Posts By: admin

Everyday creativity

I find myself thinking about how to define creativity almost every day. (Who cares about defining it I hear you say? I do, because I value it, in all its manifestations and I also happen to think it’s crucial to the very fabric of an educational institution.) Ensconced in the exciting and driven atmosphere of a

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Artefacts in research

I was reminded quite recently of the auction of Rachmaninov’s Second Symphony. It brought me back to thinking about the role of artefacts in my research practice. Over the past decade, I have done extensive archival research into Prokofiev as well as the music of Stravinsky, and that of Alexander Tcherepnin. I’ve spent countless hours looking over faded

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Thoughts on the Reflective Conservatoire Conference

It is sadly not often enough that we get to stop and think about what, as educators and practitioners, we do on a daily basis – it is so easy to get caught up in the daily operations and delivery, but the Reflective Conservatoire Conference held at the Guildhall School of Music and Drama earlier

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Are teachers still needed in our digital age classrooms?

How does learning happen? Are teachers still necessary in today’s learning environments? Two questions crucial to learning and teaching are addressed in an article by Kirschner and van Merriënboer. The authors engage with current but established thinking about the learning journey, and implicitly, about the role of teachers on that journey. [Urban Legends in Education

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Rules of collaboration – a few ‘big ideas’

While browsing through a book called ‘Invent to Learn: Making, Tinkering, and Engineering in the Classroom’ (Sylvia Libow Martinez & Gary Stager), I came across a passage dealing with lessons learnt from a research project from 1999 led by Seymour Papert. He laid out his ideas in a document designed for a visitor to the

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Reflection as creative process

An issue that has always intrigued me is that of ‘creativity’. One of my favourite sources on this topic is Ken Robinson, in particular his book “Out of our minds: Learning to be Creative”. Over the next couple of posts I will be exploring this topic a little further, side-by-side with my current work on

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Prokofiev’s ‘Fiery Angel’ and modernism

I was recently asked to deliver a paper on Prokofiev’s opera The Fiery Angel within the context of contemporary aesthetic views on modernism. I’ll be exploring this topic further as I’m working on a big project focussed on the composer’s operas but I thought I would put down some initial ideas here. I think Prokofiev’s relationship with

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Prokofiev’s early manuscripts

The music of Prokofiev’s juvenile period (although there is really nothing juvenile about it!) spans around c. 1896 – c. 1908. The works he wrote at this time can be broadly categorised into three types: works for solo piano; theatrical works; miscellaneous works. My PhD traces the composer’s development of a distinctive compositional voice using

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Innovative Conservatoire Seminar 10: Student as Teacher, Dartington 2014

The innovative conservatoire seminar is always such an inspiring space to inhabit. Over three days key members from various European institutions gather at Dartington Hall to share practice and ideas creating a vibrant and supportive community of practice. In this positive place, fear is cast aside and experimentation is encouraged. I find that this kind of

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Writing…getting started (WAA)

One of the courses I will be teaching next academic year is entirely focussed on writing within the arts. As part of my preparation for this course, I’ve decided to collect my ideas and experiences on both writing and reading. As a result the following posts are really written with my students in mind (hence

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Curiosity (my first teaching principle)

As teachers we are often in a position of needing to teach a subject that students do not consider as being immediately valid to their current practices or necessary for their experience. Yet, (and they may not know this or be able to visualise this yet) it may be an area that they will come

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Creativity in teaching

How important is creativity in today’s teaching spaces? It’s a question that is gradually coming more into focus and one which is certainly worthy of our attention. As 1-1 teachers, or eve small group facilitators is this something we need to be thinking about? Perhaps because I work in an arts environment, it has always

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Thoughts on the reflective practitioner

In the article “Focus: Becoming a reflective practitioner”, http://www.heacademy.ac.uk/resources/detail/subjects/medev/Focus-_Becoming_a_reflective_practitioner the Higher Education Academy interrogates the concepts of reflection and reflective practice identifying them as  “two of the key buzzwords in professional and education practice at present”. They provide their definition of reflection, in the process breaking down what they see as the “key stages in reflective

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Research supervision…a few personal thoughts

Research supervision is pretty much always exciting for me. Not without its challenges, but exciting nonetheless. I’m a relative newcomer to supervising graduate research projects – I’ve only been doing it for four years – but it’s a part of my teaching commitment that I greatly relish. The term ‘supervision’ continues to strike me as

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Postdocs – some home truths

The changing face of the academic world, the major cuts in funding, the new pressures faced by academics are also reflected in the changing role of the postdoc. While in the past newly qualified doctoral students or those in the writing up stage would spend a great deal of time writing up grant applications for

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A common student query…What should I reflect on?

This is probably the most common question my students ask… Reflective analyses form an part of their course work and they may be quite disillusioned with ‘reflecting’ when all they want to, from their perspective, is to ‘do’/ ‘to create’/ ‘to make’. They may just resist reflection and this can be a difficult concept for

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Critical Reflection and Teaching

Some of my reading for this week included extracts from Stephen D. Brookfield (1995) Becoming a Critically Reflective Teacher (San Francisco: Jossey-Bass) One passage quite early on in the book drew my attention: ‘What critical reflection means for our teaching’ (38-48) Here Brookfield discusses the ‘emotive’ aspect not just of teaching, but also of being reflective

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On reflection (my third teaching principle)

Further to a previous post (http://wp.me/p2kETw-59) over the past few weeks I have been thinking more deeply about the concept of reflection. Reading through current literature on the subject, I realised that there was a network of words that kept cropping up. Often these are isolated and discussed as free-standing concepts, sometimes they are not.

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Three rules of teaching – a personal perspective

With me, teaching is personal. It’s a process that enriches my practice(s), enlivens my thinking and pushes me toward excellence. Yes, there’s a lot of theoretical writing out there about teaching theories, practices and the nature of the educational experience; over the next few posts however, I want to reflect on the underlying principles of

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Thoughts on John Connell’s ‘I am Learner’

I’ve been reading various texts on learning and creativity over the past few weeks and have of course needed to think about the kind of learner that I am.  I have never really thought about what kind of learner I am, but through this research I have begun to see my own learning processes in

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