After reviewing the chokepoints blocking creativity online,
you will consider strategies to ensure that physical and virtual classrooms
become places of adventure and alliance
Brought to you by the Kadenze Academy, Kadenze, Inc.
The Kadenze Academy is a platform for educators to engage in the creative arts,
design and creative education using digital and online technologies. We are the
scholarly community of practice at the heart of Kadenze, Inc., working closely with
our Academic and Industry partners.
Since 2015 we have produced online learning frameworks, professional learning
opportunities, teaching resources and support mechanisms from our collaborative
experiences in launching over 150 online courses in the arts, design, humanities, and
creative technologies.
I am inundated with tips for online learning, but ‘tips’ alone don’t make coherent learning experiences.
I have been relying on zoom; now I need a framework to sustain my teaching.
I have a thriving course to move online, but most online courses are predictable and boring.
My supervisors are telling me online learning is here to stay, but where do I start?
Embedding creativity in learning design for our times
Instructors: Jackie Kauli, Associate Professor, QUT. and Professor Emeritus Brad Haseman, EVP, Kadenze, Inc.
Duration: 45 minutes
What you’ll learn:
After reviewing the chokepoints blocking creativity online, you will consider strategies to ensure that physical and virtual classrooms become places of adventure and alliance.
Jackie Kauli has over 20 years of experience working in international development and communication for social change, working across Papua New Guinea and Australia. Her work focuses on harnessing process drama techniques, creative practice and communication strategies to contribute to development theory and practice.
Jackie’s work draws on a repertoire of arts-based creative and reflective practices to support the work of community teaching artists in Papua New Guinea and Australia. Jackie co-leads the collective CRID group (https://research.qut.edu.au/crid/about/) that focuses on the application of creative approaches to scaffold learning in cross-cultural contexts. She is currently Principal Research Fellow in the Faculty of Creative Industries, Education and Social Justice at Queensland University of Technology.
Brad joined Kadenze, Inc. as Executive Vice President in 2019 after a 30 year career as Professor in Drama Education at Queensland University of Technology (QUT). He oversees arts-led pedagogies and learning design for Kadenze’s global online courses.
Brad’s engagement with digital technologies and online narratives for arts education first began in 2002 when, with international collaborators, he designed an extensive online process drama in a role-playing Multi-User Domain: Object Oriented. In 2014 Brad led a team of artists and educators to develop a comprehensive web-based platform of resource materials to support the implementation of the Australian National Curriculum: The Arts. In 2018 Brad was the lead designer/curator on The Basics of Teaching Artistry which was released on Kadenze.com in April 2018.
*Click on the image to know more about the instructor
OR
OR
Can’t attend one of these webinar times? We’ve got you covered. Go ahead and register and we’ll send you the link so you can watch the event later in your own time.
While each webinar is offered at 7:00 PM Eastern Time, USA, check your local time zone in the example below and lock in your attendance now.
Date | Place | Time |
---|---|---|
Friday, 29 November | New York, ET, USA., | 7PM |
Friday, 29 November | Vancouver | 4PM |
Friday, 29 November | Los Angeles | 4PM |
Saturday, 30 November | Auckland, | 1PM |
Saturday, 30 November | Brisbane | 10AM |
Saturday, 30 November | Sydney | 11AM |
Saturday, 30 November | Hong Kong | 8AM |
Saturday, 30 November | Seoul | 9AM |
Saturday, 30 November | Taipei | 8AM |
Saturday, 30 November | Singapore | 8AM |
Starting in November and continuing into 2022, the Kadenze Academy is offering a suite of three courses, themed around Unmuting Creativity Online, to prepare teachers for their post-COVID education world. Teachers everywhere are having to orchestrate learning in the classroom, alongside remote synchronous and asynchronous delivery. Seldom has there been a more pressing time for teachers to be creative in solving the wicked challenges they face. How do we devise and apply a learning design framework which is up to these challenges?
These courses are for those teaching the creative arts, design and creative technologies seeking a mature online learning framework for their disciplines.
All three Unmuting Creativity Online courses are designed and delivered by Kadenze Academy’s expert arts-educators as part of their undertaking to grow creative education as accessibly and affordably as possible.
Creative Education and online learning design
From the very beginning, online learning design has principally focused on developing analytical and linear cognitive capabilities. As we are told repeatedly, these capabilities are essential for learners to hold down a successful job and build a powerful economy. Overwhelmingly learning design has engendered the cognitive operations of mind most commonly found in Mathematics, Chemistry, Language, Engineering and Business education.
This approach is underpinned by cognitive load theory which holds that for online instruction to be effective, care must be taken not to overload the mind’s capacity for processing information. Consequently, designers become concerned with extraneous load, working memory, redundancy and concerns about temporal and spatial split attention. All to ensure that students never become cognitively overloaded.
Kadenze Academy has developed an instructional design learning framework called Technology Enabled Creative Learning [TECL]; an arts-led learning framework which encourages learners to stay with all their senses (not only their cognition). We acknowledge that many creative arts and design experiences are deliberately designed to stretch the limits of cognition; that not all cognitive overload is necessarily negative. In such cases cognitive overload does not result in a loss of meaning or intelligibility. Indeed, it can be understood as cognition in the making, where the very fabric of cognitive life is renewed as it struggles to make sense of experience.
Kadenze educators see productive possibilities for learning in the overload, not simply as events which inhibit and confuse, but ones rich with imaginative and adventurous potential to transform knowing and understanding.
Kadenze, Inc. partners with leading universities and institutions across the globe to provide world-class online education in the fields of art and creative technology. www.kadenze.com www.kannu.com Kadenze & Kannu are trademarks of Kadenze, Inc. Kannu – Offers institutions the interactive learning platform designed for creating engaging, media-rich experiences that learners desire. Built on Kannu, kadenze.com is a robust distance learning solution.Kadenze® & Kannu® are registered trademarks of Kadenze, Inc. Contact: info@kadenze.com Copyright © Kadenze, Inc. 2021