, it's been lovely to chat with you today.

Ananda

Absolute pleasure, Julia. Thank you so much.

[upbeat music]

[end of transcript]

[upbeat music]

Julia Brennan

Hi, everybody and welcome back to Chatting creative arts podcasts. And this is the first in a series of podcasts all about assessment and creative arts obviously. So, my name is Julia Brennan and today I am with the wonderful Jan Warhurst, who's an incredibly experienced teacher across the board in all key learning areas, but particularly in the creative arts and is currently deputy principal at Woollahra Public School. So welcome. Jan, thank you so much for chatting with us today.

Jan Warhurst

Thank you, Julia, for having me. I'm really looking forward to it.

Julia

Great, and we cannot wait to hear about all of your wonderful years of experience and all the things that you've got to offer to help us. So, thank you again. All right, so Jan, I thought we might just start with perhaps you sharing a little bit with our audience about you and your journey and how, you know, how you got so heavily involved in arts education.

Jan

Okay, so first of all, I was going to also mention, how I initially crossed paths with you… One of the ways that I've actually, as a classroom teacher since 1978, I found in teaching that contributes to my longevity in the profession is by using and embracing the exciting opportunities provided by the Department of Education and one of those was working with the choral teachers in the Department of Education. And that's when I first met you as a teacher and you were conducting and leading some of those activities. And then I went to a workshop with John, Dr John Saunders and you were actually sitting next to me. So, it was really exciting to cross paths at that time.

Julia

Big blast from the past. That must have been a while ago, Jan. [Julia laughs]

Jan

Yeah, I was in the city at that time. So, my arts education started as a young child and in a family where the arts were really, really revered and just we did a lot of fun things with the arts. So my mother, immersed us in drama lessons and ballet lessons, and I was privileged to have piano lessons and to be accompanying my father when he sang at home who used to have a beautiful baritone voice [inaudible] and he often sang when his friends visited and I would be instructed to play the piano, which I guess I didn't realise at the time how special that was. But it was pretty phenomenal.

Julia

That is so phenomenal. Do you do that now yourself?

Jan

I do. I sit down and play. I've got a grand piano and a pianola, and we've also got a keyboard and these instruments were bought for my children mostly, to play and which they all do at different times.

Julia

That's fantastic. Good on you.

Jan

So, in terms of, um, my journey starting my arts education started like that. And then when I became a teacher, gradually, I started to embed the arts into my own teaching. As you know, a young novice teacher. I was the one who could play the piano for kindergarten while they sat while I stood there and sang, you know, many, many songs, one after the other, but it was really wonderful to hear them, and then we used to go and sing for parents and sing in shopping centres and that sort of thing.

Julia

That’s fantastic! I bet you they all remember those days too. [Julia laughs]

Jan

Yes. So, that was how my arts education journey started and then as the time went on, I, you know, adapted and reinvented myself through different programmes and projects which I'll talk about a bit later. But it was in a career that has spanned such a long time, I have felt that the creative arts has been a constant and it's also helped me to improve my practice every time, you know, every year, with different various things that we did.

Julia

[Inaudible] Thank you for sharing with us that story. So, I mean, you really filled in a little bit of my next question which is how has the arts influenced your life, you know, professionally and personally. And I love that personal story that you've given to us and yeah, that's actually the same with me. It was the thing that converted me over to the arts so much was having it just in my household. My dad was an artist, but he would sing along with that record player on Saturday and, you know, he'd be belting out a bit of Dolly Parton and Burl Ives. [Julia laughs] And it's such a beautiful, fond memory that I have.

Jan

Oh my goodness, so he was a visual artist?

Julia

Yeah, yeah, he was a visual artist, well he was actually a draughtsman, but would sit there and draw and paint on the weekend as well as singing. I don’t know how good a singer he was, but he thought he was pretty good. [Julia laughs] I thought he was pretty good too, actually. But anyway…

Jan

Well, I didn't realise how much my dad loved it, I guess until my sister, my younger sister, was going into a lot of musicals over at the boy's high school, at Manly Boys High and they needed a father figure in Oklahoma. So, my dad went and auditioned and got the part. So then he was in Oklahoma, he would have been probably 45 or something like that. And so all of my friends were in this musical with my sister and my dad. [both laugh] So that was where I realised he was very confident, which, ironically, is more like my daughter Sam who's got that confidence to, you know, to engage in the arts that way.

Julia

So, why do the arts mean so much to you, Jan?

Jan

So, personally, they influenced my ability and my whole wellbeing in a sense. I feel that my family and my extended family loved the arts, and my children have interpreted their own experience with the arts as children and young adults and they've done different things with the arts now that they're older. And for me, for leisure time, I will go to the theatre or to the opera, or I will, um, and I have met many, many friends, I mean, some really good friends I've met through the arts. They might be, they might have crossed over from professional work that I've done or it might be through, you know, I’ve met some authors and one particularly, Nadia Wheatley, she has become a good friend.

Julia

Wow!

Jan

[inaudible] She just inspires me every time. You know, she's just incredible. So she came to my school last year and she did the whole ‘My Place’ workshop. She did workshops with the children. She did the whole Papunya model and she taught the children all about the circle stories. So when we have our festival of creativity next term, we're going to ask Nadia to come and do another workshop for some other children. But she’s really wonderful, working with professional learning, with teachers as well.

So, going back to my, in terms of why I'm so passionate and how it's influenced my life. Um, I suppose that it's contributed significantly to my connections, which, whether it be social or emotional, wellbeing or professional and cognitive wellbeing. Professionally, I've worked with the Department of Education and the University of Sydney and music, drama and visual arts in schools. And these colleagues and critical friends have been mentors and coaches for me, and so my career has been heavily influenced by that.

Through those partnerships, I've engaged in academic research with the Australian Literacy Educators Association. Initially, the money provided through the arts in northern Sydney through college Jenny Gregory provided us money, and also then ALEA [Australian Literacy Educators Association] provided us with an inaugural grant so that we could have our work published and present at a conference. And some of the projects that we’ve worked on have been improving literacy outcomes, motivation and engagement through the creative arts. That one is the one that was one of the scholarly articles that was published.

We did a, we did one, which we'll talk about a bit later, which was future directions in the arts through readers theatre. And that was a very powerful project because that was across three schools with three different groups of children. And again, that was with, um, teacher colleagues who were, um, is passionate about the arts, as I am. And then there was another project which we did with Luke Carriage, an actor and that then led me to present at drama Australia in Western Australia a few years back. And then they went on to build that into a play, and that was like a rough drought. So the students at Curl Curl in year five and year six actually looked at what Luke was coming up with and gave him input, and then he went away and developed the play. So that was a puppet play. So yes, so professionally, it's helped me to make links with colleagues all over northern Sydney.

Julia

Like Me! [laughs] Yes, that's where we first met when you were a Curl Curl North.

Jan

That's right, that’s right. [inaudible] That's where I feel very privileged to do, to have done that, and then, and more recently, so there were lots of projects at Curl Curl, and that was, that was mainly because there was a really fertile ground for it there with the, with the Arts Unit, the regional people like Jenny Gregory and yourself. But you were state, weren't you, at that point?

Julia

I honestly can't remember. [laughs] I do remember that we had the chat the other day that the last time I sort of worked with you was when I was very large and about to give birth and she's now just about 15. So, it's a long time ago. That's all I know. I'm definitely now, you know, curriculum. So that's the big focus. [inaudible]

Jan

So, curriculum with the arts is, you know, about that pedagogy, and it's about how you teaching.

Julia

Absolutely. So let's have a little chat, speaking of pedagogy, and talking about creative arts curriculum because that's why we’re here, you’re super passionate, as am I, about embedding and connecting the arts authentically into your students learning. And I've heard you comment, and this is, you know, what's really drawn me to having a chat with you today, I've heard you talking about putting the arts into your English lessons, for example, making it relevant, making it really real for your students learning. So can you tell us a little bit more about what you mean by that sort of a statement about, you know, authentically embedding the arts into your English and how teachers out there listening, you know, regardless of their level of confidence and experience in the arts, and they might want to even incorporate a bit more arts into their classrooms, how could they go about it? How can they do this sort of things that you're talking about here?

Jan

Okay, so what I thought, first of all, is definitely using literature. So starting with literature as an art form. But it's also a way that accelerates the learning in regards to literacy. So I wanted to share with you something that we did yesterday. Well, the day before it was, with this book called The Wolf’s Secret.

Julia

And who's that by, Jan?

Jan

The book is by Myriam Dahman and Nicolas Digard, illustrated by Julia Sarda.

And what I found about this book was that it really, it was a year six class, and the initial attraction for the students was to the illustrations. So the wolf has a secret. And as we went through the story, we found the spaces. So we don't read the book all at once. We predict what may be happening in the story so we’ve, and we’ve documented this with the teacher. So predictions about what the story might be about. And then a real study of the illustrations as we went through. And the language in the story is really quite amazing. For example, “the talisman bell jingled softly like an echo of the music that had guided him before,” and students chose their favourite part to draw. And then they also chose the language that sort of reached out to touch them.

So what we found was that the students and the students said this themselves, so we've actually written this down, is that it was doing that, that’s helped them to observe more carefully what's happening in the story. It's helped them, to understand what the author's purpose is. And we culminated it a little bit on Tuesday and on Monday, and we said, okay, what are the main concepts in this story. And so they were incredibly sophisticated, what they said about how you can't judge a book by its cover and you need to, you know, not all people are bad. No one is all bad. So there was a lot of really, um, looking at different perspectives in this story.

Julia

Beautiful.

Jan

On this page here where the wolf says to, says, he's telling the woman stories because her father has just died and she didn't turn around and she says “I will sing for you, but I am so sad and so lonely”. And he says “you never need to be lonely again. I will tell you the tales of the forest, the mysteries of the trees and the beasts.” And he says “only promise me you will never turn around.”

So what was interesting, there was a special needs student in the class and students had to pick out by the time we'd read the whole story they had to pick out what the critical points in this story were. And this one, this boy never participates in the class. In fact, he’s always standing at the back, sitting at the back. Gradually listen to the whole story and he wanted, and so they all, they all came up with a critical point in the story and they produced that for the class like a frozen image. And they had, one of them had to come out of the image and to explain what was happening in that part of the story. So he led that part with his group and it was quite, it was quite moving because you could see how much that had touched him.

So there are other, there are other wonderful parts of the story that really obviously reached the children. But I think what I'm saying is start out with the literature then you’re obviously preparing your outcomes that you want to achieve. You're looking at your syllabus. You might be your learning intentions that you want children to work on, looking at success criteria. But one thing that I notice is when teachers use this approach, is that they, the pedagogy is the curriculum and it really, really influences the way the children engage. It also influences the depth of the work you get from the programme. It provides, the arts provides structure and a scaffold and a clear example, clear examples to demonstrate their understanding and then the formative assessment comes from that.

Julia

Okay, so you just picked up on some wonderful points there. Always going back to the syllabus. Fantastic. Always bringing out those outcomes. Being really clear on where you're heading, making sure you know exactly what you're trying to achieve. And taking it back to the syllabus and getting all of that from that document. Fantastic. And I think a lot of us forget about that. We get carried away in the moment, and I have to always draw it back into the syllabus, don't we? Um, and I love the way that you just pulled out, you're using that text to make predictions, the way that you're getting the students to illustrate finding that critical moment and that child, you’ve just changed that child's life forever. It's just fantastic. So thank you so much for sharing that story with us.

Um, Jan, I was going to ask you now, just to talk a little bit if you wouldn't mind, a little bit more about formative assessment. So you just started to touch on it there now. So can we go a little bit further now, about why you think formative assessment is so important?

Jan

Okay, so I believe that, um, it's really important to have in your planning with the children what, you know, what things you want to achieve in that lesson. So a more specific example would be with the younger children where I've been looking at a book, a story, the story of The Selfish Giant. So one thing that we needed to focus on with the children was their critical literacy. You know, obviously, they're in for eventual comprehension but specifically vocabulary. So we worked together and we created mind maps around vocabulary that the children were predicting would be in the story of The Selfish Giant. Again, we haven't even read the book yet, but it's, so this was all from the children's imagination. So when all the children produced their own, first of all, we did it together and then they produce their own and I could immediately see. But there was a high level of success in that because everyone had had the scaffolding and everyone had been able to make their own mind map. And so then I was able to analyse those during the lesson and at the end of the lesson and to see what children had grasped that vocabulary. I also, throughout the lesson, I was taking note of who was really able to articulate what sort of a character he is and to project into that character. So I think that's so important because then that leads me to my planning for the next lesson and then for the children to actually have that success with that particular story.

I also have thought that where it's creative arts and you are using formative assessment, the children are collaborating, so straight away they're achieving together and they're sharing and they're the owners of their own learning. So they're using their own imaginations. The feedback that then I can give them is real and authentic and connected. And it's not superficial. And it's not, um, it's not narrow. It's, you know, we were able to really engage in that story together and to look at what they had come up with. So I see the teacher as the catalyst leading the questioning, acknowledging the students work samples all the time. I always, it's very important to look at their work samples, to have several work samples over a period of time to, for them to, the students to value the perspective of others. I think when they're producing work in the creative arts and using formative assessment, they can all see what they're doing when sharing those. In the, during that lesson, we have a support teacher who was in the room, who's actually Francis Berry the actor. And she was able to then show the children how to do, um, really great, strong, evocative, critical moments around The Selfish Giant and what they projected was going to happen in the story. So that in itself was an assessment because that then enabled me to see, and all of us to see, and the class teacher and Francis to see what the children were able to do.

Julia

So Jan, you've actually just prompted well, made me really think about something that teachers quite often will say to me. Do I have to always have a work sample, as in a written work sample or a product or something like that. So let's just unpack that phrase “work sample” because it doesn't have to always be the final performance item or the drawing that they've done at the end of it. It can be something that they're doing throughout, correct? So just even the process or where they're at in the process of doing things, not just the product.

Jan

That's actually a really good point, Julia, because there's one student in the class that at the beginning of the year seemed a little bit disengaged. And when I said to them, you know, as you do at the end of the lesson, okay, we'll go out to recess one at a time, and I said, “look at your mind map, look at the one that we all created together. Spell one of the words that describes the giant.” And one of the students that I had no idea how clever he was, he said, “forgivable.” And then he spelt it. And this is an eight-year-old, so he spelt forgivable correctly, and, um, he went on his way. And his teacher said, “Yes, I have been noticing that he's.” So in a sense, that was a work sample. Or even if it's articulating a question or answering a question, it could be, you know all those things.

Julia

Great. Okay, thank you, Jen. That's absolutely fantastic and I think, you know, if nothing else comes out of this, that realisation that it doesn't have to be the end product that we're assessing here, it's an ongoing process. Thank you for really highlighting that.

So, you recently described to me some incredible changes that you'd seen in your students results over time through intervention with drama and I'm assuming that's connected to the fantastic way in which you've described that you formatively assess, and you use your consistent teacher judgement along the way with that. So can you describe to us a little bit about those changes that you've noticed in your students?

Jan

So, one thing I've used over the time as a teacher and also as a leader is that concept of pre and post-testing. So it could be the pre-testing could be, you know, a piece of writing where you've looked at, it could be a NAPLAN result that you've seen, it could be the Neale analysis which we actually used in one intervention. We had some students in the group that had, you know, had really struggled with learning to read and particularly in that, you know, learning to read phonetically and using letters and sounds and all of that.

So this particular group of students were assessed using the Neale analysis before we engaged in a programme around readers theatre. So we used the text ‘Who's Afraid of the Big Bad Book.’ Children learned how to write their own readers theatres, and the whole school really focused on readers theatre at that time. And we, um, which was very, very powerful, So I wasn't actually, my own class wasn't in the study, but there were two classes at my school, two at North Sydney Dem (North Sydney Demonstration School) and there were two at Manly West. So what we did was we analysed or we tested everyone in the Neale analysis at the beginning in the classes that were involved in the study and then we tested them again at the end after it was actually two terms, the programme. So, what the Children would do would be each week, they would work on their reader's theatres. They studied the book in literature circles to start with. Then they worked on their reader's theatres and then they would stand at the front of the class and they would present their reader's theatres and they would use, they would wear glasses so that they were the actors. They wore wigs and then they ended up presenting that to a festival at the end of the whole project.

But there was many students went up several years in that programme. One particular child that had really struggled right through, and then what was interesting with her was that she went up three years in her reading through that reader's theatre. But then when I taught her in year six, she needed to, with her writing, she needed to draw pictures to tell the story before she wrote the story. And over the year, and she really improved her reading. But then she also became one of the main characters in our play about Skellig by David Almond, which, when we got into the state drama festival doing that play well done.

Julia

Well done, and I think you just hit the nail on the head there with to action a change like you're talking about and really see significant change that we need to look at a whole school approach as the best option to do it and then pulling out, as you've described there, drama forms, such as readers theatre is a great way to do it to action change across the whole school. And it’s something that's really accessible to everybody, isn't it?

Jan

Yes. And we had a critical friend in that and, you know, she was an academic partner. That was Professor Robin Ewing. So she was working with us, as teachers and helping to guide us. And I really believe, firmly believe, that it's great to have those partnerships with universities and with, you know bodies such as the Sydney Theatre Company because then that helps to, it really inspires everyone. And I said to one of my colleagues, said to Gretal, what did we actually do in some of these projects? She said we inspired each other, so yeah.

Julia

Magical. Again, that's coming back to what you said about your students earlier collaborating and all owning their learning. Well, you’ve just modelled that yourselves haven’t you, so that's fantastic, you’re practising what you’re preaching.

Look Jan, we're running out of time and I'm really loving talking to you. I always do every time I talk to you. But I know that one of your great loves is the power of storytelling. And you know, your eyes light up every time you talk about storytelling through drama and to me my mind instantly goes to dance as well. Um, a lot of teachers out there are really afraid to let loose with storytelling. So I'm just wondering, I can't, it would be remiss of me to let you go without talking a little bit about storytelling and how teachers out there, I often hear, you know, particularly in stage three, teachers are a little bit worried about doing storytelling with the boys particularly. So fill us in on some of the gaps and how, you know, how it's worked for you and how maybe other teachers out there could go about taking on storytelling.

Jan

Great, so in a few different ways. I had a great mentor in storytelling and that’s been Victoria Campbell, Dr Victoria Campbell. So, she, I met her and we, she would come to my class every week and tell the children stories. So they fell in love with story. Then through our literature programme, we introduced stories such as myths and legends and they really particularly grabbed the older students. So we did something for example Persephone and the Pomegranate and the children would, um we would read the story, we would hear the story, we would tell the story and then the children would write their own myths and legends and then they were able to tell the story. But in terms of learning how to tell a story, I believe that you do need at least one teacher who can do it well and then they can teach others and then they can teach the children to do it. And then it carries over into their writing and you'll notice that there will be improvements in their writing.

Um, there was also a project I did about the book Blueback, where I asked the children to listen to a piece of music from, um, it was the music from Deep Sea Dreaming from the Olympic Games in 2000 and the children listened to the music and created a deep-sea drama about it. And they used all of the sea life that they read about in the book Blueback by Tim Winton. And this was actually really exciting because they told a story of, you know, packs, it was the shark and the krill and Blueback himself and so on. And then they moved during telling the story, and then it became a dance and then we videoed them all. And then they came back and they wrote down the movements that their sea creatures had done. And it was amazing the power of the language that they used. So that was because they had embodied, first of all, I think the music really helped them. I think the book really helped them, the literature again, because they were inspired by Tin Winton's language. And then they were given the time and opportunity to work in groups and create their own undersea stories.

