The University of British Columbia
UBC - A Place of Mind
The University of British Columbia Vancouver campus
Faculty of EducationLanguage & Literacy Education | Langues & littératies en éducation
  • Home
  • Programs
    • Literacy Education (LITR)
    • Modern Languages Education (MLED)
    • Teaching English as a Second Language (TESL)
    • Teacher-Librarianship (LIBE)
  • Courses
    • Current Courses
    • Course Descriptions
    • Grading Categories
  • Research
    • Faculty Publications
    • Student Publications
    • Scholarship Stories
    • Recent Graduating Dissertations
    • Archive
  • Students
    • Current Students
      • Student Profiles
      • Graduate Degrees Offered
      • Graduating Project
      • Funding and Awards
    • Prospective Students
      • Application Information
      • Admissions
      • Funding for Prospective Students
    • Visiting Students
    • Frequently Asked Questions
  • People
    • Faculty
    • Additional Faculty
    • Emeritae/Emeriti
    • Post-Doctoral Fellows
    • Visiting Scholars
    • Staff
    • In Memoriam
  • Resources
    • Financial
    • Policies & Procedures
    • Mental Health and Wellbeing
    • Faculty PD Funding
    • Student Resources
    • Room Bookings
    • Logos and Templates
    • Supervision Resources
  • News & Events
  • About Us
    • Job Postings
    • Centres
    • Committees
    • Contact Us
Faculty of Education » Home » Upcoming Doctoral Defence – Amanda Wager

Upcoming Doctoral Defence – Amanda Wager

LLED PhD student Amanda Wager will defend her doctoral dissertation on Friday, September 26, 2014. All are welcome to attend.

Title: Applied Drama as Engaging Pedagogy: Critical Multimodal Literacies with Street Youth
When:  Friday, September 26, 2014 at 9:00 am
Where: Graduate Student Centre, at 6371 Crescent Road, room 200
Co-Supervisor: Drs. George Belliveau and Theresa Rogers

Doctoral defences are public. Examinations normally take 2–3 hours to complete. Exam room doors are locked once exams are in progress. Late entry is not permitted.

Abstract

This critical ethnography investigates the pedagogical spaces constituted within a youth-led, participatory theatre production, Surviving in the Cracks (Wager, et al., 2009).  The popular theatre production documented the lived experiences of eight street-youth, including their struggles to survive in the face of cuts to public health resources in Vancouver.  As anapplied theatre study, this theatre project is defined as a messy and rich site of pedagogical inquiry that is examined through multiple theoretical and methodological frameworks.  It draws on critical feminist pedagogy, critical youth studies and theatre and literacy research with the purpose of revealing how drama and theatre spaces provide “anomalous” (Ellsworth, 2005) learning places, or out-of-the-ordinary learning spaces, that youth and researchers collectively embodied during the applied drama and theatre process and production.

Analysis of ethnographic data generated before, during, and after the theatrical production of Surviving in the Cracks suggests how drama and theatre with street youth opens up embodied pedagogical spaces.  Two different methods of analysis bring multiple perspectives to this work through exploring how meaning was collectively constructed, how multimodal literacy practices were used in critical ways, how power was negotiated, how desire was manifested through imaginaries, and how safe spaces were generated by this community of youthwithin selected pedagogical moments of resistance during the theatre process.  Specifically, the script is analyzed with a youth participant followed by the analysis of particular moments of resistance during performance creation and production.

This research advances knowledge of how informal learning spaces and youth resistances within education become crucial parts of pedagogy and should be considered as future foundations and expansions of education.  Implications include using multiple methodological lenses in order to work alongside, for and with youth, as well as being able to reach larger audiences of youth, communities, educators, and scholars through different analytical perspectives.  By examining how theatre provides a space for marginalized youth to engage in dialogues about complex social issues this research contributes to the fields of critical and feminist pedagogy, language and literacy education, drama in education, critical youth studies, and methodological studies in qualitative research.


Back to top
  • Older
  • Newer
Language & Literacy Education
Faculty of Education
Vancouver Campus
6445 University Boulevard
Vancouver, BC Canada V6T 1Z2
Tel 604 822 5788
Fax 604 822 3154
Email lled.educ@ubc.ca
Find us on
  
Back to top
The University of British Columbia
  • Emergency Procedures |
  • Terms of Use |
  • Copyright |
  • Accessibility