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Story, Children and the Arts (EDUC20083)
Undergraduate level 2Points: 12.5On Campus (Parkville)
Overview
Availability(Quotas apply) | Semester 2 |
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Fees | Look up fees |
What was your favorite story as a child? What kinds of narrative adventures did you create through role-play, dance, music, painting, dressing up, puppetry? This subject examines how children engage in story and storytelling through the arts. It focuses on how artful, imaginative, and narrative experiences enrich and expand personal and social awareness, and connectedness. Students will explore story making and storytelling as expressive modes of communication and meaning making across a range of art forms, linked to theory. In practice-based arts workshops, they will investigate ways to create and make stories. Students will work individually and in groups to critique, compose, co-create and present stories suitable for young audiences drawing on a variety of multimodal texts such as: artworks, cultural artefacts, interactive picture books, film music, digital stories, scriptwriting, graphic novels, animation, theatre, dance, and zines. This subject is suitable for students with little formal arts or writing background.
Intended learning outcomes
On completion of this subject, students should be able to:
- Explain how children and young people make meaning from a range of texts
- Create visual, sonic and textual narratives, and determine the relationships between them and their audiences
- Outline and apply a range of symbolic and expressive systems in their story-making
- Critically reflect upon and analyse visual, sonic and narrative texts in and across cultural contexts
- Make an original visual, sonic and/or textual narrative for a specific audience
- Reflect upon their creative, imaginative and innovative story making processes.
Generic skills
This subject will assist students to develop the following set of transferable skills:
- Problem Solving
- Collaboration and Teamwork
- Social and Self Awareness
- Communication of knowledge in oral, written, creative and digital forms.
Last updated: 3 October 2024