Julia

And then you could turn that into a beautiful visual artwork as well, couldn't you?

Jan

Well, we did and we made a lot. We made a wall-sized mural where everybody sewed their own favourite moment from the story and I think that, in that, that beautiful mural is still back at the school.

Julia

Talk about a cross-arts experience. That’s gold, just there. Thank you, Jan.

Jan

All of the students calico squares were actually sewed into the mural, and they [inaudible] various media.

Julia

Well, I don't actually think I need to ask the last question because you have completely answered it throughout our entire conversation today, Jan, which is, you know, why are the arts, in general, important to our students. Do you think you can sum it up in one sentence? No pressure.

Jan

Particularly. I was thinking about this Julia. I was thinking it really helps you to differentiate seamlessly as well. And every child feels included. It's real inclusion when you're assessing in the creative arts because everyone can achieve success. Obviously, the teacher has to put a lot of time and effort into the planning, but it's proven to engage and motivate children and, you know, young adults and it also yes, it improves, all of the research that I've done, and I know other academics have done, it shows that it is evidence that it improves learning outcomes.

Julia

Ah, well, well, well done. That was very succinct. Well done. Thank you, Jan. I couldn't have said it better myself. That was amazing. Look Jan, thank you so much for your time speaking to me today. I'm super inspired, and I'm now thinking about all the things that I need to go back and work on to support our teachers further in this journey because gee there’s some fantastic ideas in there. Thank you so, so much. And I believe you're heading off to New Zealand in the morning for the birth of a grandchild, so it doesn't get more exciting than that, so all the best with your journey. And thank you again for your time talking to us today. Really appreciate it.

Jan

Thank you for inviting me.

Julia

Pleasure. And people listening, if you're looking forward to hearing more about the creative arts and in particular as I mentioned in this series on assessment, there will be more coming up. So make sure you subscribe and keep listening for more engaging conversations like the one we’ve just heard with the incredible Jan Warhurst. So thank you so much, Jan.

Jan

It's a pleasure to see you again. Bye

Julia

Bye.

[upbeat music]

[end of transcript]

[upbeat music]

Julia Brennan

Hi, I’m Julia Brennan and I’m Creative Arts Advisor for K-6 with the NSW Department of Education and welcome to another podcast in this series where we’re talking about the Creative Arts and the classroom, the K-6 classroom particularly and lots of different issues and different people that we’re meeting along this journey. So, remember if you’re enjoying this podcast series and you’d like to subscribe, go to soundcloud.com/primarycurriculum all one word and subscribe that way otherwise you can join us through Facebook. Now, today I’m here with the wonderful Cindy Valdez-Adams. Now, Cindy is a Refugee Support Leader and she’s based out at Fairfield Public and she’ll tell us a lot about that shortly. But the reason I’ve invited Cindy here today is because I met her I think it was last year at the Museum of Contemporary Art, the MCA and we were both there for a conference and Cindy and I just got chatting because she was talking about the value and the power that the creative arts has in working with her students. Obviously I agreed with her and then one thing led to another and we kept chatting and I couldn’t wait to find out more about what she did so I’ve invited Cindy along today to share what not only she told me about that day but also about what she does with her students and the power of the arts in general. So, welcome Cindy.

Cindy Valdez-Adams

Thanks Julia, nice to be here.

Julia

It’s great to have you. So, Cindy do you want to just fill us in a little bit about how your arts education journey started?

Cindy

Okay, so personally I did visual arts way back in primary and high school. I actually migrated to Australia in 1989, did visual arts from Year 9 to Year 12. However, at university I decided to do teaching. And one of the reasons because you know I could teach visual arts actually when I looked up what subjects I could pick. And as a teacher I’d say I’ve always really been a huge fan of integrating visual art, drama, music. I ran choir for many years at my school but especially visual arts in terms of using it to develop language with my newly arrived students, so EAL/D background but most importantly my students who are from the refugee student background. Yes, it’s been great, so in that way I suppose it’s such an easy KLA to integrate you know way before STEAM came out that we call it all now. I think art is such, yeah you could really.

Julia

Absolutely.

Cindy

Use it anywhere and everywhere.

Julia

Fantastic. Well, let’s talk a little bit more about that. So, let’s just go back to you a little bit. So, why has the arts meant so much to you in your journey both professionally and personally?

Cindy

Personally, I’d start with because you know I think the arts I remember doing it, like I said I was a migrant in Year 9. I did visual arts I felt that in that classroom with my visual arts teacher it was such an inclusive classroom like I felt like I really belonged in there and there was no right, wrong answer.

Julia

So, how old would you be at this stage?

Cindy

I would have been fifteen.

Julia

Okay.

Cindy

Year 9 back in Year 9. So, I knew I always had that sort of to take with me anyhow as an experience. And I guess when I started teaching I found that you know we focus so much on literacy and numeracy I understand are very important however I felt that especially for EAL/D learners they sometimes miss out because it’s such a you know task to be learning English and being able to respond, ask questions, explain, describe. I thought visual arts for example was such a great medium to use to get our students really describing authentically or responding authentically because they’re looking at an artwork. I mean who doesn’t have a response to an artwork? It comes automatically. They’re allowed to use their first language. So, you know we have bilingual support, they’re actually there to support, you know translate what the child is saying and for the most part I feel like it’s just an open ended sort of subject I guess.

Julia

So, for you the game sort of changed in school when somebody recognised that you had ability or they just fostered that in the classroom as something important.

Cindy

In high school, yes. I would say my art teachers were very supportive. In the end I ended up doing graphic arts and a course of fashion, textile design actually.

Julia

Wow.

Cindy

Because I was actually excelling in that like you know because like I said it was just so open, it’s not yeah. You learnt theory and the practice you know you had the support from your teachers and things. So, even at high school yeah I really, really enjoyed that, university we had a great visual arts lecturer and she was really excited and you know very enthusiastic about the subject and that really helped us I think. And yeah helped us see possibilities. Never in my I would guess I would say I never thought I would use it with the new arrivals program per se and made it the heart of the program.

Julia

So, what country had you come from before you came to Australia?

Cindy

I came from the Philippines.

Julia

The Philippines and did you do much visual arts in primary school?

Cindy

No, actually.

Julia

Or arts in general.

Cindy

No, probably not. I think arts back then is just, I consider drawing a form of art but it wasn’t such a focus, the focus was always the academic subjects as you know, you know your English, your science, your maths, chemistry, biology, all of those subjects.

Julia

So, for you it was quite refreshing to come to Australia and see the value placed on the arts.

Cindy

Yes and I thought oh my gosh I found my you know, I found my calling here, it was really good.

Julia

Oh, that’s fantastic, gosh that’s a great message. So, what do you see as the power of the arts?

Cindy

Where do you start the power of the arts? I think it really does give students a voice that sort of not restricted to say being able to speak the English language for example. Because like I said when you’re looking at an artwork, even if you’re doing not just visual arts say even drama activities you know as we know they instantly would bring in their own experiences, whatever they know.

Julia

It’s a way of unpacking their own experiences.

Cindy

Absolutely and making connections to others, to their world and we always say let’s teach them how to make connections and I think that’s so powerful with the arts because if like I’m going to say the word again is so inclusive.

Julia

Yeah and we’re going to come back and talk a lot more about specific experiences you’ve had in the classroom but just getting the idea that that is such, the arts is such a powerful thing for your students and for you personally. Now, I do just want to talk a little bit about primary teachers in general because a lot of primary teachers are really nervous about teaching the arts and they might think a bit like you I didn’t do much art in or arts in primary school and they may not have had your secondary experience. Is it possible for a classroom K-6 teacher to deliver an arts program?

Cindy

Absolutely, Julia. Even now if you look at the resources now that are created by the DoE you know on the website I always just send them the link, it’s all there and there are so many resources that are out there. I think for teachers what we need to remember is to you know we often teach you know try to teach the kids to take risks and persevere and all of that. And I’m thinking we need to apply it to ourselves actually.

Julia

Absolutely.

Cindy

Stop saying things like I can’t draw because when I hear that I just say you know everyone can draw actually if you put a bit of effort into it you can actually draw and it’s so important because I think I’m very mindful when I look out for that especially teachers’ attitudes towards art when I’m mentoring them in an EAL/D classroom. Often the medium I would teach it through is visual arts and often when I hear that yeah it’s worrying but once they’ve worked through the simple skills process they find that ‘Oh, it’s not actually hard at all, I can pick up anything and talk about anything’.

Julia

Yeah.

Cindy

It’s about having a go and teaching kids that learning is messy, it’s a messy business, nothing is messier than the arts.

Julia

Well, you can get around that by having strategies for cleaning up and that sort of stuff.

Cindy

Yeah, it baffles them when I have thirty you know twenty five kindergartens all doing visual arts because they thought ‘Oh my gosh we just do that in stages’. And I thought no, they’ll cope, they’ll you know like you say we’ll clean up, there’s protocols on how you tidy up the classroom afterwards. But as I said again about what’s important. You know watch them, look at the kids substantively engaged in creating and making and talking, that’s what art is.

Julia

Absolutely. I think a lot of us have been tarred, I mean I know in high school I had a teacher who said ‘You didn’t draw that accurately so therefore you can’t do this’. And that sunk into me and it’s something I’ve carried with me and it wasn’t until I got older and went back and did art lessons and things that I realised actually I can do this.

Cindy

Interesting you said that because I think often with teachers I work with I often say you know you just really sometimes just talk about things that you observed a child’s doing. So, you’re not really kind of judging the form or the lines, just making simple comments like you know I like how you’ve drawn this or …

Julia

Have you thought about …?

Cindy

Yeah, because it’s not about like I said the beautiful thing about visual arts for example is there is no really right or wrong you know unless you’re teaching the skill and often the teachers would love it when I would just provide the stimulus and the kids can have their own interpretation, all the materials are out. That’s hard for teachers because we know that they like to be organised and every table has the same things and every student is doing the same thing per se, they don’t want to venture out you know, take the clay out because they might want to create a sculpture to represent a particular artwork. That’s the one thing that is hard too.

Julia

I’ve had this conversation with others before that it’s not about replication and making you know thirty artworks that look exactly the same.

Cindy

And I understand, I understand because I might get criticised because you know if you’re learning a particular skill yes or a particular you know, I don’t know element, I get that, but however yeah there’s ways of encouraging those students to actually you know what, but unless you provide it for them, they’re not going to know ooh, I can create a collage or I can create you know a sculpture or a film. You know that sort of … So, that’s what I’m kind of pushing for at the moment, seeing teachers to really get out there and really produce different types of art.

Julia

And realise that they can do it. We’ve had this conversation about music in the past too that so many teachers won’t sing with their class because someone’s told them along the line that they can’t do it. It’s heartbreaking, we can do it, we can sing, we can do visual arts, we can dance, we can do drama.

Cindy

Yes, we’re not our past.

Julia

That’s it exactly.

Cindy

Well, we’ll say you know move forward and then yeah and then do what we can do in a classroom.

Julia

Well, I’m already inspired by talking to you but I want to hear about some of your inspiring journeys along the way, so some of those incredible stories that you’ve had from some of students that you’ve worked with. I know the first time I met you you told me a few and I was you know just so moved and I’m sure the listeners would love to hear some of them.

Cindy

We always say you know when you work with students from a refugee background you can’t help but be moved because they’re so inspiring and they’re so resilient, there are such resilient kids out there. We’ve always got in the kids that would say ‘I can’t do this’ at first you know before art for example. And in my classroom I found that they just give it a try because it’s the arts. I’ve never met a child who refused to pick up a pencil, pick up a paintbrush and not have a go at it. Most of them have not had the chance, opportunity to play with those but of course you would model it first and then show them and then they just gladly have a go. Inspiring stories I can’t even name one in particular but I would always say you know for the students that have seen or witnessed traumatic experiences the way they’ve come out of that you know and I find that the classroom has provided them using the arts a way of sort of also healing because they’re allowed to share their stories. So, that always gets us you know when a child draws a picture and you kind of think ‘Ooh, thank you for sharing’. That’s all we could say to them most of the time is thank you for sharing their story with us and how happy we are that they’re here and you know safe in Australia, in our classroom and look at you you’re creating artworks that you’ve, yeah never knew possible.

Julia

Our listeners will be glad that they’re not here right now because we’ve both got watery eyes. It’s just such a moving, poignant …

Cindy

They’re really my inspiration anyhow and I think every teacher would probably say that but for the most part the work that I do personally with the arts they’ve inspired me in terms of you know.

Julia

It’s a way of expressing themselves and getting out that message that maybe they just don’t want to talk about.

Cindy

Just the talk increases as they get comfortable in the classroom as we know because that’s what we have to do which is true for a refugee background feel safe and the art provides that I think, yeah.

Julia

That’s wonderful. So, in talking about that though let’s lighten it up a bit, what’s a day in your role look like? What do you do every day?

Cindy

Where will I start? So, currently the role is a Refugee Support Leader. So, the work has been around EAL/D pedagogy, building the school’s capacity to support refugee issues and their families but also yeah running facilitating courses. Today was planning for the Project that’s a showcase coming up where I had to plan for that. I had phone calls, I got meetings with schools around you know different projects that we started with them. There’s also the Art Gallery of NSW because we’re currently doing a belonging art project with them. So, today was sort of emails.

Julia

So, tell us a little bit about one of those projects that might involve the arts.

Cindy

Okay, so the vocab project actually might be a bit interesting because when I did the project I actually did it through the arts as well because again I found that the arts provided such a great platform for learning new vocabulary and increasing vocab knowledge and explicitly in you know vocab instructions so easily. Great fit for that. I’ve always called it the developing language through the arts sort of project. When I did the project in 2014 I contacted the Art Gallery of NSW and I started a partnership with them whereas I would take, they have art pathway programs. So, I would take my newly arrived students to the gallery and they’ll have a workshop day and they come out to us and they do art again with us. So, I’ve been doing that since 2014 like I said. And this year the belonging art project came about, they’ve contacted me and said ‘Cindy, we want you involved because you’ve always partnered with us’. And how much they loved having you know my students from Fairfield Public School. And so, yeah it’s been really great. So, the art project right now is in collaboration with an artist, Claudia like a resident artist that came to school with a bunch of other artists and they worked with the kids, three classrooms, seventy odd students in Year 4 and also that project also goes alongside Ben Quilty’s upcoming exhibition in November this year. So, that’s one.

Julia

So, what things do they do with Claudia?

Cindy

So, we learnt about mail art for example and how in the past you know artists would create postcard size mail artwork and send it to their …

Julia

So, mail, m-a-i-l.

Cindy

Mail art, yeah. So, I learnt something new. I’d love to start that with teachers to get them out of their comfort zones. She did lots of stories like art was again based on stories, their stories. You know so I think stories are so powerful.

Julia

Are they using any particular mediums or …

Cindy

They did lots of watercolours this time, pencil, watercolours and ink, collage work, that sort of thing.

Julia

Pretty open.

Cindy

Yeah, it’s been really great.

Julia

And their postcards, what are they about?

Cindy

So, they want to create a place where they feel they belonged. So, you know they depict you know it could be a place in the classroom or at home, we’re trying to push for the home as well and gender. But also photography actually. So, we gave them these disposable cameras and they had to take them home and yeah take a photo.

Julia

Oh, that’s a lovely idea isn’t it? Disposable cameras.

Cindy

Yeah, it’s been a bit full on that project.

Julia

So, in terms of do you have a favourite activity or a favourite work experience that you’ve had with these students?

Cindy

I actually integrate visible thinking routines when looking at artworks. And one of the routines which is my favourite it’s so simple it’s called beginning, middle, end. And I could pick an artwork and ask the students to what part of the story might this have happened? You know would this have happened at the beginning, middle, or end? And it’s great because they’re actually inferring that they don’t even realise that I have to now infer what might happen next or what happened before. Things like that and I love that, after that sort of I feel we’ll do a drama like a freeze frame, what’s happening, where they become the participant or the actor or subject in the painting. And depending on a painting, depending on a theme that we’re looking at you have to select those. Yeah, it happens, great because again you tap in and they have to be in that character and say what they’re thinking and why.

Julia

Oh, look at you, you’re integrating the arts there, that’s fantastic.

Cindy

And it’s all oral because this is the thing with newly arrived students, oral integration is so important, we have to develop that first.

Julia

How do they communicate with each other if they have a different language?

Cindy

Through lots of practices. Fairfield is not a problem because it’s like you know a lot of the kids speak Arabic anyhow and we also have an SLSO, so bilingual support that we get in the class which helps a lot. And if we don’t have her, I would obviously film it on my iPad and record that and then the SLSO would translate that later on. And then from that they can then create an artwork and they can choose how to represent that particular character or something and it could be you know pipe cleaners just comes to mind, paddle pop sticks, glue like just anything that we could find. What I love is the free choice.

Julia

So, you’re telling that story through free choice, it’s just wonderful.

Cindy

And they all come up with different versions of what could happen next and yeah it’s great.

Julia

So, what’s leaping out at me is the critical and creative thinking as well.

Cindy

And so we do lots of see, think, wonder as well initially and often we use paintings to introduce a concept, a big idea that’s happening in history or geography or science. That’s what was happening in nearly every program but also the classroom teachers take that onboard too.

Julia

So, what pathways do you think are open to our students if they’ve got an interest or an ability in the arts?

Cindy

So, at the momentI’ve looked into which we’ve entered operation art every year so far and also …

Julia

Which is a fabulous …

Cindy

Yes and one of my students actually he inspired me because he did, the theme is to make someone smile. So, he actually chose to do a collage of a pirate because pirates are brave. You know when you speak to him, he’s from Syria at that time and he said you know pirates are very brave people and then he placed a chicken on his shoulder. And I said ‘What is that?’ And he said ‘Every pirate has a bird, a pet bird’. He said ‘But I like this one to have a chicken’. You know I go okay, great and he’s very good because he’s actually one of those kids that sort of you know comes to school and a bit disengaged in the mainstream classroom but come to my setting in a smaller group, newly arrived art stuff, he’s in there, he’s being very creative.

Julia

Isn’t that magical, his interpretation with the chicken, I love it.

Cindy

Right and he actually is one of those kids very proud of his family. You know inspired by his mum and dad, I mean the parents were academics back in Syria. So, it’s one of those things that you think again he didn’t get much art and you’re doing it now and you’re excelling at it. So, his artwork to cut a long story short was chosen to be in the top fifty at Westmead Hospital right now and I’m trying to find it because they never tell you where it is. I’ll spot it one day. But to be in an art gallery and you as teacher and they attend the ceremony and the parents were just like not in their wildest dreams you know.

Julia

Incredible story.

Cindy

So, that would probably be my highlight in terms of, well, one of many highlights of success in terms of entering something. Young Archie is a great, great, great, yeah, love you Archie because again is open. So, those are the two that I’ve mainly personally encouraged my students to enter and continue to do so this year even if I’m not at Fairfield.

