通过文化治愈,授权,参与,学习和去殖民化:通过创意艺术在课堂上生活健康,弹性和复苏

IF 3.3 4区 心理学 Q1 PSYCHOLOGY, EDUCATIONAL
Shannon M. Tabor, Marisa Van Bavel, Karlee D Fellner, K. Schwartz, Theron Black, Clarence Black Water, Star Crop Eared Wolf, Perry Day Chief, Deon Krugar, Lauren Monroe, John Pepion
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引用次数: 0

摘要

艺术与本土文化密不可分。从装饰精美的小屋和数千年前的战争衬衫到当代混合和数字媒体图像,土著艺术是生存的表达。创造性艺术在试图进行文化灭绝的过程中维持了土著的认知、存在、行为和治疗方式。研究表明,艺术使年轻人参与生活技能的培养、学习、情绪调节和精神治疗,支持艺术作为健康的干预手段。以文化为基础的艺术表现和创作过程促进了土著青年的健康。作为同化和殖民主义的主要场所,教育机构有责任通过植根于文化的、以艺术为基础的健康方法来实现和解。学校心理学家很好地支持这些方法。本研究在南阿尔伯塔省的Kainaiwa进行,探讨了Niitsitapi艺术家和教育工作者对Niitsitapi中学生课堂上基于文化的艺术干预的影响的观点。在两天的时间里,专业的土著艺术家与阿尔伯塔省凯奈第一民族的一所中学的学生分享了他们的艺术实践。我们与12名Niitsitapi社区成员进行了研究对话,他们采用了非殖民化、以社区为基础的方法参与了这次活动。土著故事被用来理解研究对话,为学校心理学家提供信息和指导,以告知他们与学校土著学生和社区成员的接触。研究结果强调艺术具有治疗作用,特别是考虑到它与文化的联系。此外,通过艺术的文化参与支持学生的健康和教育参与。艺术可以用来增强声音,克服叙述的缺陷,创造新的故事,并应对不和谐。艺术还可以让年轻人参与发现和学习,提供一种替代讲座式学习的方式,增加课堂体验的乐趣。这些发现对未来的干预和艺术教学的整合具有实际意义。本文提出了一些建议,强调了植根于文化的艺术实践和传统的以欧洲为中心的艺术教育方法之间的明显区别。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Healing, Empowering, Engaging, Learning, and Decolonizing Through Culture: Living Wellness, Resilience, and Resurgence in the Classroom Through Creative Arts
Art and Indigenous culture are inseparable. From the immaculately decorated lodges and war shirts of thousands of years to contemporary mixed and digital media images, Indigenous arts are expressions of survivance. Creative arts have sustained Indigenous ways of knowing, being, doing, and healing through attempted cultural genocide. Research has shown that art engages youth in life skill-building, learning, emotional regulating, and spiritual healing, supporting art as an intervention for wellness. Culturally-based artistic expression and the process of creating promotes wellness among Indigenous youth. As primary sites of assimilation and colonialism, educational institutions have a responsibility to enact reconciliation through culturally-rooted arts-based approaches to wellness. School psychologists are wellpositioned to support these approaches. This study took place in Kainaiwa in Southern Alberta and explored Niitsitapi artists’ and educators’ perspectives on the impacts of culturally-rooted arts-based interventions with Niitsitapi middle school students in the classroom. Over 2 days, professional Indigenous artists shared their art practices with students at a middle school in Kainai First Nation in Alberta. We had research conversations with 12 Niitsitapi community members involved in the event using a decolonizing, community-based approach. Indigenous storywork was used to understand research conversations, highlighting information and guidance for school psychologists to inform their engagement with Indigenous students and community members in schools. Findings emphasized art as healing, particularly given its connection to culture. Further, cultural engagement through art supports student wellness and educational engagement. Art can be used to empower voice, overcome deficit narratives, create new stories, and cope with disharmony. Art can also engage youth in discovery and learning, providing an alternative to a lecture style of learning, increasing enjoyment in the classroom experience. These findings have practical implications for future interventions and the integration of art pedagogically. This paper offers recommendations that highlight stark distinctions between culturally-rooted art practice and conventional Eurocentric art approaches in education.
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来源期刊
Canadian Journal of School Psychology
Canadian Journal of School Psychology PSYCHOLOGY, EDUCATIONAL-
CiteScore
4.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
10
期刊介绍: The Canadian Journals of School Psychology (CJSP) is the official journal of the Canadian Association of School Psychologists and publishes papers focusing on the interface between psychology and education. Papers may reflect theory, research, and practice of psychology in education, as well as book and test reviews. The journal is aimed at practitioners, but is subscribed to by university libraries and individuals (i.e. psychologists). CJSP has become the major reference for practicing school psychologists and students in graduate educational and school psychology programs in Canada.
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