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Curricula of value – in place and in service

Citation

Fountain, W and Hall, K and Wise, K and Tregloan, K, Curricula of value - in place and in service, ACUADS Conference Program, 28-29 September 2017, Canberra, ACT, pp. 1-12. (2017) [Refereed Conference Paper]


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Copyright Statement

Copyright 2017 the authors and ACUADS. Licensed under Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivs 2.5 Australia (CC BY-NC-ND 2.5 AU) http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/2.5/au/

Official URL: http://acuads.com.au/conference/article/curricula-...

Abstract

Flowing from a curriculum review and strategic re-direction of the School of Creative Arts from 2015 to 2017, this paper details an approach to designing ‘valuable’ degrees in the service of futureoriented, place-based concerns. The place in focus could be equally labelled ‘wicked Tasmania’ for its demographic and educational attainment challenges, or ‘design island’ for its rich traditions and cultures of making, beginning with the Aboriginal Tasmanians. Amid a phase of unprecedented creative production in Tasmania, four themes have been deemed ‘valuable’ to the island state: creative communities, creative technology, creative health, and creative industries.

In our thematic and post-disciplinary conception of curricula, once discreet disciplines are wilfully subsumed and re-oriented to intersect with ‘foreign’ disciplines such as health, science, community services and tourism, and socially-located practices outside the university. Such boundary crossing pursued via these thematics is not an end in itself; rather it is positioned in the service of the Tasmanian communities and industries with which we partner, as well as institutional goals for graduates.

Taking perspectives from curriculum design, place and cultural value, we outline the re-design of a statewide degree targeting the educational goals of Tasmania: the Bachelor of Creative Arts (BCA). We highlight the thematic underpinnings, course design principles, and dialogue between disciplinary and contextual curriculum elements. Finally, we propose that discerning and delivering value, through the critical engagement of creativity with the specifics of place, becomes the key transferable skill of our future BCA graduates.

Item Details

Item Type:Refereed Conference Paper
Keywords:Interdisciplinary, creative arts, community, curricula, design
Research Division:Creative Arts and Writing
Research Group:Other creative arts and writing
Research Field:Other creative arts and writing not elsewhere classified
Objective Division:Education and Training
Objective Group:Teaching and curriculum
Objective Field:Assessment, development and evaluation of curriculum
UTAS Author:Fountain, W (Dr Wendy Fountain)
UTAS Author:Hall, K (Dr Karen Hall)
UTAS Author:Wise, K (Professor Kit Wise)
ID Code:123582
Year Published:2017
Deposited By:Office of the School of Creative Arts and Media
Deposited On:2018-01-11
Last Modified:2019-10-17
Downloads:71 View Download Statistics

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