Julia

But beyond that just keeping the dialogue open and keeping the experiences going and allowing the students to explore the arts like this, it’s just wonderful.

Cindy

See, the word explore, so teachers come on, let it go, let it go, like let it go. They just have to explore.

Julia

I’m not criticising your singing.

Cindy

No, sorry. I’m just saying just let it go, yes, interesting, so yeah.

Julia

Well, there’s so many pathways there. Well, look it’s been fantastic talking with you today, Cindy but before we finish up I’m sure that the listeners would be so inspired by hearing your journey and what you do every day. Are there any other incredible, inspiring stories or experiences you’d like to share with us today?

Cindy

Gosh, where would I start? I just think do art, just do art in a classroom and watch the magic happen because it’s probably the only time you’ll see kids in my experience anyhow, kids are so substantively engaged and when I say substantively, they put their whole body and mind into it, you know not the one task thing that they’re just finishing up, they’re really in the moment and I think like I said before kids are always inspiring, they always come up with some brilliant idea. And I think we have to allow that to happen so we have to be mindful of you know our comments, they’re helpful comments but sometimes it’s …

Julia

Yeah, that’s right not being critical in that way but encouraging them to think.

Cindy

Get the kids to actually give each other feedback, I’ve found that that helps. You know like I said and they you know they are very honest about you know what I like about your artwork and like I said I think that would be, yeah kids inspire you to do art.

Julia

And for your students you know you’ve just expressed how being able to tell their stories and express themselves and get those emotions out through art is so important but there’s students in every classroom everywhere that have got so many experiences that the arts really will enable them to bring out.

Cindy

Yes, I like that, enablers and enabler KLA.

Julia

Yes, absolutely.

Cindy

They have to do it.

Julia

Alright, well look thank you so much Cindy Valdez-Adams for coming in to work with us today and have a lovely chat. And my name is Julia Brennan, thanks for joining us today. And as I’ve mentioned before if you’ve enjoyed today’s podcast and you’d like to subscribe go to soundcloud.com/primarycurriculum all one word and don’t forget to subscribe. And we’ll talk to you again soon. Bye.

[upbeat music]

[end of transcript]

[upbeat music]

Julia Brennan

I'm here today with Rebecca Divine. Now, Rebecca is a dance teacher extraordinaire who has worked in primary schools for a very long time and is now also working in some secondary schools as a dance teacher. And she brings to us a wealth of experience in dance in the classroom, which is fantastic. And we are so lucky to have her here today. Hi, Rebecca. And welcome.

Rebecca Devine

Hi, Julia. Thank you so much for the invitation.

Julia

Well, that's a pleasure. And I know you've been in the classroom all day today, so you're absolutely exhausted, but I'm going to make you push through all that pain and answer some fantastic questions. And let's have a great conversation about dance in the classroom so we can really help our teachers across the state out there, So thanks. No pressure, Rebecca. I know you can do it.

Rebecca

[laughs]

Julia

So, Rebecca, let's just find out a little bit about you before we talk about the generic dense education question here. But just tell us a little bit about your primary education journey. How did it start? What it looked like? A little bit about that.

Rebecca

Okay. Well, I was first invited into a primary school as a specialist dance teacher and then fell in love with primary school teaching. So, I migrated into the K-2 classroom and then eventually became permanent. So was able to teach K-6. And it's been a wonderful journey.

Julia

Thanks, Rebecca. That's exciting. And how did I guess? You're telling us a lot about you as an educator, and that's cool. But how did dance fit into the picture with you?

Rebecca

Okay, so, um, the school that I started teaching I was very strong in the creative arts. We had myself a specialist dance teacher, and we had a music specialist teacher and a visual arts teacher. So weekly, each class would receive one dance lesson. We also had four ensembles, which was about 100 students, and they performed at regional and state levels such as dance festivals and state dance festivals and School Spectacular. So, we had a very strong dance culture in our school and it wasn't necessarily that the students were trained outside or attending dance lessons outside.

Julia

That’s interesting

Rebecca

We actually only had a few of the 100 students that attended. We had a strong… we had a boys’ ensemble and the class… the general class dance lessons. They loved it. They just lived for it each week and they got to compose movement and perform within their classes, but also for the whole school at assemblies and annual events. So, it was just a really creative buzz in this high school… [laughs]... in this primary school.

Julia

That's amazing. That's really interesting what you just said then, about no dance outside the classroom, because I get people saying to me all the time, “Oh my school is really strong in dance,” but it's all things that the students are doing outside the classroom. So that's inspiring to hear your story that was inside the classroom.

Rebecca

Yeah, and that's what I believe the dance curriculum is all about. It caters for the general… the general student. It's not for highly trained dancers at all. They actually get more creativity, I feel, out of our lessons that we teach in primary schools because they're not stuck in a box of technique and they get to really explore their creativity.

Julia

Wow, you are giving me some nice prompts for our next little conversations. It's exciting, Rebecca. So, tell us why dance means so much to you?

Rebecca

So, dance, I believe it's just vital in education, like I believe arts are. It promotes the 21st Century learning skills to think both creatively and critically. There's so much problem solving that's required in these tasks, especially working in groups. We set composition group tasks and it's really stressful for the kids to work as a team and to get through their task, and they work collaboratively. And it's just a really great interactive subject for them. It's vital for… I believe it's really vital for the growth of the individual student to express themselves. It improves their self-confidence and develops their performance skills. And I also think, just like any other creative arts in education, it engages the students to enhance their learning in all key learning areas. So, I found that they would come to their dance classes and really burn the energy and just really recharge their minds and then they would go back into the classroom more focused and able to achieve their learning goals in the classroom because of the opportunities that they're receiving from the creative arts, especially dance.

Julia

Interesting. I'm just going to pull out a couple of little things you said there. So, one word you just used was ‘stressful’, working in collaboration. What did you mean by that?

Rebecca

Because you've got sometimes groups of maybe 5 or 6 students, and they've got to solve the problems together. They're giving movement composition tasks and then there's… they're excited and it's all got to be equal. They've all got to have a voice and they've got… sometimes you can do some really challenging quick task, like give them a minute and then it explodes the class. The learning space explodes with… quickly children trying to communicate and solve the problem and then, all of a sudden, be ready to perform it. So, it can get a bit stressful for the kids. But they get through it and then there's a really great sense of achievement afterwards that they've been able to work through the teamwork.

Julia

I guess once I've done it a few times the stress level would definitely decline. You've also hit on a couple of other words their ‘creativity’, ‘expression’ and ‘self-confidence’. So important! And what a fantastic way to develop those skills in our students. Alright, so I'm going to give you a little bit of a background to me and my first experiences in dance. I mean, I trained as a full-on ballerina as a child, and it wasn't until I was 13, and I realized that this career was just not going to happen for me. And I when I first started teaching, thought that's what dance education in the classroom meant. Now, obviously, I don't think that anymore and that was very swiftly changed by one of my very first school dance concert experiences.

And actually, it was a school very close to you and maybe it was your school, I don't know. But what blew me away was that every student in that school was involved in dance. Every student. It wasn't just an elitist thing for certain children who had learnt outside of school. And you've already talked about that. There was no giggling. There was no, you know, there were no frills. There was no sequins. There were no leotards, that's for sure. There was a story. There was expression. There's that word again. I was absolutely engrossed and so moved by those students and their performances. And we’re talking, this is a K-6 situation here. Why is dance so important for our students?

Rebecca

I believe, specifically for dance, it is really inclusive for all students. It promotes their physical exercise and their self-expression, as I mentioned, their collaborative teamwork. And really find the challenges of the performing but the sense of achievement they get from performing is really important and it's just a really positive subject for them. I find it’s just so positive, especially because it's music as well, and you can do tasks in silence. But it's just a very high energy with the music. And of course, it's really great to select songs that are relevant for the students. But it's also very educational to use a wide range of genres. So that's why I think it's really important in education to have dance and especially the arts.

But when you're talking about the festival you went to, so I was working in the primary school, and then I mentioned we have the regional festival and I had the opportunity to join the committee there and become part of the production team, and so that was really wonderful. So, we had a lot of primary school and secondary teachers across the Sydney region that came together for an annual dance festival event. And I just was in that for a very long time and really just valued that event that we provided all the schools… and really promoted dance in schools because it had a performance outcome to then go and have all the parents attend and watch. It was great promotions for the school. But then, looking at the dance festivals more specifically, they are an equitable performance platform. And for all the teachers and the students of public schools, they built the capacity of our classroom teachers to step out of their comfort zone and to get ensembles together and to come and perform.

But then we had classroom teachers who have had… they were even studying dance as a student, and they've now found that there's a need for dance in their school, so they were able to start up dance ensembles. And then we even had normal classroom teachers who actually didn't have anything to do with dance but they were the organisers to bring in the external dance tutors to get these performances together. And we had… it fostered the accessibility in the arts for a range of students. So, we also could offer performance outcomes for students with special needs, from Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander backgrounds and also refugee students. So, um, these public school dance festivals are fabulous. They're really wonderful.

Julia

So, I think a lot of teachers out there, however, will still think that dance education is all about leotards and interpretive dance and tap shoes or something else like that, something that has to be done by an external provider or a specialist teacher or is only done in a festival. I want to blow that myth out of the water. I don't agree with that. I think we need to see dance in the classroom. Is it possible for a teacher who has limited experience in the art… will stop limited experience, limited knowledge and limited confidence in dance? Can they do it? And if so, how can they do it? Come on, blow that myth out of the water for me?

Rebecca

Yes, absolutely. 100% they can. So, dance in education is not ‘eisteddfod dancing’. So, we are all about dance having a meaning and teaching the students to tell the story through movement. So, it is possible for the general classroom teacher with absolutely no training in dance to offer dance lessons. And I believe that everyone can dance. That's the dance teacher. I believe everyone can dance. So, then I therefore believe everyone can teach dance and because it is so inclusive that everyone can enjoy the benefits. And I have encouraged teachers in the past to realise that they can offer dance within their classroom. Just to take on the challenge of integrating dance into their programs. And it can be as simple as class rewards. Starting off just by saying, “Okay, if we get this work done today on the interactive whiteboard we will put on a ‘Just Dance’ video,” and we can all just copy that movement and then from that very simple integration of dance into your classroom, you can then move towards providing more dance lessons, like movement composition tasks in the school hall. You can even do dance in the playground. You know, you leave your socks and shoes on but you can do dance anywhere and you can do it within… safely within the classroom as well. And I have mentored classroom teachers to collaborate with their students in choreographing performance items.

So back to the dance festival we… I was doing professional learning for teachers, where I went in and with the actual class, not a dance ensemble, their class, we went through the very simple steps of creating a dance by collaborating together with the ideas the students explored. We structured the movement into the choreography. And there's such a rich resource of their creative minds that it can form the foundation of the movement vocabulary that you need for a performance. So, it's very about working with the students as well, not just saying, “Okay, I have to be the dance teacher at the front, and everyone has to follow me.” It's not about that at all.

Julia

Fantastic. Thank you, absolutely agree. I think so many teachers get caught up in. I've got to demonstrate what this is going to be like and that's where their fear comes in. And they think, “I'm not going to do that!” It's absolutely not about that and I think that's one thing that I learned very early on to is the role of storytelling in all of this. So, speaking of that, and just sort of ways into all of this. What are some examples that you've used with classroom K-6 teachers to build their capacity in dance? Some of the lesson ideas that you perhaps could give to people who are listening to this thinking, “Okay, I wouldn't mind giving this a go.”

Rebecca

Okay, yes. So, when working with classroom teachers to introduce their dance… to introduce teaching dance, I structured their lessons to start off with a warm up. Now this can be as general as walking around the room in various pathways. And then you can build it up; skipping, running, darting and dodging. So, you don't even, again, have to stand there and teach a dance warm up. The kids are warming up because you have directed them. Movement, direction; this is what it's all about. Then you get into a composition tasks where the students can work independently or in groups to create movement in response to a given stimulus. Again, you're standing there, you're pressing play, you're pressing pause. You're giving them the ideas and you're letting them move. And then each lesson concludes with performance and appreciation sessions. So, the students sit down. Each group performs for each other. You know, everyone has to clap. That's the rules.

And then we discuss, “did they achieve our task?” and “what did you appreciate about your friends’ performances?” So, we're very lucky in the department to have such amazing resources at our fingertips. Some dance teaching and learning online resources. So… which I have access to all the time. Teaching dance myself, as a specialist dance teacher, I've needed these resources myself. So, we've had amazing previous modules that we can access. But then, with the new selection from Move Ease, this has taken it to a whole new level. So, I've always directed the teachers… Just even recently, I was contacted by someone who is new to primary teaching dance and I've said, “go to these resources a starting point and they're going to just send you in the right direction. There's so much variety to work with.”

So, with the Move Ease modules we have Learning Across the Curriculum references so it will allow teachers to integrate other key learning areas, your units of work. So, you can actually start these modules and then build from them to make sure all the other key learning areas are filtering into these units. So, we have five themes with differential content from K-2 classes and 3-6 stages. So, these range from… just a couple of examples. We have the ‘Elements of Gamelan’ module, which responds to the stimulus of water, fire, earth and air elements. And then another module we have is called ‘Cyber Dance’ and that focuses on students designing a dance performance. So, they're really brilliant resources for the general classroom teacher to just tap into and it would be such a simple process to start teaching dance in your classrooms.

Julia

Excellent. I'm really glad that you brought up Move Ease because it's been an ongoing project and something we've had work specially commissioned for, and we've got teaching and learning videos in there to support any teacher out there who might be feeling a little bit anxious. They can just throw those videos on and either work through them with their students or they can practice and study up on it before they go into the classroom if they'd rather do it that way. So, there's just so many possibilities with that and all those tracks are included as well and fantastic lesson ideas that are linked to the syllabus. So, one stop shop really? So that's exciting. You brought that up. So, a lot of people get confused and think, “okay, well, look, I'm doing dance in PDHPE. How is that different to creative arts?” What's your interpretation on that one?

Rebecca

So, the PDHPE syllabus content differs to the creative arts syllabus by… it mainly just focuses on movement and performing rather than the creative composition and appreciation components. So, you know, in primary dance it's all about the students exploring movement. Um… the syllabus expectations is for the students to develop knowledge in performing, composing and appreciating dance through the elements of dance. And these are action, which is dynamics and time, space, relationships and structure. So that's what differs from the PDHPE, which is really about movement and the body. We’re like looking at all these other elements of composing dance, performing and appreciating in the dance.

Julia

And that whole expressive side to tell the story as well.

Rebecca

Yep, yeah.

Julia

Thanks for clearing that up for us. Just before we finish up, there's one little thing that you touched on earlier that I think people might be interested in which is, you mentioned that you had the boys were really actively involved in one of your schools in dance. How do you… how do you get the boys involved?

Rebecca

Yeah, well, it's just about games. You play a lot of games and, you know, they would still do their dance technique. But it was just a lot of fun for them. And I would… you know… what I'll choreograph, their dances would be obviously less feminine than… we had a senior girls’ ensemble, then we had a mixed junior and a mixed intermediate. And yeah, as I mentioned before, a lot of the teamwork, they really love that. But I think we're very spoiled at this school, in particular, because it was just a huge part of the dance culture there. And they… none of the boys trained really. We had like one boy who actually was very dedicated to his dancing and he's now a professional ballerina overseas. But that's one out of many, many hundreds of students that went through our dance program and still there now. So, it's more just about the element of fun and games and that's what a lot of the resources I mentioned get the kids to interact. And again, when you're not standing there as the dance teacher, “follow me and point your toes”. And the creative dancing is all about doing what your body is capable of and making shapes and just exploring different movement dynamics. So, it's not about a dance technique so much, and that's what I think really gets the boys involved and passionate about it.

Julia

Yeah, that shapes and stories idea is really important. I think, actually catering to them in terms of the stories that they're telling through the dance as well. Something is interesting to them is really important. Just in wrapping up, you just spoke about a boy who obviously was so inspired by dance that ended up doing that as a career. And you know, that's fantastic. But I think a lot of people think, “I'm not going to do that as a career, so there's no point in doing it.” We all know that the arts is so important just for our functioning as humans in society and the way that we see and view and feel in our world. Why is the… why are the arts? I mean obviously, it’s dance, specifically for you. But why are the arts so important in your life both personally and professionally?

Rebecca

Well, my mum got me into dance lessons because I was bouncing off the walls at home and I was just really hyperactive and had some pending behaviour issues. If she didn't get me burning my energy at dance classes, she was not going to get to control me. So that started with behaviour management, really, for me, but and also because I wouldn't stop dancing around the house and she put me into dance classes. As I grew up, I just got obsessed with performing. It's just quite a good adrenaline rush, and it was really great outlet for me. So, I was doing the eisteddfod dancing. There was the, you know, the bush dancing, partner dancing at primary school. I went to a high school that I was the only dance student there at all. And I was still training and my teachers were like, “well, we need you… you can't study dance here, but you can go to the local performing arts high school and you can do sport there and you can join their ensemble and you can go to the dance festivals and you can go to School Spectacular.” So, I was the one… my high school would be on the program, but I was the one student who's representing them.

And then I went to in Year 10, I heard about this contemporary dance student workshop, and I was I was going through a period where I was dancing on stages, all the eisteddfods and just going, “Why am I smiling? What am I doing on stage? I'm just smiling. I don't know why.” And then I went to this student workshop with the Contemporary Dance Company and they had the whole day was composing a dance to this audio track of a drama play. Just people talking, no music. And we had to create a dance to that and it blew my mind. And I was like, “What? Dance can actually mean something!” And then I was obsessed with that, and I immediately had my eyes on going to university and spent, I believe, the best three years of my life training full time in dance. And then I was yeah, just went… couldn't wait to get teaching dance, and just… it's so infectious. You just see the students and how free and how happy and how expressive they are. And it's such a positive learning environment. So, I just you do receive so much back from your students as well. And the benefits that you see that gives them for them their mental wellbeing and their health and their learning. So, it does become quite addictive, teaching dance. And you can really start to see the benefits for them.

Julia

Fantastic. Thank you. Gosh, if that doesn't inspire people, I don't know what will. That was an amazing story. All right, just before we finish up, Rebecca. What's your advice for any teachers out there who might be struggling to make a start in their creative journeys, particularly in dance?

Rebecca

Well, just give it a go and trust yourself and allow your students, their creativity, to lead your lessons. So even if you just mentioned, we're going to do a dance class today, I think the excitement from them… especially I think they all can. They're all really knowledgeable on the ‘Just Dance’ videos now. So even just start with that, just pop that on as a reward and go from there. So, you know, tap into those brilliant department resources. They will give you the confidence and the support that you need to get outside of your comfort zone and good luck.

Julia

All right. Well, look, thank you so much for your time today. Fantastic talking to you. And we hope we can chat again soon and I'm hoping all the teachers out there listening will be inspired to start their dance journey in the classroom. And look at all those resources on the website that are available. So really nice spending time with you again, the wonderful Rebecca Divine. And everybody out there listening, if you’ve loved listening to this podcast, make sure that you subscribe. And we'll talk again very soon. Thanks again, the magnificent Rebecca Divine.

Rebecca

Thanks. Julia.

