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Record Nr. |
UNINA9910373948803321 |
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Titolo |
Arts-Based Research, Resilience and Well-being Across the Lifespan / / edited by Loraine McKay, Georgina Barton, Susanne Garvis, Viviana Sappa |
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Pubbl/distr/stampa |
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Cham : , : Springer Nature Switzerland : , : Imprint : Palgrave Macmillan, , 2020 |
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ISBN |
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Edizione |
[1st ed. 2020.] |
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Descrizione fisica |
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1 online resource (370 pages) |
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Disciplina |
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Soggetti |
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Developmental psychology |
Psychology - Methodology |
Educational psychology |
Theater |
Social service |
Developmental Psychology |
Psychological Methods |
Educational Psychology |
Applied Theatre |
Social Work |
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Lingua di pubblicazione |
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Formato |
Materiale a stampa |
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Livello bibliografico |
Monografia |
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Note generali |
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Nota di contenuto |
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Chapter 1. Introduction: Defining and theorising key concepts of resilience and well-being and arts-based research; Georgina Barton, Loraine McKay, Susanne Garvis, Viviana Sappa -- Chapter 2. Early childhood education, arts-based research and resilience; Susanne Garvis -- Chapter 3. How arts-based methods are used to support the resilience and well-being of young people: A review of the literature; Abbey MacDonald, Margaret Baguley, Georgina Barton and Martin Kerby -- Chapter 4. Building resilience through listening to children and young people about their health preferences using arts-based |
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methods; Jane Coad -- Chapter 5. Promoting resilience in youth through participation in an arts-based mindfulness group program; Diana Coholic -- Chapter 6. Engendering hope using photography in arts-based research with children and youth; Sophie Yohani -- Chapter 7. Using arts-based reflection to explore the resilience and well-beingof mature-age women in the initial year of preservice teacher education; Loraine McKay and Kathy Gibbs -- Chapter 8. Joint painting for understanding the development of emotional regulation and adjustment between mother and son in expressive arts therapy; Rainbow T. H. Ho and C. C. Wong -- Chapter 9. Empowering in-service teachers: A resilience-building intervention based on the forum theatre technique; Viviana Sappa and Antje Barabsch -- Chapter 10. Overcoming a lived experience of personal impasse by creating a theatrical drama: an example of promoting resilience in adult education; Deli Salini and Marc Durand -- Chapter 11. Clowning training to improve working conditions and increase the well-being of employees; Reinhard Tschiesner and Alessandra Farneti -- Chapter 12. The reflexive practitioner; using arts-based methods and research for professional development; Cecilie Meltzer -- Chapter 13. University teachers’ professional identity work and emotions in the context of an arts-based identity coaching program; Katja Vähäsantanen, Päivi Hökkä and Susanna Paloniemi -- Chapter 14. “Colouring outside the lines”: Employment and resilience for art-makers with disabilities; Tanya Riches, Vivienne Riches and Bruce O’Brien -- Chapter 15. Beating stress, the Swedish way: Time for a ‘fika’; Liisa Uusimaki -- Chapter 16. Using clay in Spiritually Ecological-Existential Art therapy: To “see”, to “listen” and to “understand” by hands; Jaroslava Anna Šicková-Fabrici -- Chapter 17. Picturing childhood connections: How arts-based reflection and representation strengthen preservice early childhood teachers’ understandings about well-being, belonging, and place; Alison L Black -- Chapter 18. Arts based research across the lifespan and its contribution to resilience and well-being; Loraine McKay, Georgina Barton, Viviana Sappa, Susanne Garvis. |
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Sommario/riassunto |
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This book investigates how arts-based research methods can positively influence people’s resilience and well-being, particularly in constraining environments. Using examples from arts-based research methods in different contexts and from across the globe, the book brings together a diverse range of perspectives to understand how both resilience and well-being can be supported in a world that is rarely stress free. Collectively they demonstrate how arts-based research methods can: provide agency through the foregrounding of participants’ voices; afford transformational learning opportunities; create opportunities for relationship building; support creativity and new ways of thinking; generate aspirations and hope; encourage forms of communication that expose ideas, emotions and feelings that previously might not have been known or known how to be expressed; and enhance reflection and reflexivity. The authors explore how art-based practices, such as clowning, collage, dramatisation, drawing, painting, role-play and sculpting, can be used to support the resilience and well-being of individuals and groups across the lifespan, and theorize how arts-based research methods can positively contribute to participants’ positive self-esteem, self-image and ability to cope with challenges and new circumstances. Academics, professional learning facilitators, higher education students, and anyone interested in resilience and well-being in the health and education sectors will find this an interesting and engaging text. Loraine McKay is a senior lecturer in the School of Education and Professional Studies at Griffith University, Australia. Georgina Barton is an associate professor in the |
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School of Teacher Education and Early Childhood at the University of Southern Queensland, Australia. Susanne Garvis is a professor at the University of Gothenburg, and a guest professor atStockholm University, Sweden. Viviana Sappa is a senior researcher and teachers’ educator at Swiss Federal Institute for Vocational Education and Training (SFIVET) in Lugano, Switzerland. |
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