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Department of
Spring 2014 • Educational Theory and Practice Newsletter Educational Theory and Practice
Educational Theory and Practice N e w s l e t t e r Spring 2014
What’s inside: • Program News and Updates... page 2 • Awards... page 3 • The Awesome Clubhouse... page 4 • Faculty Book... page 5
Upcoming Fundraiser Drawing Change: The ART of Teacher Education 6:00 p.m. - 8:30 p.m. May 14, 2014 Taylor-Grady House 634 Prince Avenue "Drawing Change: The ART of Teacher Education." To include music by Papa Legba All proceeds and donations benefit the Awesome Clubhouse @ la escuelita, a community-based educational space created through a partnership with the Department of Educational Theory and Practice and the Northeast Georgia FoodBank. The clubhouse is inspired by Reggio Emilia philosophies in education as well as critical perspectives of identity, power, and pedagogy for equity and justice. The Department of Educational Theory and Practice's Stephanie Jones directs the clubhouse where approximately 30-45 children between the ages of 5 and 12 participate in after school and summer programming. While the clubhouse does not invite "volunteers" to spend time at the clubhouse, the clubhouse occasionally does invite unpaid teacher candidates who are in a teacher education program to cultivate their practices of being present, mindful, creative, supportive, responsive and relational in a community-based setting.
Issue 2 • Volume 1
Dr. Bettina Love’s TED Talk Dr. Bettina Love is eminently recognized in the College of Education, UGA, the region, and throughout the country for her expertise in Hip Hop education, as well as for her illustrious teaching abilities. Because of her reputation, Dr. Love was chosen to give a presentation on her teaching and research in learning through Hip Hop music. In her Ted Talk, she describes how her elementary students learn by embodying Hip Hop music and poetry. Hip Hop, she asserts, is “a cultural learning tool,” and it is effective because it draws from students’ cultural knowledge and understanding. “Hip Hop is the latest iteration Bettina Love of Black genius,” that taps into a cultural legacy, and builds upon social and emotional intelligence, grit and resiliency, curiosity, and the ability of students’ improvisations and theatrical techniques. She describes how learning through Hip Hop aids in bringing about children’s imaginative strengths, and how Hip Hop serves as a medium through which children learn and from which they can sculpt new and unique meaning. Hip Hop provides the cultural framework through which many children see the world, and this musical genre makes possible new learning experiences that both inform and that are informed by children’s cultural sensibilities. To view Dr. Love’s stimulating Ted Talk and to get a glimpse into the fascinating work she is doing in our department and in the College of Education, click on the following link: http://tedxuga.com/love/