[upbeat music]

[end of transcript]

[upbeat music]

Julia

Hi, I’m Julia Brennan and I’m Creative Arts Advisor for K-6 across NSW and the department of schools. And today I’m speaking with Unity Taylor-Hill and she’s Principal at Anzac Park so we’ve got some lovely things we’ll be chatting about today. Just before we get started if you want to follow this podcast series remember to go to soundcloud.com/primarycurriculum all one word and log in with your @education.nsw.gov.au or if you’re not from the department you can also log in through Facebook or create your own SoundCloud account. So, let’s get started. Unity and I have known each other for a really long time, so it’s really nice to have you here today Unity.

Unity Taylor-Hill

Thanks, Julia.

Julia

We met a gazillion years ago as targeting grads out at South Coogee Public, those were the good old days and we were young and had a bit of a spring in our steps. And at the time we were both relatively new to teaching and had just finished university and we bonded over our mutual love of the arts and our united belief in the importance of the arts in the classroom. So, from then I found out a little bit about Unity and I’m sure she’ll fill us in a little bit more on that. But in her current role as Principal at Anzac Park she also embeds the arts and loves the arts and really promotes it in her school so we’ll find out a bit more about that today. But I bet many of us didn’t know that she was actually, I don’t know, maybe she still is quite an accomplished cellist and the arts really influenced her journey today. So, Unity do you want to tell us a little bit about how your arts education journey started?

Unity

Yeah, thanks Julia. I think it was my cello playing that actually got me my targeted grad position at South Coogee. Our principal at the time had ticked the box for string ensemble and whilst I was told that I would never get a targeted grad position in the Eastern Suburbs, it was actually my string experience that got me that position that I was very fortunate to get at the time. So, it helped in so many different ways about employment within the department, one that helped me end up at South Coogee. Arts education has been and the arts in general is something that is really important to me and something that I think has come from the importance played on the arts and from my family. Musical instruments and learning a musical instrument was non-negotiable growing up. And I did go through the piano, the violin and finally settled on the cello. But also my mother was an artist and a writer as well so she would often have canvases going at home and would paint throughout her life. So, the role of the arts and the importance of arts really came from the home but also through my journey and education.

Julia

Why do you see the arts as being important for our students in our school? I mean obviously Anzac Park you would have a big influence in the arts.

Unity

I think the arts provide our students with that opportunity to understand the world and also understand the world from different perspectives. It also provides that opportunity for us to create and to express ourselves in ways that we can’t necessarily express our emotions and our feelings in other ways. We have a very diverse range of students at Anzac Park including a support unit for children on the autism spectrum and providing opportunities for students to be able to have that opportunity to express themselves but also understand through the arts is really crucial.

Julia

Is it possible and I’m sure you’ve got teachers on your staff who don’t quite have the arts experience that you’ve had and we do see that hours of arts training are declining in our university sector. Is it possible for a teacher with limited experience to be able to teach the arts?

Unity

Look, from my own experience I would say you know naturally music was something you know from a graduate teacher that I felt very confident in teaching although when teaching alongside you in music I always felt that I couldn’t quite keep up. But certainly for me as part of my university degree I majored in my final year in drama education with Robin Ewing out at Sydney Uni and having no experience in drama at all but spending that time in my final you know year of undergraduate study focusing on drama provided me with that understanding of the fact that you don’t have to be good at drama to see the worth and the value of teaching drama. And for me that understanding of the arts as a process rather than a product and that providing students with that opportunity to explore through drama and through the arts doesn’t mean that you have to be an expert yourself, it means that you’re on the journey with the student to find that new understanding. I certainly don’t feel as a teacher that I had a personal expertise in visual arts but it was always something that I enjoyed teaching. I don’t think that you need to have a personal expertise in the arts to teach it well. I think it has to do with the fact that I think it is very innate in humans to enjoy the arts and to express through the arts and I think we all hold that sense of the importance of learning through arts that you know we all have that capacity to be excited and learn and teach through those programs.

Julia

Alright, so you’ve said something that’s really excited me in there. I didn’t realise how much drama you had had or how much drama experience you’d had. So, let’s rewind twenty one years. So, you’re a beginning teacher and you’d like to do some drama in your classroom, how do you go about it? Where do you start?

Unity

For me it was understanding you know through quality picture books particularly was my way into really exploring drama and that idea of processed drama. You know I see teachers you know pick up the most amazing picture books and read the whole book to their class in one hit and I think there are so many lost moments within rich picture books to provide you know opportunities to explore you know point of view and to explore perspective and to explore narrative through you know different drama activities. It was …

Julia

… changing and talking about the different perspective role playing …

Unity

Yeah, things like you know hot seating or things like tapping into a character where they are.

Julia

So, as in putting that perspective in your line as your …

Unity

Absolutely and trying to understand the characters’ motives and what they’ve done and understand provide such a richer understanding. You know at Anzac Park we are really keen on making sure we’re teaching those 21st century capabilities and that idea of critical thinking and understanding you know through particularly through drama and the art forms, that development of critical thinking through some of those techniques is absolutely hand in hand.

Julia

You mentioned hot seating, we might just explain that for say a beginner teacher who has never heard that. What did you mean in that situation?

Unity

So, hot seating is a drama technique that where students take on one of the characters in a book and then the class or as a teacher are asked questions as the child takes on that character. So, you know a child can be you know one of the characters from a book, you know like the Dad pig in Piggy book is a really great example. You know understanding motivation through interviewing a student and asking them to take on that character and understand.

Julia

So, you were the Dad and I might say something like why did you do that to Mum today? Or something along those lines.

Unity

That’s right and you know the student can try and justify those choices that the father you know Daddy pig has made through understanding through that technique.

Julia

Beautiful, thanks Unity for explaining that, it’s important. Look, you’ve been a principal in quite a few schools now and had some really important influential roles over the years, how have you managed to keep the arts as something important to you?

Unity

For me the arts is a really important part of education and I think you know our role as educators is to prepare you know and prepare our children to be successful in life and I think that the arts is a really important part in that. So, in creating the whole child and wanting to you know the whole wellbeing of a child, you know the arts is a really important part of that whole child development.

Julia

You mentioned your 21st century skills and those the 4Cs. How does that sort of fit in with what you’re talking about?

Unity

Look I think you know recently we saw the CESE paper released regarding you know critical and creative thinking skills and you know that research is showing us that you know you can teach children to be more creative and you can teach them to be more critical. But the research is saying that it needs to be done within a context and it needs to be done within content. And I think the arts is everything natural way to explore those 21st century capabilities and an awesome forum for that.

Julia

So, look a lot of people are absolutely fascinated by the Anzac Park model. Talk to us about what a day in the life of the arts would be at Anzac Park. What does it look like? How do you deal with the arts at Anzac Park?


Unity

Yeah, so for those of you who aren’t aware of Anzac Park we are a new school that opened in 2016 and we have a really clear vision in that we want to make sure that that we’re utilising and embedding evidence based practices in our teaching and learning but also making sure we’re preparing our students for life in the 21st century. So, we have five what we call drivers as part of our vision for learning. And one of those drivers is what we call creating connectors and that is that we have a conceptual inquiry approach to our teaching and learning. As part of that this year we have launched what we’ve called the eight big questions scope and sequence. All of the syllabus outcomes and content in the key learning areas of English, geography, history, science and the arts and PDHPE now with the new syllabus are brought under eight big questions. So, the students explore through a conceptual lens those big questions and work through those different key learning areas and understanding. So, an example of that is you know our students at the moment are exploring how do we know? As their big question this term. They’re looking at how do we know through a geographical lens of place and space and exploring through that concept but how do we know through the arts has been a really exciting question for our students to embark on? An example of that is tonight our Stage 3 students are holding their first Vivid evening where all of the students in Year 5 and 6 are creating light installations that respond to that question, how do we know? So, when I went around yesterday and spoke to our Stage 3 students I said how does your artwork explore that question how do we know? And some of the students had responded in creating an artwork using lights, how do we know? We know through nature and we know through the natural world. We have students saying how do we know? We know through research and we know through our memories and have created artworks exploring some of those concepts of how do we know? My favourite artwork was when I saw some boys and they had created a whole lot of boxes with they’ve put fluro spray paint and all these different lights. It’s a very big, life size kind of boxes and I said ‘Well boys, tell me how do we know?’ And they said ‘Well, we know because the neurons in our brains can communicate the outside world in and that communication is how we know’. So, the buildings had represented the brain and how we communicate and the lights were how the neurons in our brain connect. So, we’re seeing very deep. So, we’re seeing you know eleven year old boys exploring some of those big questions that are really exciting way to explore the arts by opening up some of those big questions and allowing the arts to provide a forum for those children to be able to explore them.

Julia

How fantastic is the whole Vivid light show full stop? It’s such a magical way of moving forward with the arts. It’s incredible.

Unity

Yeah and I think having that audience for their work is really important as well. So, we have a big community evening this evening where you know parents can come and share and develop that deeper understanding of that big question and appreciate the understanding that the students have developed.

Julia

People out there probably like me have got a million questions about this, so how long has this process been going for?

Unity

So, each term they have a big question, so this has been part of the big question for Term 3. For next term, you know it’s around story. And so we’re seeing our teachers at the moment getting ready to explore narrative and story through dance and through music. So, being able to utilise technology particularly we utilise programs such as garage band for our students to be able to create music. But you know I know that our students will be composing their own music based on their own stories next term using garage band but then creating their own dance music video using green screen to provide a dance that goes with the music that they’ve composed.

Julia

In saying that I’m just going to throw a little plug in here because in the Vocal Ease More resource that came out last year we’ve actually now got a digital unit in there about how to create your own music video clips. How do you actually resource this sort of project that you’re talking about in terms of I’m imagining with the Vivid light show that you’ve got a bit of expense in gathering together equipment and things like that? How could people go about doing that if they wanted to?

Unity

Look, a lot of the materials that the students are using are recycled materials. So, as I said you know our boys with their neuron buildings how to utilise cardboard boxes and found materials. But then we have also dedicated you know our budget and our parents have supported you know that the budget in these programs. So, I think it is important for school communities and for schools to be prioritising the arts and making sure that they’re well-funded so that programs can be you know operate.

Julia

Look, my next question to you is going to be around the fact that we have got quite an old syllabus for the creative arts and how do you keep the flame alive? I don’t think I need to ask that, you’ve just answered that already. It’s so exciting. What happened in Term 1 and 2?

Unity

I’ll go back to your question around the old and the new syllabus. I think what stays true with the old syllabus is the fact that you know that idea of organising sound, that idea of it making and appreciating you know are really timeless ways of looking through the arts. And whilst it has been around since you and I started teaching, it’s certainly is one that can be applied well, you know into new ways of programming and thinking about how you know the parts can fit together.

Julia

Alright, well Unity another thing that’s really fascinated me is a lot of principals and teachers are struggling with making a start in the arts. You’ve given us some great ways of doing that, do you have any advice particularly for the principals out there who are thinking I don’t know how to get into this space, I don’t know how to promote the arts further in my school, some of my teachers are struggling with the arts or I’ve got various other constraints and I’m feeling a lot of other external pressures. Can you give them any advice on how to get this journey going?

Unity

I think for me the arts needs to be seen as not an add on program but actually central to the work that we do and it actually enriches our programs rather than needs to be added on as additional to our programs. We do have, you know at Anzac Park like many schools you know extracurricular programs in the arts and the passion that our teachers show in the arts as we did as young teachers contributing to school communities through leading choirs and string ensembles in my case but you know the teachers that we see coming in with a background in the arts and allowing those teachers to be able to bring that expertise that they have into their programs I think is really special and helps build that you know sense of the importance of the arts but also seeing how the arts can be embedded within our programs. So, you know that idea of you know how did we become to be or our big questions of how do we know? You know how can we explore that through the arts as we do all the other you know key learning areas?

Julia

It’s a really powerful message.

Unity

Rather than we need to stop now and do the arts. It doesn’t work like that, it’s actually a wonderful you know vehicle for exploring you know …

Julia

I made this point before that we don’t exist in silos so I’m not quite sure why we teach like that.

Unity

Yeah, absolutely and you know I’ve seen over my years in education you know the role that even having opportunities for our students to engage in and how life changing it can be for a child and how rich it is for a child to be involved in a life performance and something that they you know get so much from but also. You know we recently took our students to the Contemporary Art Museum in Sydney and opportunities for students to engage in art and particularly contemporary art you know rather than you know thinking that art forms can look very different, that we’re not always just talking about painting that we can express ourselves through film and through music and through installation as art forms I think is really rich. And I think those programs that we have on offer through you know our local art galleries or through our local programs or even you know we have at Anzac some grandparents in kindergarten who play the piano accordion and often you know can come in and play, just those opportunities for sharing.

Julia

How special is that for those little, early Stage 1 people to see their grandparents in their classroom teaching their friends something?

Unity

Yeah, absolutely.

Julia

It’s magical, yeah. It’s also too about exposing the students to something they may not necessarily get in their normal life but I’ve said that before too a lot of people shy away from things that don’t make them feel comfortable but I think it’s about giving the children those opportunities and allowing them to see what’s out there, not restrict them in any way. Something you said in there though was that the teachers along the way bringing their expertise. What if they don’t have any? They’ve had very limited exposure to the arts, how do we help them? Surely, you must have some teachers who’ve had to have their hand held along that journey.

Unity

Yeah, absolutely. I think what is you know special for us is you know I think it’s important you know we all as teachers have different skills that we bring into the classroom and that we bring into our school community to enrich that community and it maybe through sport or it maybe through the arts or it maybe through Lego robotics experts at Anzac. So, you know we all have something that we bring that contributes and you know through things like collaborative programming and shared programming. You know we use you know our Google Drive to have those collaborative programs where teachers can add and share ideas and evaluations of programs to support teachers that may not feel confident with the arts. But for us at Anzac we also co-teach. So, for us co-teaching provides a really great opportunity for developing professional development in understanding.

Julia

So, putting a teacher with lots of experience with someone maybe who’s a little less experienced.

Unity

I have an example you know that I can think of where I have actually a graduate teacher so someone in their first year of teaching who has an expertise in the visual arts co-teaching with a teacher who brings a lot of expertise through the sport and through technology and to see those teachers working together and supporting each other. You know we see you know a very young teacher being able to contribute a lot to the school community through that expertise in visual arts and being able to recognise that whilst he is early in his career in teaching, he’s still able to make a strong contribution to those programs.

Julia

… For him so that would make a difference.

Unity

Yeah and building the capacity of those you know in the team.

Julia

That’s brilliant. Look, you really answered the final question that I have for you but I’d just like to go back one more little step and see if we can just re-enforce this one more time. So, I think a lot of teachers feel so much pressure in terms of assessment and standardised testing, and the curriculum you know progressions and other strategic goals along the way. So many time pressures and we’ve still got to ensure that the arts are taught, what advice can you give to those teachers out there – principals, schools that might be struggling with all these pressures and feel like they’re trapped in that vice to get out there and make the arts part of their school?

Unity

I think living the arts you know through the programs I think you know we need to ensure that the arts and you know we keep the integrity of the arts as something to be taught in itself but you know the capacity for the arts to be taught in conjunction with you know other aspects. You know as I said it’s not an add on, it’s actually central and particularly for our students in being able to communicate and express you know through the arts you know we go back to that early example around the role of drama in teaching you know critical understanding, you know through English. You know we see being able to explore. You know I think you know drama blends itself beautifully to many aspects of the PDH syllabus and understanding stereotypes and the role that we play in managing those relationships. You know we see you know so many different ways that the arts can be brought in as part of enriching those opportunities for students and not something that needs to be as I said segregated but something that is brought into that.

Julia

As enhancing the journey along the way.

Unity

Absolutely.

Julia

Well, look thank you so much for your time, Unity, it’s been a while and I’m really glad that you could find time to come and have a yarn with us today, so it was really nice to hear all about your experiences and particularly what you’re up to now. So, thank you so much. And everybody out there if you enjoyed listening to today’s podcast and you’d like to hear more, make sure that you follow this podcast series by going to soundcloud.com/primarycurriculum all one word and clicking on the orange follow button and you can log in with your @education.nsw.gov.au account or else create your own account or sign in through Facebook. It’s been lovely talking to you today and we’ll talk again soon.

[upbeat music]

[end of transcript]

[upbeat music]

Julia Brennan

Hi, I’m Julia Brennan and I’m Creative Arts Advisor for K-6 with the NSW Department of Education and welcome back to our podcast series. Remember, if you’re enjoying these podcasts and you’d like to subscribe, go to soundcloud.com/primarycurriculum all one word and hit the subscribe button. Today, I am with the amazing John Nicholas Saunders from the Sydney Theatre Company. Welcome, John.

John Nicholas Saunders

Thank you, great to be with you.

Julia

And we’re going to be talking about his experience in the arts, just as we have with other guests in the past and remember this series is all about the Creative Arts in K-6 and some inspiring journeys of people we’ve met along the way and ways of getting the K-6 Creative Arts syllabus into your classroom. Now, John is the Director of Education and Community Partnerships with the Sydney Theatre Company and he’s going to tell us a little bit about his journey but I’d first of all like to just share with the listeners how I first met you John and that was at a PL course that you were offering with Peter, so primary English teachers and it was just amazing looking at the ways in which drama and literacy work together and I mean that’s a fairly obvious thing but just the way you unpacked it was absolutely magical and it really set me off on a path of a much deeper understanding and learning and drama. So, I was really inspired after that.

John

That’s lovely. It was a great fun workshop.

Julia

It was a great fun workshop.

John

For a Saturday morning, an early Saturday morning we had a lovely time.

Julia

We certainly did. So, John tell us all about your arts journey and how it’s done.

John

Well, I suppose like many arts teachers that it started with my own experience at primary school and I found learning pretty difficult in primary school. I found reading and writing really hard. I could write but no one else could read what I had written. My spelling was atrocious and my reading really was terrible, I really couldn’t read throughout primary school. And you know when I first started primary school it was a really fun place where the arts had a really prominent place. I think in the early years of primary school where visual art and music and drama and play and movement and dance were all really sort of intertwined.

Julia

Now, that’s an inspiring story.

John

It was lovely, it was lovely. And then as you know primary school got more serious then you know people sort of started to say you know you’ve got a learning disability or a learning difficulty and I was diagnosed with ADD and told that you know I’d sort of never go to university and probably wouldn’t finish high school and maybe a trade would be a good thing you know when I get to high school to look at. And then the arts sort of started to become much more important you know all of the kind of naughty kids were sent to after school drama you know and actually lots of us became teachers out of that group which I think says something.

Julia

Can’t picture you being a naughty child.

John

I know, I know, it’s shocking. I just think the more that I engaged in the arts, the more confident I became, the more engaged I became and motivated at school. And that sort of carried all the way through into secondary school where suddenly I was actually doing really well academically. And you know through the arts I got to meet great people and become really good friends with people. And so as a whole person I think the arts really transformed me. But I don’t think that’s a unique story either, I think teachers, even you would have seen this time and time again in our classrooms we see it and that’s why I think we’re so passionate.

Julia

That’s the same as my journey as well. I explained that in the first podcast. I used to have this name, a fictitious name that I would tell the students about where I was called Alice and the teacher came into my classroom one day and changed my life because she could play the guitar and used to sing every day.

