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Undergraduate Identity Exploration T...
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Goodyear, Kathleen McMichael.
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Undergraduate Identity Exploration Through the Arts: Increasing Self-Awareness and Cultural Sensitivity.
紀錄類型:
書目-電子資源 : Monograph/item
正題名/作者:
Undergraduate Identity Exploration Through the Arts: Increasing Self-Awareness and Cultural Sensitivity./
作者:
Goodyear, Kathleen McMichael.
出版者:
Ann Arbor : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, : 2018,
面頁冊數:
627 p.
附註:
Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 80-05, Section: A.
Contained By:
Dissertations Abstracts International80-05A.
標題:
Art education. -
電子資源:
http://pqdd.sinica.edu.tw/twdaoapp/servlet/advanced?query=11005262
ISBN:
9780438589797
Undergraduate Identity Exploration Through the Arts: Increasing Self-Awareness and Cultural Sensitivity.
Goodyear, Kathleen McMichael.
Undergraduate Identity Exploration Through the Arts: Increasing Self-Awareness and Cultural Sensitivity.
- Ann Arbor : ProQuest Dissertations & Theses, 2018 - 627 p.
Source: Dissertations Abstracts International, Volume: 80-05, Section: A.
Thesis (Ph.D.)--The Ohio State University, 2018.
This item must not be sold to any third party vendors.
This dissertation discusses how engaging in arts-based identity exploration activities can help traditional-age undergraduates (ages 18-24) develop increased self-awareness and cultural sensitivity. The dissertation first explores the participatory inquiry paradigm and the roles of artistic/creative expression in holistic knowledge creation and transformative learning. It then provides an overview of the field of arts-based inquiry and its wide variety of approaches. The following chapters discuss traditional-age undergraduate identity development and how arts-based identity exploration activities can be used in undergraduate multicultural social justice courses to foster self-awareness and cultural sensitivity. Chapter 8 discusses the author's Spring 2016 in-class research at The Ohio State University, in which 50 students from a wide variety of majors engaged in various arts-based identity exploration activities. It was conducted within two sections of the general education course "Visual Culture: Investigating Diversity and Social Justice." The study was grounded in the participatory inquiry paradigm. It addressed these research questions: (1) Can engaging in arts-based identity exploration activities help the traditional-age undergraduates in this study increase their awareness and understanding of their own and others' individual and cultural identities and thereby increase both self-awareness and cultural sensitivity? (2) If so, which specific activities, utilizing which artistic modalities, do they find effective and in what ways? (3) Do study participants in non-arts/humanities majors react differently to various activities than do arts and humanities majors? If so, which activities and how? This mixed-methods study employed arts-based inquiry, qualitative, and quantitative methods. First, a qualitative questionnaire solicited students' views on whether and how arts activities could help traditional-age undergraduates further understand and develop their identities. Then students engaged in eight arts activities involving narrative, creative writing, visual, musical, theatrical, and embodied inquiry. After each activity, students wrote reflections on their process and insights gained and responded to Likert-scale and open-ended questions evaluating the activity's efficacy and suggesting improvements and/or other activities. At the end of the semester, students responded to the same open-ended questions they did at the beginning, plus follow-up interviews were conducted with ten students. Examples of students' written and visual creative work and excerpts from students' reflections, questionnaire responses, and interviews are provided. Statistics regarding students' Likert-scale responses are presented in the aggregate and broken down by college/program. All 50 students reported gaining insights about their identity from at least one activity, with most benefiting from several and a few benefiting from all the activities. In their written responses, students provided rich detail regarding how the insights gained had increased their self-awareness and cultural sensitivity. In the aggregate, students in their Likert-scale responses rated all but one activity positively. Surprisingly, the non-arts/humanities majors in the majority of cases rated the activities more highly than did the arts/humanities majors, with several expressing gratitude for having an opportunity in college to explore identity. Finally, the dissertation discusses the numerous ways arts-based identity exploration activities can be used in undergraduate courses, teacher education and other helping profession programs, service-learning, study abroad and other high-impact practice programs, and student life programs.
ISBN: 9780438589797Subjects--Topical Terms:
547650
Art education.
Undergraduate Identity Exploration Through the Arts: Increasing Self-Awareness and Cultural Sensitivity.
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This dissertation discusses how engaging in arts-based identity exploration activities can help traditional-age undergraduates (ages 18-24) develop increased self-awareness and cultural sensitivity. The dissertation first explores the participatory inquiry paradigm and the roles of artistic/creative expression in holistic knowledge creation and transformative learning. It then provides an overview of the field of arts-based inquiry and its wide variety of approaches. The following chapters discuss traditional-age undergraduate identity development and how arts-based identity exploration activities can be used in undergraduate multicultural social justice courses to foster self-awareness and cultural sensitivity. Chapter 8 discusses the author's Spring 2016 in-class research at The Ohio State University, in which 50 students from a wide variety of majors engaged in various arts-based identity exploration activities. It was conducted within two sections of the general education course "Visual Culture: Investigating Diversity and Social Justice." The study was grounded in the participatory inquiry paradigm. It addressed these research questions: (1) Can engaging in arts-based identity exploration activities help the traditional-age undergraduates in this study increase their awareness and understanding of their own and others' individual and cultural identities and thereby increase both self-awareness and cultural sensitivity? (2) If so, which specific activities, utilizing which artistic modalities, do they find effective and in what ways? (3) Do study participants in non-arts/humanities majors react differently to various activities than do arts and humanities majors? If so, which activities and how? This mixed-methods study employed arts-based inquiry, qualitative, and quantitative methods. First, a qualitative questionnaire solicited students' views on whether and how arts activities could help traditional-age undergraduates further understand and develop their identities. Then students engaged in eight arts activities involving narrative, creative writing, visual, musical, theatrical, and embodied inquiry. After each activity, students wrote reflections on their process and insights gained and responded to Likert-scale and open-ended questions evaluating the activity's efficacy and suggesting improvements and/or other activities. At the end of the semester, students responded to the same open-ended questions they did at the beginning, plus follow-up interviews were conducted with ten students. Examples of students' written and visual creative work and excerpts from students' reflections, questionnaire responses, and interviews are provided. Statistics regarding students' Likert-scale responses are presented in the aggregate and broken down by college/program. All 50 students reported gaining insights about their identity from at least one activity, with most benefiting from several and a few benefiting from all the activities. In their written responses, students provided rich detail regarding how the insights gained had increased their self-awareness and cultural sensitivity. In the aggregate, students in their Likert-scale responses rated all but one activity positively. Surprisingly, the non-arts/humanities majors in the majority of cases rated the activities more highly than did the arts/humanities majors, with several expressing gratitude for having an opportunity in college to explore identity. Finally, the dissertation discusses the numerous ways arts-based identity exploration activities can be used in undergraduate courses, teacher education and other helping profession programs, service-learning, study abroad and other high-impact practice programs, and student life programs.
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