This blog is created to support conversation generated from and about the learning process for MA Professional Practice (MAPP) in the Faculty of Arts and Creative Industries (ACI) at Middlesex University.
Saturday, 14 May 2016
Friday, 6 May 2016
Looking forward to May 12th & 13th
MA Professional Practice, Dance Technique Pedagogy
Finalist Presentations
May 12th & 13th 2016
Thursday May 12th
1000-1130 Presentations 1 -
1000-1040 Sinead Keaskin (skype)
1045-1125 Ainsley Sudds
1145- 1315 Presentations 2 -
1145-1225 April Brown
1230-1310 Louise Warren
Friday May 13th
1630-1830 Presentations 3 –
1630-1710 Hayley Arthur
1710-1750 Sarah Lockwood
1750-1830 Julie Campbell
Monday, 2 May 2016
PM chat...
PM chat
We talked a lot about Literature as a
concept:
Where
do you find it?
What
is its role?
Where
do you put it when you write about your research?
What does
it do and where
does it go were keen topics.
For ‘what does it do?’ we talked about the
idea that ‘the Literature’ is helping
build the puzzle/ overview/picture you are exploring or building. It is not
something that provides an answer to a question or where you find other people
doing exactly what you are doing. It can be a way to help you re-think or
broaden your own ideas.
Helen talked about the puzzle: not looking
for the center piece but allowing the literature to take you to places on the
edge of the picture. Tamzin http://tamzinhoward.blogspot.com is going to post further on this.
In terms of ‘where does it go?’ we talked
about the Literature Review and where else we talk about the literature. We
noted that having a Literature Review is particular style of writing (quite
traditional) for instance in some narrative Inquiry approaches you would not
use a Literature Review the literature would emerge across the whole document. However,
we ask you for this more traditional style of Literature Review in order to
help organise your thinking. The Literature Review introduces the ideas and
theorist you will later refer to as talk about your analysis. This is so it is not a surprise when
you refer to someone later in the text. The Literature review also gives context
to the people and theory you refer to and also to where your own thoughts stand
in the field.
So after the Literature Review, the
literature reappears across the text as you build the picture of the research.
Louise http://louisedubai.blogspot.com
is going to post further on this.
We talked about a more open approach, particularly
in Module Two when you are planning the project. You do not have to pin-things
down we are working within the notion of movement – things flow, emerge, and
respond. Tara http://dancetara.blogspot.com
is going to post further on this.
We talked about how you can not put
everything you did, or learn or that changed for you into the work you hand-in.
You need to share part of it the core or it. Helen http://www.helenkindred.blogspot.com
is going to post further on this in
terms of noticing the value and relevance
in what you are writing about. The writing part is not a ‘dumping’ of all that
happened. It is a coherent narrative, sharing the shift you saw in your own Professional
Practice (and thinking…).
We are noticing that skype is looking for
up-dates and that this can cut you off the call unexpectedly. L. We will try to find out more about why this happens but it might
also be go to take your computer in for a check-up once this Module is over.
Its good to get them, up-dated, defrag (!!! )sort of get their oil changed
every now and then as they labour away with you. The summer might be a good
time to do this.
We also talked about the Summer Intensive which we really encourage
you to attend, new and returning Intensive people. Today AM and PM
conversations where so apart of what we will be looking at and covering. It is
part of our on going building of the dance scholarship of Professional
Practice. Last year was our first year and a wonderful week for everyone.
Please also spread the word to people thinking about diving into HE again and
those on the other side graduated and wanting to carry on their thinking and
doing. We know you have a lot on but places are limited so if you are thinking
about it please action sooner rather than later.
Here is a link:
Looking
forward to seeing and hearing people on May 12th and 13th
at the presentation.
Adesola
Sunday, 1 May 2016
AM chat...
AM Skype chat
We talked about the reflective essays and
about research topics. It emerged that it is really useful to just explain what
you are doing to other people. We took the challenge of not first contextualising
our own research project/ideas in what someone else has said but jumping in at
the deep-end and explaining them from scratch.
We explained our ideas, either the idea of
the research inquiry you are proposing in Module Two or the Research process
and knowing in Module Three, (we did not have any Module Ones in the
conversation). Then we took in turns to feedback what we had heard the person
saying and what we wondered. I think just talking to people about what you are
doing is really useful. While explaining it to people informally you hear yourself
saying things that you maybe had not realised you thought. Or things you don’t
agree with and had not realised you did not yet know how to articulate so they
slipped back into language that you don’t really agree with.
Alanna http://sustainablerisktaking.blogspot.com also suggested as you blog about ideas this
too is a way to look at what you are thinking. She suggested blogging at this
point in the term to look at your own positioning. As you have been working
across the Module your positioning may well have shifted and you may not have
articulated the change. Your blog and your preparation for your reflective
essay might be places where you can visit this.
April (April please write you Blog address
in comments below) talked about the
Module Three inquiry and in talking we discussed letting go of binaries / polar
structures. Even though the theory you encounter might be clear and resonate, that
does not mean you have to adopt the articulation of that theory as the only way
to engage with the ideas within it. Of course the articulation of the theory is
the idea since communication of thought is held prisoner in the language used
to express it. (At times you would loose the ‘meaningful’ or sound as if you
were cherry-picking with the idea if you loose the structures and articulation
of the theory from the theorised who introduced it to you). But it is important
as you work with a theory that you notice how it is positioned and how that communication
might be imposing a shift on your articulation of the idea. April is
posting about remembering transformation can be an alternative articulate for
many ideas that when presented imply binaries.
(Note: that witnessing of moving away from
your own Professional articulation/structure for communication is what the
artefact is addressing.)
Helen http://www.helenkindred.blogspot.com/2016/05/plurality-of-meaning.html is posting on remembering pluralities of
meaning. This is so important in our work as dance scholars because we are
forging the ideas and language of the somatic and have check we do not loose ourselves
in the pinning down, measuring, hunt for one
certainty that is so counter to fluidity of movement.
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