John

Yeah.

Julia

It sounds very similar to what you had.

John

Yeah, absolutely. And I think you know it can be just that one thing that you need to you know for me I think it was finding something that I was good at but my peers who were good at everything else or it seemed like they were good at everything else I could do better, I could be a great drawer or I could you know play the piano well. And I could you know perform in the little school play really well and that was actually a commodity that I didn’t realise I think perhaps at the time.

Julia

And you found your people as well

John

I found my people, yeah, yeah and I think that was a pretty pivotal moment. But certainly I think that set me on the trajectory to become a drama teacher.

Julia

Great, so look, well, that really leads into the next question which was you know why did the arts mean so much to you and how has it influenced your life? Obviously we’ve just heard the personal story, talk to us a little bit more about that and the professional side too.

John

I think you know I mean I think I knew it was true for my own experience as a student but then becoming a teacher you also see it in the way that it can transform students’ lives and there’s a sense of belonging and you know wellbeing aspects like I think can increase through the arts. But also I think you know the academic elements as well that can increase. And you know for me I think that the arts really I’m interested in how they can be transformational for students and transferable.

Julia

Yes.

John

The skills that I think you develop in the arts, even if you’re not going to become an actor or a singer or a dancer or a visual artist, the skills that you learn are I think the most important thing that you can learn because they are what we really need in the future more and more.

Julia

Absolutely. You know I’ve had parents in the past say look, I’m not going to let that child learn an instrument for example because I don’t want them to be a musician. It’s not about that is it?

John

It’s not about that, no. I mean some people will and that’s fantastic and you know and there are careers in the arts for artists. But also you know artists use their skills in a whole range of areas as well. But it is I think the transferability that is so important in the arts all the way from kindergarten through to Year 12.

Julia

Now, I don’t know if you’ve perhaps looked at these questions before but you keep leading into where I’m heading. That’s fine. So, talk to us about the power of drama for you.

John

I think drama is, look I love all of the arts and I think they are all really important like a family of learning areas, I think they each feed each other and each I think will resonate with different students in different ways and I think that’s really important. I suppose drama for me you know was something that really stood out for me and I think I saw it more as a teacher where the stepping into the shoes of someone else and that really led me into working in primary schools where children can still so easily move into that playful world where they do step into the shoes of another character. They pretend to be someone else and think like them and feel like them and act like them. And in doing that they see the world through that other character’s eyes and take on their perspective. And I think that is something that is very unique to drama, I’m not sure there’s any other kind of learning area that sort of does that in the way that drama does it.

Julia

It’s incredibly powerful.

John

It is, it is. And you know I work with mainly children in primary school but also you know boys in juvenile justice centres. We work with adults in refugee, migrant and asylum seeker backgrounds and it’s the same for all of them I think no matter who you work with there’s something about stepping into the shoes of someone else and imagining life from that perspective. And I think that’s the kind of world I want to live in where we can imagine what it would be like to be that person or have a really different perspective or different opinion and I think that empathy that you know is something we desperately need today.

Julia

Absolutely. I love that idea of empathy and perspective and that’s something that we don’t talk about enough.

John

And it’s you know I think empathy and perspective are great. Empathy and perspective also help us you know with our literacy as well when we’re trying to understand characters. That’s right. So, I think you know it’s about the whole, it’s a very holistic or it can be a very holistic way of engaging students I think.

Julia

Absolutely. So, are there any other things that you would like to add to that sort of discussion about why the arts are important for our students?

John

I think it is also about you know I think the current kind of situation in education, the current kind of climate I think isn’t perhaps I’m talking very broadly Julia, very broadly I think you know in lots of countries where we see you know a focus on multiple choice testing and high stakes testing. And I think you know we’re seeing so much pressure on teachers globally and a focus on quite limited data within schools rather than holistic data, we’re seeing you know high rates of disengagement particularly in the middle years of school, that end of primary and the first few years of secondary I think are a really interesting period that’s so often overlooked. And I was reading a study the other day about really early childhood kindergarten Year1 and 2 students, the suspension rates had increased quite dramatically in one state in Australia and I think that’s really sad. And the arts have ways of engaging those students of supporting those students so that those things don’t happen.

Julia

That’s right. Helping them to work through their own personal journeys.

John

That’s right.

Julia

In a forum that’s really accessible and …

John

Yes.

Julia

… Not really necessarily exposing them.

John

No and it’s engaging and motivating and there’s you know a huge amount of research that supports that and I’m at the end of my PhD journey but it is totally fascinating to read the research from around the world about the impact that the arts are having in schools, the impact they have on students and teachers.

Julia

Or just hearing your story, I mean, wow.

John

Yeah.

Julia

It’s fantastic, isn’t it?

John

Yeah, and you’re not unique. Yeah.

Julia

Yeah. Look, John you’ve talked to us a little bit about the power of drama and the power of the arts in general for our students. But let’s be honest there’s a lot of teachers out there who are scared to teach the arts and particularly drama. They might think look, I didn’t do that at school or that’s not something that I value. How can they go about starting this journey? Let’s just say that they’ve realised through listening to you that it’s something they should go ahead and try. How can they get into it?

John

We’ve seen in pre-service teacher ed courses that the time for the arts has been cut and cut and cut over the past thirty years. So, I think there are lots of teachers, lots of our colleagues who come into the profession wanting to use the arts but not feeling particularly confident or they have you know particular connotations about the arts from their own experience. I mean I think there are lots of resources out there. I mean the primary English teachers association professional learning event that you and I met at is you know a great example that there are lots of professional learning events all around that really support teachers to use the arts and particularly drama. And not just teaching it as an art form but also using its pedagogy across the curriculum and using the arts to make meaningful connections across the curriculum. But there are also great resources around I think you know there are great books, there is great professional learning programs, there are great podcasts like this and e-books and iBooks. I think there is a lot to support teachers out there if they go looking. And I think a good place to start is with the professional associations as well that are around that are here at Sydney Drama NSW who offer professional learning to all teachers.

Julia

And of course, you’ve been supporting us through our journey and creating the Act Ease series so that’s very exciting.

John

Very exciting, absolutely, another fantastic …

Julia

So appreciative of your efforts.

John

Not at all, another fantastic resource to help teachers. You know and I think once you start you sort of go ‘Oh yeah, this isn’t scary and I can do it’. And when you see students working in that way I think it’s motivating to keep going.

Julia

And I think for me when I first met you and saw you in action, watching what you did with a children’s picture book was just so inspiring. And we had a principal in a few weeks ago for a podcast, Unity Taylor-Hill from Anzac Park and she mentioned because she learnt through Robyn Ewing about just how upsetting it is to see a teacher just read straight through a text and not stop and break it down and that’s something I’ve seen you do so well. Do you want to talk us through just one example of doing that? Maybe one thing we could do with a picture book

John

Yeah, I call it the apathetic pretext model. And in drama often you know you can just read it, a text will take an idea and jump into the drama but I think you can use drama devices and strategies throughout the book. So, you kind of read an episode of the book, a page or two and then dive into the book so you’re not sort of re-enacting what you’ve just read, you’re going really deeply into the story. So, something like hot seating a particular character at a particular point in time. You might do it as the teacher pretending to be that character and answering questions in role as that character. I mean you might read a little bit more of the book and dive in again and the students might be predicting what could happen next at that critical moment. So, in groups they might create two or three frozen images and share those with the class. So, you know they’re really common devices and strategies that are in our syllabus documents, they’re in lots of books and resources. But you can sort of place them strategically throughout quality layered children’s literature. And I think it just completely changes the experience for them, well it does, it deepens the learning.

Julia

And you don’t need to be an academy award winning actor to do any of this, a teacher can do it.

John

As you saw in my workshop that you do not need, that’s right, no nominations for an Oscar were being handed out at that workshop.

Julia

I think you’re undervaluing yourself.

John

Thanks, Julia.

Julia

So, John you do have quite an incredible position that you work in. Can you share some of the incredible stories that you’ve seen perhaps primary school teachers or students working in drama?

John

Yeah, look I suppose Julia the Sydney Theatre Company and my work there has been such a privilege to be able to work alongside primary teachers in a co-mentoring relationship where we share our expertise with each other. I share my expertise in drama and they share their expertise with me as well as expert educators. And I think through that I mean personally what I’ve seen have been teachers who have come out of their own shell I think and found a joy in teaching English and literacy in a very different way and perhaps a different way than they’ve been doing for decades, teaching really well but it just can be something completely different without desks where we are using all of the emotion and the senses and you know cognitive skills as well altogether but also with the students I think you know. I work with students over a term in the school drama program so you see a shift during that term throughout that term you know particularly boys I think, particularly boys who find English and literacy difficult or who find school a bit disengaging. I think of the ones who I see the most significant shifts in their engagement.

Julia

You’re reflecting on your own personal journey.

John

Yeah, I think so. I think I knew that to be true but I certainly see that, I really picked that up in almost every classroom I go into. And I think it’s important to say also that you know working in this sort of way isn’t the one solution you know our research shows it will help lots of kids, it will help almost everyone in the classroom but there might be a couple of kids who don’t love it who you know doesn’t quite work for them. And I think that’s why that broad repertoire of skills that we bring as teachers is so important, you know there’s no sort of golden bullet that will fix everything, it’s about a broad repertoire of teaching skills I think.

Julia

The process of building up those skills is not about having that final product or the assembly item or anything like that.

John

No, no, that’s right, that’s right.

Julia

Consistent and often.

John

The process, the making you know for Gonski said ‘It’s not important what young children create but that they do create’. And I think that is you know it’s true for all of us that we learn so much through the process of making.

Julia

That’s right, doing.

John

That’s it, that’s it. And we do it without even noticing. You can walk into any primary classroom and see children making art, making drama, making visual art, making music. And it is that process which I think is …

Julia

Yeah, that’s right. It doesn’t have to be about that end product.

John

No.

Julia

That’s great. Look, John a lot of people are going to be excited to hear your voice because they’ve you know watched you in action or heard you in action over the years. So, tell them all about what your average day at Sydney Theatre Company is like.

John

Look, I’m super lucky, I mean I was a teacher prior to coming to the Sydney Theatre Company. So, the best part I think is that I’m still able to work in a classroom one morning a week on the school drama program and I think that feeds me in a way that nothing else does. So, I find that’s wonderful. But a day will involve sometimes being in a school and teaching alongside a teacher and then I’ll be back and working with my incredible team in the office overseeing a whole range of programs. So, school drama being the biggest of those programs where we’re in almost every state and territory across Australia. So, it’s coordinating teaching artists who are working in schools all over the place. It will be you know answering questions from a teaching artist and supporting a teaching artist who might be working in juvenile justice centres, running through what the team who are working with adult refugees, migrants and asylum seekers in our connected program what they might be doing next, then it will be you know a budget meeting or looking at next year’s season of plays and what the connections will be to the curriculum. So, it’s really varied. Yeah, a bit like teaching, no day’s ever the same.

Julia

Tell us about some of the amazing people you’ve worked with along the way.

John

I mean, well I think that for me I think that what’s impacted my journey at the Sydney Theatre Company the most has been probably working with our former artistic directors, Cate Blanchett and Andrew Upton together with Professor Robyn Ewing from the University of Sydney. And really those three people I think and my predecessor, Helen Hristofski started the school drama program. And I think for artistic directors today they’re going to invest in education, we’re going to make that a real focus and we want that to be something that lasts beyond our time as artistic directors. I think it’s a really big deal and for that program you know it’s now ten years old, we’ve reached over 30,000 teachers and students across Australia and New Zealand. I think you know to have that vision eleven years ago and to put in place things that would sustain you know years after they’ve gone I think is really important, really special. And I think I’ve been so lucky to work with Professor Robyn Ewing who you know is in her heart I think is still a kindergarten, Year 1-2 teacher and I’ve learnt so much from working with her and working alongside her, seeing her work with a group of you know five and six year olds is completely mesmerising but she’s also a terrific academic and a brilliant scholar. And you know I think you know personally has kept pushing me and I kept learning from her over the years.

Julia

So, you know that my short list of children’s book authors if I had to narrow it down which I get asked all the time, I’m down to kind of a Shaun Tan, Anthony Browne kind of …

John

Two brilliant, two brilliant young people.

Julia

Two absolutely brilliant people. Have you got a favourite author? I know it’s a horrible question.

John

It’s hard, it’s hard. I actually really didn’t like Anthony Browne for years, it took me a very long time to get into Anthony Browne.

Julia

Very confronting.

John

Yes, very, Robyn Ewing loved Anthony Browne and kept sort of going you should really try and engage with this. And I was like I don’t know, I don’t like it. But you really have to work slowly with it I think, but so rich and deep, I’m converted now, you’re relieved.

Julia

Thank goodness.

John

Look, I think that’s really hard. There are a couple that I love, Armin Greder’s work I really love, very dark work, ‘The City’ and ‘The Island’ that he wrote are two I think really fascinating, meaty texts. I really like his work as an author and as an illustrator I think. ‘Fox’ by Margaret Wild and Ron Brooks, you just can’t go wrong with that. It is so, you know you can work on it with a group of Year 3s. You can work on it with a group of fifty year olds and it’s still so rich and layered. And then my most recent obsession is ‘Tricycle’ which I think is the one that you did with me by Elisa Amado and Alfonso Ruano who are South Americans, it’s out of print, you can buy like a second-hand copy you know online. But I just love that book.

Julia

That is a gorgeous story, it is gorgeous.

John

It’s fantastic.

Julia

Absolutely gorgeous.

John

Yeah and I think it is because those texts are so rich and layered you know that you can pick them up you know at different points in your life and still get a lot of meaning from them. And every time I do it with a class and look at that text and explore it there’s something else that comes up which I never thought of before which I just think you know that’s a sign of a good text.

Julia

How powerful is that?

John

Yeah, yeah.

Julia

Fantastic. So, John what pathways do you think are open for our students if they’ve got an interest or an ability in the arts? I mean you’ve shared with us your journey which is fantastic. What other pathways are there?

John

Well, transferable skills that everyone has I think are really important. But I think there are lots of great programs that lots of arts companies run that support students to engage in the arts. The Arts Unit, is you know one example of a unit connected to the department who run great programs that help students further develop their interest and skills. At the Sydney Theatre Company we run a work experience week program which is like an intensive week where we bring twenty five students from across NSW in so that they can really investigate all of the different roles that we offer at the company. So, it’s not just about performing or directing or writing, it’s about learning about our marketing team, about our set and costume designers and the set and costume makers and everything in between. So, I think that there are so many jobs out there.

Julia

So many jobs out there. Look, I was only speaking to a colleague the other day who mentioned that her husband designs the sculptures that are in the background in the sets in movies.

John

Yeah.

Julia

There are just so many jobs out there that you don’t realise exist.

John

No.

Julia

It’s incredible. And it’s not just about going into the arts, it’s about expanding ourselves as we mentioned before.

John

Totally. And you know I mean the research about like future employment I think is fascinating.

Julia

Critical and creative thinking that the arts do so well.

John

Totally, totally. And I was just looking at Frey and Osborne, two academics from Oxford University did a study of US employment and they looked at like seven hundred and two occupations and how susceptible they were to being replaced by computerisation over the next I think like fifteen or twenty years. And they found like forty seven per cent of all US employment was highly susceptible to being replaced by computerisation.

Julia

Wow.

John

But the jobs that were least susceptible were the ones that required creative and social skills. And I was like that is so intrinsic, so deeply embedded in drama. You know I think that’s just another reason why everyone should do a bit of a drama.

Julia

I think you’ve convinced us all John. Look, John we’ve got to wrap up but just in finishing are there any other inspiring stories or experiences or just a message you’d like to leave us with today?

John

I think the message that I’d like to leave with is that you know it’s not scary and it’s not hard to teach drama and it can just be a little bit and it can be a little bit in an English and literacy classroom and that’s a great start.

Julia

Well, look thank you John, it’s been such a pleasure having you here today. Every time I chat to you I always leave inspired and laughing my head off at the same time.

John

Thank you, Julia.

Julia

So, a big thank you to John Nicholas Saunders from the Sydney Theatre Company who’s joined us today. If you’ve enjoyed listening to today’s podcast remember you can subscribe by going to soundcloud.com/primarycurriculum all one word and hitting the subscribe button. My name is Julia Brennan and I’ll look forward to talking to you again soon. See you later.

[upbeat music]

[end of transcript]

[upbeat music]

Julia Brennan

Hi, I'm Julia Brennan and I'm Creative Arts Advisor for K-6 for the NSW Department of Education and today I'm with Leanne Carr who is the Education Manager at the Art Gallery of NSW. Welcome Leanne.

Leanne Carr

Hello, how are you?

Julia

Really nice to have you here and we'll talk a little bit more about you in just a second. But everybody out there if you're enjoying this podcast series and you'd like to subscribe make sure you go to soundcloud.com/primarycurriculum all one word and log in with your @education.nsw.gov.au account. You can also join via Facebook or else create your own SoundCloud account. So, I've invited Leanne here today because Leanne and I have been working together over the last couple of years in her capacity as Education Manager at the Art Gallery of NSW and it's just been fantastic for me. I came in for my very first tour around the art gallery with Leanne a couple of years ago and was just so inspired by hearing about her story and all of the things that she had to tell me and all the inspiring ways that she looked at the amazing artworks that are in the art gallery. You know she's been at the art gallery for twelve years now, an Education Manager for four years of that which is fantastic. And one of the exciting things that I discovered when I went there was that most of the artworks that I saw were actually up online. And how great is that for our teachers who can't necessarily get into the art gallery, let's say they're in a rural and remote setting and all of those artworks are up online that they can access freely, so that's fantastic. But, look I do go on and I'd love to hear more about your story Leanne and I'm sure everybody out there would like to hear that too. So, Leanne do you think you could share with us a little bit about how your arts education journey started?

Leanne

It's an interesting one I've always felt like art was part of my life. I used to really love art at school, it was one of those situations. I think you've heard these stories many times with people that live in the art world or work in the art world. It came naturally to me, it was something that I didn't think of not having in my life but then I did become a visual arts teacher for ten years. So, I was working in high schools for that amount of time and I think that was a really wonderful way to start any career because you really see the world in one classroom, you see so many diverse personalities and ways of looking at the world. And I used to love debating with kids about art and thinking about you know how we could approach making and talking about art and studying history etcetera. And then I started working at the art gallery, I did a few things in between that were in the creative arts field but then I worked at the gallery and it was really something that I was really attracted to because even in my teaching I knew the importance of looking at the original work of art and I would constantly have arguments with maths teachers, geography teachers about art excursions and I'd be you know putting my hand up and saying I have to take my Year 11s to the art gallery four times a year because they just have to see art all the time. And I was one of those teachers that also used to put up the scale of artworks, I used to get masking tape and say this is exactly how big artworks were. It was really important to me that they were connecting with an original piece of art. So, when I got a job at the gallery I was like, this was just so natural, this is something where I should have really been at. And I still love seeing kids being inspired by what we can offer. The difference I found too at the gallery is I don't have the world of art in my classroom, I have a collection to look at but I can get a really deep engagement with that collection. And as the exhibitions change you know we have to look at how we can best inspire students. And then it just sort of kicked from there and I've always been in arts education, I've always loved it, I still love it, it still inspires me because I see being in the arts as something where you're never just sort of sitting idle, you're always learning every day and if you have that open mind as many great teachers are they're learning every day with their students not just for their students.

Julia

Leanne, you've sort of talked to us a little bit about how much the arts means to you but you know how has it influenced your life both professionally and personally?

Leanne

I feel like I don't work like in a job, it's actually part of my life because if I'm doing a lot of creative thinking I work with a team of really talented people.

Julia

Team work is so important isn't it?

Leanne

It's fantastic. So, there's nothing that comes out of the gallery that hasn't been a team effort. So, we love working together and trying to pull things together in a creative way and trying to push the boundaries. There's never a day where we think 'Oh, we've done everything now'. It's always something to do, something that we can aim for. And I think when you're in the creative arts you are really trying to find, there is no end game but you're always aiming for it and that process, a process of building and discovering the world differently with your team or your colleagues is the most inspiring part. So, even with my own kids I'll say I'm not saying I'm going to work today I say I'm going to the gallery today. So, I never feel like I've ever had a job. I feel like I just work here.

Julia

What I really picked up on just in that statement was the importance of process, it doesn't always have to be a product and we see that so often that people think I've got to create this incredible artwork by the end of my lesson. That's not about that is it?

Leanne

Not at all, not at all. I think the process is where you really see those inspiring moments. And just recently we've had some school groups coming in from Western Sydney public schools and they were inspired by an artist called Christo and Jeanne-Claude and the wrapped coast and at the moment we have the Kaldor Public Art Projects fiftieth anniversary exhibition on making it public. The students are being inspired by the Christo work and I'm seeing these groups of Year 7 girls and boys depending on the school and they're creating these massive Christo works with easels and furniture and themselves, they're wrapping themselves and they're so into it, it's like they're in another world, they're not mucking around, they're not thinking or being distracted, they're so focused on creating these amazing pieces and they're so different and vast and then they're so proud of it when they talk about it to everybody else. So, I mean...

Julia

So, they're sort of critically unpacking it afterwards and discussing it.

Leanne

They own it. So, because of this collaboration or because of the process, the process is what's helping them to connect with their artwork so they're not just being told how to paint or draw which feels like someone's telling them how to be artistic, they become artistic themselves. So, then they own it and they're proud of it and then they want to show it to everybody. And it might not look perfect, it might have some rough edges but that's not about that, it's about building a self-esteem, thinking creatively because you want our kids from primary school to be creative thinkers. You want them to not be afraid of going out into the world and trying to fix or solve problems in anyway, it doesn't matter what career they go into.

Julia

So, I think you've actually almost answered the next question. What is the power of the visual arts to you?

Leanne

The power of the visual arts, well it inspires too, it doesn't have to be always something that you have to always learn from or with. We see many students that come in the gallery and just want to look at art and just enjoy looking at it. So, it has this great depth of understanding of art and you can really get something out of it by really understanding it but you can also just love it just by looking at it. And you can have a personal connection with it.

Julia

Absolutely. The few times that I've gone into the gallery to meet you and I've sort of stood around afterwards and looked around and I just get lost, it's just mesmerising, you're sort of transported into it.

Leanne

Yeah. And I have to say if I've got a block upstairs at my desk I'll walk around the gallery and that's where I find my answers. And I usually look at other kids too doing their thing and I realise 'Oh, okay I can see where we can make things better or things differently. Yeah, yeah, yeah, yeah.'

Julia

So, do you think that's a theme that is with all of the arts. I mean obviously we don't have that visual impact of looking at an artwork in the other art forms but I guess we can look at performances and things like that in the other art forms. What's the common sort of general theme in the arts?

Leanne

I suppose it's just about using your senses, all the senses is what an artist thinks about when they're creating visual arts but they're also doing that with music, with drama, they're not just blocking one sense out for another. It's all about how you encompass yourself as a whole and it's not just what you see, it's what you hear, what you even taste sometimes with art. Yeah and move and it's all about bringing all of those senses together and stimulating your brain in so many ways.

Julia

Which is so important too because I think we do live in such a visually driven world with our devices and all that sort of stuff, we're constantly looking at all of that. So, to use those other senses is so important.

Leanne

Absolutely, absolutely. And now with art too there's so many artists that work performative practice or they're looking at installation art. You know there's so many different art forms now that kids can really get into and get excited about.

Julia

3D and textures.

Leanne

Yeah, everything, absolutely.

Julia

Fantastic. Look, in talking about all this though I mean you've obviously got a background in the arts and particularly visual arts, is it possible for a teacher who has got limited experience in the arts to you know make some headway in teaching the visual arts?

Leanne

Yeah, of course, of course.

Julia

How do you go about it?

Leanne

Well, I suppose from my job too I've had the opportunity to meet so many different teachers that have come from all sorts of places from around the state, right across the state, even interstate and internationally. And you will always find there's a hesitation out of teachers that haven't had that sort of experience of art that I've had. And I've always been very respectful that they've come from a different journey. And I think if we just make sure as teachers that we keep an open mind and we just make little steps and it could just be coming to a professional learning day and just getting inspired maybe by one session of that day. Just going and keeping your mind open and thinking alright, I'm not into art, I'm really into sport or I'm really into maths but there could be something from this art professional learning day that could help me in my whole career.

Julia

And what's great is you're really aware we're creating an online introduction to visual arts course so that's going to really help people out there too and we've been working hand in hand on that. Lots of lovely links to the gallery in there.

Leanne

But I think it's like never just sort of disregard any experience. I used to always go into a professional learning program going okay, I'm going to learn something and I'm going to implement something from that day regardless of what it is, it could be a tiny thing, it could be the whole day into my practice when I go back into the classroom. And if you keep that open mind you will be able to take in a lot more influence from people around you.

Julia

Let's say we don't have the opportunity to do some professional learning, how can we go about starting our journey in our own classrooms. Can you give us an example perhaps drawing on particular artworks?

Leanne

Yeah, I mean looking at art is a nice, fantastic way to do it and I always encourage, I mean I am biased but I encourage that all teachers, primary teachers especially at Australian art collections. Sometimes you will go to the favourites like Van Gogh or Matisse or Monet, Picasso. And we've got some of those in the collection by the way but I always encourage that you should be looking at art that kids can see. So, even if you can't get to an excursion, to any of those state galleries that you look at, you can at least get a resource that you know is up to date on our website. All our collection has web pages like you mentioned before and curators are constantly updating that information to make sure it's all very accurate but also kids can also come with their families which they constantly do into the gallery.

Julia

They can go to their local gallery if they're in a regional area.

Leanne

Absolutely and I've always even encouraged if you don't have a local gallery close, if you don't have a state gallery close you can do things online but try and see original art and there's always a public sculpture somewhere in the town or the area, even town halls have art. There's art somewhere where you can see it but there's also touring shows, so we do a lot of touring shows.

Julia

There's community members within our school.

Leanne

Yeah, absolutely. You can have your own exhibition, have a competition for kids you know and that will bring artists that are in the community to the school, get in touch with what's going on in your own place.

Julia

Australian artists can you give us a few names that perhaps we really should be looking at.

Leanne

Yeah, I mean I always like encouraging female artists too, so you could look at Grace Cossington Smith, that's a nice, fantastic artist who worked in the early 20th century and Margaret Preston. There's a whole lot of information on those artists but also just their work is very interesting. One of my favourite artists is Rosalie Gascoigne and Rosalie Gascoigne is a bit later in the 20th century and she started her art making much later in life. I think she was in her late fifties in fact but she said that her training to become an artist by the time she got to fifty seven say when she started was that she was always looking, always looking at the world and that was her inspiration. And one of the things she said that she always had restless hands. And I always like thinking about Rosalie Gascoigne when I think about kids because they're always quite restless, they're jumping out of their skin sometimes when they come to the gallery because they're so excited about what they're seeing and they want to be part of the conversation. But she always had restless hands and her work is all about looking at the found object. So, she finds these pieces that have been discarded in the environment or in the community and then she recreates them into art. And what I love about that is you can see where the history of that object came from but now it's become new and there's a new history with that artwork and then it reminds us of things that we see every day. So, for example there's a work that she's created called 'Metropolis' she created in the late nineties and it's made of old road signs. So, it's just yellow and black letters and the letters have now been reformed to look like new words or even abstract. So, now all of a sudden a functional symbol or shape which always makes art a spelling or a word has now been rearranged and you have to sort of try and figure out what it says and then it becomes abstract. So, now they've just become forms. And then you start thinking about what is literacy and how you pull literacy together. And we create some activities for primary kids with that work where they have to find letters and recreate words out of those letters and then also think about what it means and so how do the words in the artwork respond to what they think it's talking about. Everyone's looking at the same artwork and everyone's got the same ambition. So, if you all say 'Right, everyone write a sentence that has to do with the letters in that work'. They're all the same instruction but they'll all be different outcomes.

Julia

Okay, now let's talk about that with artworks because that's a bit of a bug bear with me. It makes me upset when I see artworks that are all identical hanging in a classroom.

Leanne

Yeah.

Julia

How do we go about this? Like we're giving the same instructions as you said, how do we go about getting different artworks? Talk us through that.

Leanne

You have to not try and offer the outcome to the students. So, if you have a printout and you say 'I want you just to do your own thing in the printout'. The printout has already gone too far, what you need to say in fact is you have to think about the material you use, you can use the same materials, you could use the same amount of materials. It could just be use three colours or use five colours, you could still go through maybe the colour wheel or something that you feel you want to have some foundational knowledge in. But the outcome could be but you know paint a picture of spring or summer or autumn or winter, it doesn't have to be everyone draw the same picture but use you know different colours in variations. Just think, I always tend to think for especially with primary when you feel like you really need to have some sort of foundational understanding, you think about why you're doing it, you think about why am I making this artwork'Is it just to tick a box or is it to inspire? Is it to make us feel connected with art'And if it is to connect with art, every student should be creating a different outcome. And it doesn't have to be neat. And I know that can be difficult sometimes in a primary classroom when you're doing so many different subjects in that same room. You might not be going to an art specialist room, you're just working in your own classroom so you want something to look nice on the wall but you can also create things that are collaborative. You could have pieces that are created by each student and then put them up as a huge mural work. You don't have to have them all identical. And also don't be afraid of sculpture and don't be afraid of performance or sound art and that's where you might have to do a bit more reading, look at resources online. We've got heaps of resources online.

Julia

Well, that links really well with all the other art forms too, doesn't it?

Leanne

Exactly and we've been talking a lot about STEAM too in the classroom and in the gallery especially and how do we incorporate looking at science and technology, engineering, maths and art you know together and how is it creative? So, you know it's all exciting if you just open your mind just be brave, a little bit brave.

Julia

So, speaking of braveness, any examples leaping out at you of some incredible things that you've seen produced by primary school students?

Leanne

Yeah, there's been some really interesting work like we do this program called art box and the art boxes have all these little devices in them and even like small things like for example we've got a microphone in there. And when you give a kid a microphone they just change, it's amazing and we get them to be like the person that has to be the expert on what they're seeing and they'never seen the work. But they're amazing at being the expert at it and they have turns in being that. Or I've seen them being wrapped up in butcher paper with you know the children's guides or the artist educators that we have on staff. And you have these like kids that are just pulling these artworks together and they're not questioning what art is and I think sometimes we think that our own definition of art as an older person when we have our own sort of understanding of the world in a different way. Kids are still open and still sponges. So, when we say you know oh this little sort of sculpture in the corner is an artwork and this painting is an artwork and this performance is an artwork, they're like yeah, okay I get that. It's sometimes our own limitations that slow us down but the kids don't need to slow down, they in fact can also help us to understand what it is, yeah. So, we see a lot of kids doing some amazing work in the gallery a lot in front of original artworks which is what we love.

Julia

Leanne, I want to talk a little bit about Aboriginal art. So, we so often see and hear about dot paintings and very limited colour patterns and copying artworks. Some schools will avoid it altogether because they don't want to do the wrong thing. Now, I love those artworks that you see in some situations where they've drawn inspiration from Aboriginal artworks or Aboriginal experiences or stories and they tell those stories without copying. Can you give us some examples of some Aboriginal art that have really inspired you or Aboriginal inspired art that you may have seen from primary teachers or students?

Leanne

We have seen some fantastic examples through our work with teachers from public schools across Sydney as part of the Koori art expressions project and that's part of the Department of Education and it's an annual exhibition of student artwork that is created in response to the theme from NAIDOC week. And since 2009 we've been running this professional learning day and we've had some fantastic examples come out of that program. And what these teachers do is they engage with Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander art from our collections and they have talks from our curators, educators, indigenous educators, key artists etcetera because it's really important to have that authentic voice in the process and then you start to see the rich learning experiences that teachers can engage with in the classroom and they're very doable ideas and activities. I think people sometimes are quite afraid to start, they're not quite sure where to start. And so this is a space where I really feel that teachers do need to either look at our online resources which have been created by our curators, by indigenous educators and by our specialists where we are really unpacking how to look at an Aboriginal artwork, how to engage with it in art making as well for primary teachers.

Julia

It sounds like a really valuable resource.

Leanne

Yeah and I think you shouldn't be afraid to not keep learning about it, this is where we really need to not just rely on a professional learning day or a resource you might have looked at ten years ago, you really need to keep your knowledge up and you really need to have more current and dynamic experiences and come to either learning days or look at resources all the time because it is evolving and changing like all art. You know when I started teaching I was teaching artists in my first year that by the ninth or tenth year I was teaching completely different artists. I was constantly relearning, relearning. And this is where in this space especially you should be really looking at that and engaging. But there's some fantastic resources and programs that are running through the department, through the gallery, you know through the home program.

Julia

It is all about, you know there is a video, is online on the department page, our curriculum page which is called 'Beyond the dots' and it is about moving beyond the dots and really about thought and thinking and inspiration and those sort of things.

Leanne

Exactly. The diversity of the practice of the art making runs across Australia, there's all different types of approaches and we shouldn't just be relying on one thing and we should be thinking in a more broad way, more contemporary way. So, that's really important. Yeah, just to keep your knowledge up. So, I expect you all to come to the gallery.

Julia

So, talking about the gallery, tell us what an average day in the gallery might look like because so many people want to know what you do all day, every day.

Leanne

Well, the gallery doors actually open at ten o'clock. So, we have the pleasure of looking at behind the scenes for an hour before the doors open and that's usually when the curators have their specialist brushes and they're dusting all the sculptures or they're looking at the frames or they're doing all their you know touch ups etcetera, whatever they have to do. And then you've got installation crews moving artworks around with their big cherry pickers. And you've got exhibition managers and curators all sort of also there in the entourage. And then we'll start looking at, security will start turning up, they're there 24/7 by the way. But in terms of the day security they'll start having their meetings, front of house will do the same and then we'll start looking at when the school program is going to start and have welcome hosts start getting prepared at the front etcetera. So, all of that happens and then the doors open. And then my favourite time in the day is when the primary kids come in because it's always about how excited they look when they come in and they look up and they look around and they just can't believe where they are and it's really exciting that they still get a buzz out of coming to the gallery. So, I love that moment when the front doors open.

Julia

Who are some of the amazing people you've worked with. I know when I went in every time I go into the gallery I get a bit star struck.

Leanne

Well, yeah I mean yesterday I had a few star struck moments. I had while we were doing that big project I was mentioning I had John Kaldor was with me that day and he was part of the program, he wanted to talk to the students because he loves talking to kids and about Kaldor projects. And then Ben Quilty came down the escalators and Gretel Packer was there.

Julia

Name dropping!

Leanne

I'm sorry, you asked me, you asked me.

Julia

Exactly.

Leanne

But I mean you know my biggest inspiration is actually my team, my team is the most talented team in the whole gallery, I'm not biased, yes I am, I'm sure I am, but they are incredibly talented and they inspire me every day. So, it doesn't have to be a name but it is definitely, we do see the artists are walking around and it's really great to have conversations with them and they really love to know what we're doing in education. So, we are very connected to the arts.

Julia

That's fantastic that they really are inspired by what you're doing in education, they're realising that's their future.

Leanne

That's right, that's right, they're passionate about how kids respond to their work and if they're contemporary artists they just really want to know what's going on. So, it's fabulous, yeah.

Julia

Yeah, great. Look, I'd like to sort of wrap up but before we do that you know very well that my favourite artist is Jeffrey Smart we've talked about ...

Leanne

Yes.

Julia

... on numerous occasions and I love his fascination with geometry and the Australian landscape but looking at it in such different and surreal sort of eyes. Who's your favourite artist and why?

Leanne

People ask me this a lot, it's really hard because it moves and changes and shifts around but I do love the females I have to say, I'm going to stick with the female theme this time around. So Rosalie Gascoigne is on top of my list I think. I think Rosemary Laing, a photographer does some amazing work, I really love her work, it really explores environment and looking at the world a bit differently. I always seem to get attracted to artists who do that sort of thing. There's some little favourites in there like I suppose the Picasso, the Picasso is sort of cool, people always look for that and just to have a Picasso in the collection is pretty nice. The Australians, you know there's some really amazing Australian artists that I like, Frederick McCubbin or just I don't know there's so many, I don't know. I think Margaret Preston and Grace Cossington Smith are sort of like the female champions of the 20th century. So, I think that they're really something that everybody should be inspired by, so it's really good.

Julia

Now, just before we close have you got any inspiring last words or messages that you would like to say to students or teachers mainly who will be out there listening to today's podcast.

Leanne

That art is part of your life, it's not just a subject, it teaches you about who you are. Students would come and say you know in maths I learn about maths and that's great. You know I get a lot of knowledge out of that but when I do art I learn about myself. And when you know that art is so powerful that in fact can change or influence your personality and your character and how you see the world then I mean I think we're doing the right thing.

Julia

Thank you again Leanne Carr for coming in from the Art Gallery of NSW. It's been absolutely lovely to have you here today and you're very wise and I've learnt so much through our conversations, not just today but in the past.

Leanne

Well, you too darling you're very inspiring too and do some great work. Well done.

Julia

Thanks. If you enjoyed listening to today's podcast and you'd like to subscribe remember you can go to soundcloud.com/primarycurriculum and sign in with your @education.nsw.gov.au account or go through Facebook or create your own SoundCloud account and make sure you press on the orange follow button. Look forward to talking to you again soon.

[upbeat music]

[end of transcript]

[upbeat music]

Julia Brennan

Welcome to the second podcast about the creative arts. And as I’ve mentioned to you before if you would like to follow these podcasts you go to soundcloud.com/primarycurriculum all one word and click on the orange follow button. Log in with your @education.nsw.gov.au account or if you’re a non-DoE person go through Facebook or alternatively create your own SoundCloud account. And we’ll have lots of interviews and discussions with principals and arts educators, teachers, industry professionals, even a few famous people coming along and we’ll be talking about general information about the Creative Arts. So, today I’ve got in the studio with me Susan Sukkar and many of you will know Susan, she’s worked with I don’t know how many students over the years but a lot with her current role as a Arts Coordination Officer. But you might know her through the Festival of Instrumental Music which she has run for a gazillion years and I’m sure Susan will talk us through that a little bit later. But I’d like to introduce Susan and welcome her today, hi Susan.

Susan Sukkar

Thank you, Julia.

Julia

So, Susan and I first met a really long time ago. We’d been trying to work out where or when but I think what we can track it back to is around about the time of the Sing 2001 choir program which was set up to really as an opening ceremony item for the 2000 Olympics. And I was a new grad at the time and I remember my principal saying to me ‘Oh, look you’ve got a bit of a musical background, why don’t you go for this?’ Because they were auditioning for people to take some of these choirs. And I had absolutely no confidence and thought really I don’t have that much of a musical ability but I’ll give it a go. And I remember I think it was actually Richard Gill who came along at the time and auditioned me with my Year 1 class …

Susan

No pressure whatsoever.

Julia

… and I taught them to sing a round and he obviously saw potential in there and thankfully got lots of professional learning and I believe that’s where I first met you.

Susan

Probably. My story is a little bit similar in that I was sitting in a staff meeting at the beginning of the year for a teaching position, I had a classroom position and they were going through the list of duties and they were saying ‘Who would like to wash the tea towels? And who would like to be the Fed rep? And who would like to take the choir?’ And nobody put their hand up and they said ‘Really, nobody?’ And nobody put their hand up and I said ‘Well, I’ve got a little bit of a music background and if there’s nobody else to take the choir’. I hated the thought of the choir not existing. I’ll do that. And the rest is history. So, I’m like Julia I came into it from a music background but as a generalist teacher and without thinking that I had the necessary skill set that was required. And yes, so I’ve been on that journey with Julia all these years. And in fact it was the last millennium that we met, that seems like a very long time ago.

Julia

Saying something about our age I think.

Susan

Well, you know we have had a lot of experience and lots of amazing times in-between. So, it’s been a privilege to work in this area of education and I wouldn’t have it any other way.

Julia

So, you’ve sort of told us a little bit about your music education journey there but like how did it transpire from there? Obviously you started taking the choir but what happened next? What were the next steps?

Susan

Well, I started to look for opportunities for the choir to perform and obviously the Arts Unit opportunities came up and the school had been successful in the past, in years past in auditioning for those opportunities so the Sing 2001 started and I also auditioned for that and was successful in winning one of those places. And I started auditioning the choir for various things and very quickly discovered that the adjunctive of those performance opportunities and not even the performance opportunities but the repertoire that was so carefully selected and so suitable for primary children was like absolutely essential to my music teaching practice and I was taken off classroom teaching and put onto RFF music at this large school with over seven hundred children. So, I was hungry all the time for repertoire and you know the Vocal Ease all came out around that time. I went to every professional development that was available and sort of soaked it up and it was so great …

Julia

That’s probably why our paths kept crossing. We were following the same trajectory.

Susan

Yes.

Julia

So, Susan you have obviously got a musical background but that’s not something that we all necessarily need to have to make this journey start.

Susan

No, it’s a love of music and the desire to have a go and to enrich the lives of students through music. And I always find with teachers that I work with that once they start that journey and they see the enormous and immediate response from children and their enthusiasm and their love of learning they often feel starved for that type of experience I feel children and teachers. And once they start that journey it’s self-propagating, you know it just continues.

Julia

And that’s something I said in that very first podcast was that I think teachers who will deprive their students of an arts education really they’re starving those students of something that is so important for their lives and so important for the future of our country.

Susan

Absolutely and it’s a human condition to love the arts, it’s part of our DNA, we all love music. If your love of music happens to be country and western and you take that to your children in the classroom and show them that you love it and explain why. The children will start to love it too, they catch that enthusiasm and it enriches their lives and then that has a spill on effect to every other aspect of education, that joy, that spontaneity, that creativity flows over into everything else.

Julia

So, if I’m out there listening to you talking Susan and I hear okay, well you’ve got all these skills behind you but I don’t have much, I’m pretty limited in my experience. Let’s say I’m a cricket player and I’m really great at that but I’m really aware that I need to start teaching my students some music but I’m scared to death. What do I do?

Susan

Well, there are so many resources and things that you can delve into and the Vocal Ease MORE resource that has now just been released, that’s the genre of the music is very varied so that you will always be able to find some way of hooking into children through the music that you love. You actually will realise that you know a lot more than you thought you knew. If you take the creative arts (music) syllabus, K-6 syllabus and apply that to music that you love as a starting point with the children. So, it might be beat, it might be pitch, it might be an ostinato that you can hear through the music. If you look at the curriculum it isn’t that difficult to breakdown the composite parts and analyse a piece of music and take it from there.

Julia

I think it’s a lot to do with getting past that initial fear of ‘I can’t do this’. And as I said last time you know quoting Master Yoda that there’s no such thing as try, just get in there and do it. And that’s what happened for me, I was kind of forced, my hand was forced, go in and try, well, I’ve just said don’t just try but go in and do it and you’ll be amazed. And once I broke down that initial barrier, the sky was the limit for me and it really surprised me what I was capable of. So, I think that’s a really important message to get out to people out there.

Susan

It’s true and teachers are inherently creative people, they have to be, you have to be flexible, creative, a blue sky thinker to be a good teacher. So, if you take those qualities into your classroom and have a go with the children they will forgive your errors, it’s your enthusiasm, it’s your passion for music that they will pick up on. I’m constantly learning from teachers. I do professional development with teachers everyday, almost you know on a daily basis and everyday I learn something from a teacher. I watch what they’re doing and think ‘Oh my gosh that is a great idea, I had never thought of that’. And a child will ask a question and take you off onto another tangent and the lesson will go off in another direction that you couldn’t possibly have imagined initially. You need to be flexible, you need to enjoy it and have a go.

Julia

So, what if I’m one of those people who back in the day was perhaps tapped on the shoulder and said no, you’re not in the choir because you can’t sing in tune or someone’s told me somewhere along my journey that I can’t sing, what do you do?

Susan

Well, you hear that all the time from teachers and it makes me so mad because learning to sing is a skill and it’s a skill that needs to be carefully attended to. So, it’s almost akin to saying to somebody like me who is very, very bad physically, go and jump those ten hurdles over there without knocking one over. Well, I could never ever do that, it would never happen. I can sing because I’ve got some natural sort of ability but everybody has that ability, it’s a matter of finding the right repertoire of not jumping in trying to sing. And this is an example I give all the time to teachers: ‘Red and yellow and pink and green, orange and purple and blue. I can sing a rainbow, sing a rainbow, sing a rainbow too’. Okay, lovely words, lovely kindergarten sort of message, very, very difficult. The range of the notes, the intervals: ‘I can sing a rainbow’. Very, very difficult. So, any teacher trying to sing that without the background and the pre-learning, it just won’t work. So, you must learn to assess the music and to pick and that’s why things like Vocal Ease More are so useful because all of that has been done for you.

Julia

The curating.

Susan

Yes, the ranges of the songs, the sort of sequence of learning the music so that it’s broken down into bite sizes. I have never met a teacher that I couldn’t work with so that they could sing in tune I have to say. I’ve had bets along the way and I’ve won them every time.

Julia

So, in saying that, okay so you’ve given us an example of something hard, if I wanted to start, where could I start?

Susan

Well, there are masses of primary school level music that’s available. So, you could start with chants, you could start with very limited …

Julia

Okay, so through speech.

Susan

Yes.

Julia

Yes, so we’re using speech to start.

Susan

Yes and you go from speech to chanting which is rhythmic speech to very simple songs like: ‘Seesaw, up and down’ the minor third descending ‘in the sky and on the ground’.

Julia

Don’t worry if you don’t understand what that terminology means. All that’s just your siren.

Susan

Exactly.

Julia

Apparently the first interval that children ever hear is that interval.

Susan

And it is also the interval that is cross-cultural.

Julia

Absolutely.

Susan

If you go to Japan and go into a classroom or a playground you’ll hear that interval, Hungary, Australia, anywhere in the world. So, it’s very natural.

Julia

And in saying that think about children’s singing games and their clapping games that you might see in the playground.

Susan

‘You’re king of the castle, get down you dirty rascal’.

Julia

That’s not very nice, Susan. What about something like you know Frère Jacques or something like that? So, let’s just sing that one.

Susan and Julia

Frère Jacques Frère Jacques Dormez-vous? Dormez-vous? Sonnez les matines Sonnez les matines Ding, ding, dong Ding, ding, dong.

Julia

Now, let’s say for fun we wanted to change the words and I’ve done this a lot with students over the years where we just changed it to something that’s fun for them. So, let’s try the Star Wars version.

Julia and Susan

R2-D2 R2-D2 C-3PO C-3PO Obi-Wan Kenobi Obi-Wan Kenobi Han Solo Han Solo.

Susan

Han Solo Han Solo, sorry I got mixed up with that.

Julia

No, that’s alright. Now, let’s go even further with that, just say we were in a classroom and want to have a bit of fun. I’ll do just one about you.

Susan

Okay, and I will answer.

Julia

So, you’re going to make one up back to me?

Susan

I will.

Julia

Wow, this is getting complicated. Okay. Susan Sukkar Susan Sukkar She’s very clever She’s very clever She’s a great musician She’s a great musician Wow, she’s good Wow, she’s good.

Susan

You are great You are great. We’re patting each other on the back here aren’t we?

Julia

That was a bit of fun but that’s great fun kids can have. We are 3B We are 3B and so on you know making up things, yeah.

Susan

And you can change words to nursery rhymes too and to things like Diddle, Diddle Dumpling, Richard Gill’s set of those beautiful nursery rhymes that we’re losing out of our culture.

Julia

Nursery rhymes are so important aren’t they?

Susan

They really, really are and there are lots of examples of those but you can take one of those nursery rhymes and personalise it to a child in your class and when you do do that the look on their face is …

Julia

It’s gorgeous isn’t it?

Susan

… precious because they realise that you’ve picked them and you’re making up something about them, they love it.

Julia

Yeah, now look in saying that we just launched straight into singing that in a round. Now, you wouldn’t do that if you were not feeling very confident in music, you would start with just singing it as we did without doing it as a round and then gradually building up that singing in a round skill. Because that takes some time and some practice, you have to be really confident with the melody and everything first don’t you?

Susan

Yes. Well, you noticed us we were sort of or me in particular …

Julia

What are you saying Susan?

Susan

You know I wouldn’t like to listen back to that with a tuner on because you know it’s not an easy skill, that’s right. So, these people that have been told when they’re a little child you know you should never sing, you go out and skip and stop singing is hurtful and it’s a very strong message that people carry as a hurt and it should never happen and we need very much to guard against that making those very sweeping judgements about people’s musicianship.

Julia

Oh absolutely, I remember my mother telling me she never ever sang to me when I was a child because she’d been told she couldn’t do it. Someone at school had told her that.

Susan

And that’s you know that’s just not true, it’s a learnt skill it’s and it’s one that has to be carefully worked on. So, keep singing in the shower, sing away, don’t worry about what other people say, use the music that you know and enjoy as a starting point with your class. Do some research into that. Go into other key learning areas, have a look at the words.

Julia

Yes, absolutely. You know don’t be scared to use recordings as well as long as they’re good recordings and sing along with those too.

Susan

Yes, absolutely. You know it’s a matter of just introducing music that you love to your children. I think that’s the most important message.

Julia

Absolutely. Now, talking about that though, let’s say you don’t really, I know you do love classical music but let’s say that you didn’t and it’s not something that you listen to. What’s your position on teaching classical music in the classroom or having some classical music for the students to listen to?

Susan

My position is that classical music forms part of the genre of music for all of us and that just because you’re unfamiliar with it, doesn’t mean that you should shy away from it. Stories that are told through classical music can be incredibly powerful to children. You can Google anything these days so you can find adventures in music and you can be listening to all sorts of music and I believe that classical music should be part of that cannon of what we teach to children. Just because you haven’t got any experience with it doesn’t mean that you should shy away from it.

Julia

Absolutely.

Susan

Just listen to it, find a piece in the ‘Hall of the Mountain King’ from the Peer Gynt Suite, ‘Rodeo’ from Aaron Copland, things that are very strongly programmatic.

Julia

The Four Seasons.

Susan

Yes and tie into other areas and just Google classical music for children and listen through to things. I have seen a simple listening lesson where a piece of music has been put on, children are sitting and listening and I have seen children be absolutely captivated and transported and they’re not the ones that you necessarily would think be the ones that have been transported by this music. So, it can lead into an art lesson, it can lead into a creative writing lesson so easily. It can be used as a lesson break to just you know as a circuit breaker in the classroom for children to relax, to breathe. You will come up with all sorts of ideas if you start to think about what you can do.

Julia

Absolutely. So, we know that music is a universal language and basically you’ve already said that but how could we relate music in our classroom to other cultures?

Susan

Well, you know every culture has its own specific music and so it’s quite easy to find examples of that music and then to go and research.

Julia

Or ask the students themselves.

Susan

Yeah and one thing I’ve done is I actually asked the class to ask their mums and grandmothers and grandfathers for that matter and fathers to sing a lullaby to them, something that they use to go to sleep.

Julia

It’s kind of their homework, isn’t it gorgeous?

Susan

And actually got them to come in and sing it to the class and to teach it.

Julia

Wow.

Susan

Because usually the language is very limited and you know so it’s something that you can actually teach another language to the class and that makes that child feel so valued that their culture, that their traditions are being valued by a whole class of children. And a lullaby always has very small number of lyrics. So, just quite simple and they can just come and sing it or they can record them.

Julia

And nice and soft and gentle too. I think our students are so exposed to things like the Voice and Australia’s Got Talent and all of those things I think they’ve got to belt everything out and use this really big chest voice and you know blast the roof off the building but beautiful, gentle singing is the best way to do it and it’s the best way not to damage your voice as well.

Susan

Absolutely.

Julia

Now, I wanted to talk to you about a difficult topic which is notation. Now, this is always a block for teachers if they don’t read music they think I can’t do it, I’m not going to do it, it is too hard. Now, I know and you know that really reading notation (a) it’s an expectation of the syllabus, talking about that sound to symbol relationship but it’s actually just a mathematical code, it is really just symbols on a page to represent a sound, that is all it is. Now, we’re not saying that you have to go out and suddenly start doing music lessons so that you can read music but getting the idea across to yourself and to the students that notation in the primary school is about getting that sound to symbol relationships so we start with graphic notation and then we can build it up. How have you dealt with that with teachers who don’t know how to read music and maybe are reluctant to do it?

Susan

Well, again exactly as you said, you start off with a very limited palette of rhythmic notations and you teach it alongside the children. So, every teacher is able to read you know a crotchet, two quavers and a crotchet rest or ta tee tee and sa rest.

Julia

So, we could think of it like a whole pizza for ta, a pizza cut in half for tee tee and a sa, the whole pizza’s been eaten.

Susan

Yes. Oh yes you could do that.

Julia

All we’ve got left is the packet to show that there’s still a beat there.

Susan

That’s right.

Julia

Nothing left of it.

Susan

And you can devise it in all sorts of different ways but I start off with teaching that, it’s very interesting how much you can do with just those three, you can do all sorts of games with auditory imagination, auditory memory, auditory awareness. So, just those three things can be used to build a whole lot of lessons around teaching those very, very fundamental and important skills that our children we all feel as teachers are losing. You know they are that ability to listen and to focus and to because of the amount of stimulation that’s coming into the world …

Julia

Absolutely.

Susan

… is a challenge for many, many children and so you can use those things to teach that then adding pitch to those rhythms is another so just a note and then a note above and the note below and just adding.

Julia

A gradual process.

Susan

Yes. And for the majority of primary school children and teachers that is enough. So, if they do go onto private lessons in you know or instrumental lessons at another time that’s given them the foundations and the concepts of the principles to start to learn more complex notation. But from that point it’s really up to the individual to see how far they develop. And a lot of teachers do get a great kick out of being able to do that and to realise oh, yes well, there’s and so much out there now to help you with it. There’s so many tutorials and you can go into Vocal Ease 2, Vocal Ease More, all of those departmental resources.

Julia

The animated scores that follow along and show you what to do and how to read it. Yeah, it shouldn’t be a stumbling block and again even just starting with graphic notation of you know a triangle equals this instrument and a circle means play this instrument and a big one might mean loud and a small one might mean soft and if it’s up high on the page then it might be a high sound and down low might be a low sound. Those sort of starting points, it shouldn’t be a hurdle. Now, Susan we’ve talked a lot about music, what about the other art forms in your opinion, let’s talk about the importance of all the art forms.

Susan

Well, for me I feel like to divorce them and to put them all into their own little category is a really alien concept to me. Movement, dance and music just go together. Dramatising you know chants and if you’re channelling your inner Richard Gill as I always say you know you dramatise everything that you’re doing with children, it’s hard not to and to move and I know that dance has its own repertoire of movement and terminology and symbols and all of those things and I’m completely you know I respect all of that but I also think that there’s a symbiosis that goes with all of these things that happens automatically and one thing leads to another. So, as I was saying you know if you’re singing a song or you’re listening to a piece of music and it leads to some creative writing it can also move very easily to dance and it can also move to drama and it can very easily go into visual arts.

Julia

Absolutely. And I’ve seen some fantastic local teachers using visual artworks as stimulus for all of the other art forms as well and I just think it’s magical.

Susan

Yeah, they all interrelate and have a relationship with each other and to try and divorce them from each other is counter-intuitive I feel.

Julia

We don’t function like that as people do we? We don’t walk around going I’m only music, I’m only dance, I’m only mathematics, it’s all integrated in our lives.

Susan

And that’s the fun of teaching when you take something like that and then just explore it and go to whatever corner of the Earth that it takes you with your children and with your own creative ideas.

Julia

Fantastic. Well, look is there any other advice that you’d like to offer to some teachers out there who might be struggling with their music or arts journeys? Obviously your background is mainly in music but is there anything that you’d like to pass to those teachers out there who are thinking I can’t do it but I’m on the precipice, I’d really like to give it a go.

Susan

I would say get in touch you know make sure you get in touch with you or with me, there are networks of teachers out there that you can get involved in. There’s a myriad of support documents around and help that you can get. If you have a community of schools perhaps talk to the other teachers and workout whether you can have a music afternoon and all bring something along to the afternoon and invite another person along. You know there are music teachers right over NSW, it’s not as though or and dance and drama. It’s not as though there’s nothing happening so you just need to reach out and make a connection.

Julia

And if you’re on your own just starting with, even if you’ve got a Stage 3 class, there is nothing wrong with starting with a nursery rhyme, getting it chanting, turning it into a rap and then adding some backing music to it. It’s amazing, the sky is the limit really and letting those children take some creative control there and go for it, give them some stimulus.

Susan

Yes and they can use garage band now and make backing tracks. The children are infinitely better at that than we are.

Julia

Absolutely. Comes back to that old digital native statement.

Susan

The children now are fearless and we, I’m talking about myself, a lot of the teachers listening to this are probably in that fearless category. I worry about breaking something or doing it wrong, the children aren’t and they go with them, you know get them to make a film, make a digital and put music to the film and there’s your drama happening. You can have dance and movement happening in there. You know there’s so much that can be done. But reach out for some support if you need that, there’s many people in the department, I know you would be a good starting spot.

Julia

Absolutely. And we’ve got some online courses in music particularly that are great if you’re starting on that musical journey.

Susan

Yes.

Julia

And those are all linked on the education.nsw.gov.au page which is freely available for teachers to look at and download and access courses and they can jump on MyPL and there’s a few music courses there that they can do as well. So, look Susan it’s been fantastic talking with you today and I’m sure everyone’s got a lot out of hearing about your journey and it’s been really exciting. I know how many students out there have been incredibly stimulated in their lives by the work that you’ve done with them over the years and for their teachers. So, thank you and thanks for your time today, it’s been great.

Susan

It’s been a real privilege speaking with you. Thank you very much Julia.

Julia

And if you enjoyed today’s podcast and you would like to follow us so you can get future episodes remember to go to soundcloud.com/primarycurriculum click on the orange follow button and use your @education.nsw.gov.au account to log in and set that all up or otherwise go in through Facebook or create your own SoundCloud account and I’ll look forward to speaking to you very, very soon.

[upbeat music]

[end of transcript]

[upbeat music]

Julia Brennan

Hi, I’m Julia Brennan and I’m the Creative Arts Advisor for K-6 for the NSW Department of Education and welcome to the first in the series of podcasts. And the idea of these podcasts is really to just give you out some general information about the Creative Arts from the NSW context and to just fill you in on some of the things that are happening. And we’re going to be interviewing some principals, leading arts educators, teachers who in most cases will be leading arts educators as well and some industry professionals. We’ve got some really exciting people lined up in this series.

So, today I’m going to start by just introducing what we do in the creative arts in our NSW public schools and just giving you a few little ideas and information about things that are going on. To follow this series of podcasts you go to soundcloud.com/primarycurriculum all one word and click on the orange follow button, simple as that. Now, if you don’t have access to that you can log in with your @education.nsw.gov.au account. Or if you’re not DoE you can go through Facebook or alternatively create your own SoundCloud account. So, we’ll have lots of interviews and discussions coming up and I promise they’ll all be super exciting and informative for you.

So, to start today just a bit of general information about the creative arts in NSW. So, I think it’s really important to get that message out that the key learning area is actually called the creative arts. And when you go to syllabus information from NESA you look at your time allocation well, we do make up a substantial one and a half to two and half hours per week and that incorporates all four of your art forms, so music, dance, drama and visual arts. The way the syllabus is presented is to allow you lots of flexibility and how that can be delivered. But I guess from my point of view it’s really important to reinforce that a little often is how your arts program should look in your schools. Don’t think of it as a necessity to be an external program or to have an external provider coming in. A little bit in your classroom every day is fantastic if you can do it and all four art forms are equally important, really must get that message out that we need to be working on all four of those art forms.

So, in talking about that though I think it’s really important we first of all establish why the arts are important to be teaching in our schools. So, we know within our syllabus content that we’ve got making, performing, composing, or organising sound and appreciating and listening. They’re all important for our learning and they’re all part of the history of our world, they teach us about different cultures, they teach us about different ways of seeing the world. You know if you look around at the original inhabitants of this country and you also look at universal cave drawings around the world we see that the arts form the basis of communication throughout history – artefact, ceremonies, rituals, buildings, they’re all part of our history and so much of it is embedded in the arts.

I’ll just indulge you with a little personal story that I always used to talk to parents about at the beginning of the year and I’d have this fictitious character called Alice. And Alice was this student who was from a very middle class family and was sort of sitting in there going okay at school, not really thriving in the way that she possibly could have. And then Year 4 along came Miss Dodds. I wonder if Miss Dodds is still out there somewhere I hope she is listening to this it would be great. But Miss Dodds came along with a guitar and she promised our Year 4 class that if we worked hard on things that we could sing every day. Now, for me that just switched something on. It was the first time I’d had a teacher who really embraced the arts and thought that that was fantastic. We did visual arts, we did a lot of dancing and we did so much singing and I’m sure there was some drama in there too, I just can’t really remember it at this stage but I just remember that for me that’s when I started to really focus on school and it became important for me and I really started to learn and flourish.

I’m sure we’ve all got those people in our lives, those students who it just takes something to switch them on. I mean I can look at my own family and I’ve got one child who loves the arts and the other one who thrives on STEM, science and technology is his world. So, we’re all different, something makes us tick but we need to understand as a primary school teacher that we need to cover all of those bases so that we do find the thing that makes each one of those students in front of us really tick.

I’d also like to just draw your attention to the rationale that’s in the front of our syllabus, I know it might sound a little bit dry but I think it’s really important that we actually read that from time to time because it tells us why we do what we do in the creative arts. And yes I know our syllabus is old, we’re looking at a revised 2006 document but it does say to us at the beginning that the Creative Arts provides opportunities for students to respect the views of different genders, different cultures, different social groups, people from different religions, belief systems and people with disabilities. All of that diversity can be covered through the arts and it really unites us as a society. So, visual arts, music, drama and dance offer students and people of all ages an opportunity for personal expression, enjoyment, creative action, imagination, emotional response, aesthetic pleasure in the creation of shared meanings.

We learn about the arts, we learn about culture so that we can be informed consumers when we grow up, we can empathise with others not only because it might offer us a career path but just so that we can be out there in the world and knowing those aesthetic things that the creative arts can teach us. I love Sir Ken Robinson and I listen to his podcasts and TED Talks and things and have read his books. And what I love is one particular comment. ‘Learning in and about the arts is essential to our intellectual development. And engaging in the arts is the most vibrant way of seeing and feeling the world as we do. The arts illustrates the diversity of intelligence and provides practical ways of promoting it they’re amongst the most vivid expressions of human cultures.’ That’s just magical. So, I want you to think about those things that I’ve just said from Sir Ken Robinson. So, the arts are about the qualities of human experiences through music, dance, visual arts, drama we give form to our feelings and thoughts about ourselves and we experience the world around us.

So, reflect on that about your own experience and your own teaching. If you’re afraid of teaching the arts, don’t be, focus on what your students need. So, I think the first step in this journey in these podcasts is to talk about how we can go about teaching the arts and to focus on the outcomes and indicators. Take onboard whatever suggestions you can and do let the students have some time to explore. Be a connoisseur of the resources in front of you, not a bowerbird, so don’t just collect stuff, actually really think about what it can do for your students but remember what I said before, a little, often. Integrate arts wherever you can, make it about the real life, it gives it a real context.

So, again coming back to Sir Ken Robinson his comments have been the main role of a teacher is knowing, how, when and ways to teach something, that’s your job, you don’t have to know absolutely everything about every art form, it’s about knowing your students and how they learn. You don’t have to be a specialist or to have specialist skills but you have to have a willingness to learn to accept the offers for advice, assistance and also working with your students. I guess I like that sort of management quote idea with a staircase of which step have I reached today? You know you might start with I won’t do it. I can’t do it. I want to do it. How do I do it? I’ll try to do it. I can do it. I will do it. And yes, I did it.

For me, I just think if you deprive a child of an education with a rich day-to-day opportunity in the arts then you are starving them of a full and well-rounded chance to flourish. You’re also depriving our country of the full extent of its creative potential and the wellbeing needs of its people. I just cannot underestimate what I just said, it’s so important we can’t ignore the arts, it’s our responsibility as educators to give our students every opportunity to thrive. I know you know that but it’s something I feel really passionately about and felt I had to say today.

So, through these podcasts I’m going to talk about each of the art forms separately through some different interviews with different people but today I just sort I’d give you a really brief overview of each of the art forms and some ideas and some teaching tips and things just to breakdown some of those barriers that you might have.

So, if we think about music, you know there’s a lot of media hype around at the moment about ‘Oh, we should do music because it makes you smarter.’ Yes, there’s a lot of research around it and yes, there’s a lot of discussion about it and most of that focuses around these very true facts that are important that yes, music is our first language. Yes, it improves our focus, our concentration, collaboration, cooperation, aesthetic skills, judgement, time management, teamwork, organisation, discretion, judgement, critical and creative thinking and so on the list could go on forever. I would also say that I think this applies to every art form. One thing that I think is really important but is missing from this argument about music making you smarter is what about the joy? Music is about joy and it’s about wellbeing, it’s something that makes us happy. So, music yes also links to literacy and numeracy, we read a text, we compose around it, we read, we recite lyrics, we discuss their meanings. In literacy and numeracy we are also decoding symbols and counting beats, sub dividing beats, creating rhythms, we’re graphing structures, we’re following scores and codes.

So, there’s so many links to literacy and numeracy with music. I’d also draw your attention to one of our outcomes which starts at Stage 1 which is that symbols have to link to sound right from Stage 1. So, if you think about that that’s a very mathematical skill, we’re graphing, we’re looking at shapes, we’re doing that sound to symbol link. The other thing to remember too is that if we’re talking about music being a joyous thing it doesn’t have to necessarily be done by an expert. So, not withdrawn from your classroom.

Music in the classroom is about not necessarily playing instruments or being in a band or a choir, it’s about experiencing music as a class, bring yourselves together enjoying the delight and fun of music whilst developing knowledge skills and appreciation at the same time. It can be as simple as having a beat underneath your spelling words or creating or exploring a musical structure, singing, exploring beats, rhythms, pitches, using nursery rhymes, creating soundscapes or you know pictures through sound based upon a familiar text, right through to accompanying songs with chord notes or getting the students to engage with garage band which in my case they teach me a lot about. You don’t have to be able to read music. I get that all the time I can’t teach music because I can’t read it. You don’t have to be able to do that, you do need to try. I would also really encourage you to incorporate some classical music into your teaching and some music from a variety of cultures and really inclusive for the students in your class.

I’ll just relate you to a story of when you know in a former life I was doing some university work and I had a student who I put on I can’t remember which Beethoven Symphony it was but we were doing some movement to a Beethoven Symphony and she said ‘I would never put on classical music in my class.’ ‘So, why not?’ She said ‘The students won’t like it, they don’t like that sort of music’. ‘So, how would you know that if you’ve never given them the opportunity to try? By all means put on some pop music as a hook in but then also gradually try and introduce some Beethoven or some other classical music or music from other cultures and make them experience other things, that’s our job as educators is to expose students to things that they may not necessarily have had exposure to in the past.’

Now, let’s just talk about visual arts. Visual arts is not about replication, it’s not about copying an artwork or colouring in something, it’s about exploring and discovering, use what you see as inspiration by all means, you know there’s some fantastic artworks out there that we need to be using for that sort of inspiration and using those techniques and those colours and that sort of thing but allow the students to do it in their own way.

There are so many incredible links in visual arts to critical and creative thinking and literacy and numeracy. We are depicting and creating narratives, factual texts through artworks, we’re illustrating, we’re discussing, we’re making meaning about various artworks that we might see, we’re measuring when we’re doing say for example a portrait. There’s a lot of measurement involved in that. We’re examining proportions and perspective both physically and mentally. I think it’s really important too with visual arts to be asking lots of why and how questions when you’re looking at artworks and illustrations. I read a magical quote the other day about a teacher who thrived on seeing her students’ crinkly eyebrows. I thought isn’t that magical, that’s through those why and how questions, that real critical thinking.

So, visual arts is a journey of appreciation, it’s just so extensive. You can explore techniques and forms, look at the context and the meaning of artworks and relate to your own environment but give the students time to explore. In saying that though I really think it’s important you preface it with clear guidelines for behaviour and clean up. Much as I was saying with the music example that people won’t do it because they think they can’t read music. A lot of people say ‘visual arts, I’m not doing that because it’s too messy’. Establish some clear routines, the clean-up and setting up. Get a team together whose responsibility it is for each of those parts of the visual arts experience, it’s about establishing those guidelines and then smooth sailing.

I’d also really encourage you to use resources that we’ve got around us like the Art Gallery of NSW for example, their website is fantastic and it’s full of artworks, look at those artworks, discuss them, then use the techniques or the inspiration or the themes or the meanings to create your own artworks. I’m a little bit of an outcome nerd here but I do love, it’s VAS 2.1 which it says represents the qualities of experiences and things that are interesting or beautiful by choosing amongst aspects of subject matter. So, in this context what they reinforce is that beautiful doesn’t mean pretty, it means something that excites or arouses or wonder, fascination and delight. For me that encapsulates so much about the visual arts, getting our students excited, getting them to feel that amazing thing that only the arts I believe can really do. Now, let’s talk a little bit about dance.

Now, dance has got a bit of a bad rap with a lot of people, it’s got a bit of a reputation with teachers thinking ‘Oh no, you know I’m not into lycra and I’m no expert dance teacher’. It’s not about that, it’s not about the Macarena, it’s not about doing ballet and it’s also not about your school dance group. For me the amazing power of dance is through its storytelling ability. So, the ability that dance has to link ideas together through movement and it links so beautifully with drama too with that idea of mime and movement and bringing story out.

So, in dance we can read a story and retell it through dance. It links so beautifully to literacy particularly through that aspect of storytelling whether we’re either retelling a story or creating our own. We’re learning to express ourselves and to be creative. In mathematics we can look at things like mapping pathways and that sort of stuff. We are moving to a set number of steps or beats. We don’t have to but that’s one aspect that links beautifully into numeracy. We’re using different dance techniques such as high, middle and low levels so the students are standing up really tall and high, middle, low, we’re counting, we’re exploring, we’re subdividing rhythms, we’re trying out different tempos or speeds. It’s also encouraging our students to be physically active. Now, we know we have to do this so why not do it through dance. So, you’re not only getting that physical activity but you’re also getting into the expressive aspects and that’s what the arts can do, creative and expressive movement side of dance is fantastic. Let’s talk a little bit about drama too.

So, drama traditionally I think most of us have known links beautifully to literacy, it’s a fantastic way of re-enforcing meaning and adding to the comprehension or helping to our students understand what a text might be about but also helps to increase their fluency and therefore their understanding. Drama’s fantastic for getting that student engagement, the students absolutely love drama, they love working together in groups, cooperating, it can be so much fun. Yes, a lot of students will get performance anxiety and that’s something that you can work through, maybe those students don’t always get a big role in something but you can build those skills up slowly.

For me looking at drama there’s such an incredible power of storytelling and also a way of exploring emotions and ways of feeling and knowing. You can deal with those really big, complex issues through making it an unreal or staged situation. The students don’t actually really know they’re even dealing with it. The power of role play is incredible in those sort of situations so the students are problem solving through creating their own scenarios. Also things like improvisation is absolutely fantastic for getting our students to think critically and creatively on their feet, they’ve got to move fast and it’s also a great way of helping our students to develop empathy for each other’s views, understanding different perspectives. And why not reverse the roles in a situation and then they get to see things from the other perspective.

So, the arts often gets talked about as being important purely because of the future career or future focus sort of discussion and I think that is really important, I think we do need to equip our students for the future. Now, I’ve talked a lot about the benefits of the various art forms and ways to go about doing it.

So, let’s just talk a little bit about this sort of future career thing that’s being discussed a lot around at the moment. So, there’s a great text called ‘Thrive’ by a lady called Valerie Hannon and one of the things that she mentions in there is that the purpose of learning in this century is not simply to recite inert knowledge but rather to transform it. So, we’ve sort of moved on from that industrial age idea of replicating knowledge, we’ve now got this emphasis on thinking, transforming, people skills, empathy, critique, transferring knowledge.

The most recent Deloitte study from 2019 found that interpersonal and creative roles will be the hardest to fill in the future and they’re going to be the hardest to mechanise as well so therefore their estimate is that eighty six percent of jobs created will be brain jobs rather than labour intensive. Two thirds of those jobs will be soft skills. So, things like being able to communicate and think critically and get on with others and the boring and repetitive work will be done by robots leaving us humans the more challenging and interesting work. I think that’s exciting, I think that’s fantastic and the arts is so well placed to set up our students to create those connections.

We know that the arts really helps to connect the sides of the brain, we know it helps to develop a growth mindset and the ability to generate new ideas. So, the arts are about so much more than just that as well though. Yes, they can teach us about this sort of correlation and the future but we know too that the arts is great just for the joy that it can bring as well.

Now, let’s talk a little bit about creativity because let’s face it the KLA is called the creative arts, so I think creativity is a really important thing to discuss here. And we’re going to talk about this a lot in future podcasts but one thing I just wanted to discuss today was creativity is being this increasing, well, it’s being increasingly recognised now as a globally competitive commodity as 21st Century skills and the 4Cs about raising new questions, new possibilities regarding old problems from a new angle requiring creative imagination. Now, Albert Einstein said that back in 1938.

So, we know that creativity is something important and we know that the arts is really well placed to help us with that. There’s a lot of research around about the big C and the little c. The big C’s where we’ve got those big ideas that can transform an entire society or culture. And the little c are those everyday creative decisions that we make. But I love this quote by Kerry Freedman: ‘Creativity can only be achieved to the extent that conditions will allow’. I’ll say that again. ‘Creativity can only be achieved to the extent that conditions will allow’. Now, that’s just my favourite quote, I actually have it on a chalkboard in my house for those moments when I cannot get my kids off their devices. You’ve got to think about how we can set up our environment in our classrooms to best allow our students to be creative. We know that creativity takes time. We know that we need to give students some skills obviously. We know however that for this creative process to be done properly we need to encourage our students to take time, be persistent, not be afraid of mistakes and just keep trying to make different solutions. So, creativity cannot be underestimated, it’s something we really need to develop in our students and the arts is a fantastic place to start with that.

Now, as I mentioned these podcasts are going to feature different people over the coming weeks and coming episodes and all of those people will be addressing various art forms and other issues that we’ve brought up today. In closing though today I would just like to point out to you that online there’s a lot of resources available on the education.nsw.gov.au if you follow Learning and Teaching Curriculum then Creative Arts you’ll find something for every art form up on there, they’re practical, they’re based in curriculum, you don’t need to do that curating as I mentioned before. I’ve been the connoisseur for you, it’s all up there. There’s also stuff for other KLAs up there, every KLA has got some practical things that you can use. There’s also information about PL that’s coming up and also about the curriculum team and who you need to talk to if you need help for various things.

So, in finishing today I’d just like to let you know that in the future we will be looking at assessment and ideas about how to get those sort of formative assessment practices happening in your classroom. And also just making you aware of one very important quote before we finish which is a Dylan Wiliam quote and we all know that he’s most famous for his work on formative assessment and I just love this quote and it’s something that we all need to takeaway with us because I think sometimes we feel like we’re stuck in a vice and it’s really hard to get out there and do our work in the Creative Arts. But just let go, find some time and let your students really engage with it and listen to this quote and hopefully this will inspire you. ‘The curriculum should promote the intellectual, moral, spiritual, aesthetic, creative, emotional and physical development of the child. And while the traditional disciplines of language, arts, mathematics, science, history, geography should figure strongly, the creative arts are just as important. Indeed given the increasing capability of technology to do almost anything that can be reduced to routines it maybe that the greatest contributions to economic growth will in the future come from the Creative Arts.’ Wow, that’s it from me today for this first podcast.

Now, if you enjoyed this podcast and you’d like to get a hold of more of them, as I said at the beginning go to soundcloud.com/primarycurriculum all one word and click on the orange follow button. Log in with your @education.nsw.gov.au account. And if you’re not a DoE person you can go through Facebook or alternatively create your own SoundCloud account.

That’s it from me today, I look forward to talking to you soon.

[upbeat music]

[end of transcript]

Category:

  • Teaching and learning

Business Unit:

  • Educational Standards
Return to top of page Back to top