Transcript Slide 1

'Happy Families' - a cross-phase Panjabi
language and arts project
Rathmore Asian Community Project, Greenwich
4th September 2010, Jennie Lee Centre (Wolverhampton)
Iqbal Sanghara and Jim Anderson
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Background
• Goldsmiths, University of London project ‘Creativity
in the community languages classroom: pedagogies
and professional development’ funded by the Nuffield
Foundation (2009-2010)
• Four schools involved, two mainstream and two
complementary:
 Downderry School, Lewisham (Tamil)
 Sarah Bonnell School, Newham (Arabic)
 London Mandarin School, Hackney (Chinese)
 Rathmore Asian Community Project, Greenwich
(Panjabi)
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Rathmore Asian Community Project
• Panjabi complementary school set up in 1982
• Currently attended by 40-50 students aged between
6-17
• Mainly 3rd or 4th generation, range of competence in
Panjabi
• Aims to support children’s linguistic, cultural, social
and religious development
• Prepares students for GCSE, AS and A level
examinations
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Introduction and planning Task 1
– Introduction of project to students and parents
(shared responsibility)
– Student choice of Task 1 (composing and performing
a drama) and theme (sensitive community issue:
unfair treatment of young women by mother in-law
when they marry and become part of husband’s
family)
– Development of ideas for the drama (plot, characters,
scenes)
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Scripting and rehearsals
– Drafting text in Panjabi script as well as in
transliterated version and in English by two ‘A’ level
students
– Assigning roles (3 parts played by mothers)
– Rehearsing (emphasis on collaboration, e.g. older
students helping younger ones)
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In rehearsal
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Performance to parents and community
members
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Performance to parents and community
members
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Task 2: Expansion of wedding scene from
drama integrating music and dance
– Two year 8 boys take responsibility for selecting
music and planning dances:
 Ladies’ Jago dance
 Girls’ dance
 Boys’ dance
– Boys opt for mixture of traditional and contemporary
songs
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In rehearsal
“I enjoyed doing this activity
very much because getting to
know the kids and getting to
work with them.”
“I have learnt how to organise
other people, myself and to
organise the whole
performance. I have leanrt
how to help the children
without making them feel
bad…”
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Performance
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Task 3: Bilingual story book based on
drama theme
– Students decide on contents and structure of comic
book, work then divided up between groups.
– English text translated into Panjabi by students
preparing for GCSE
[Slide show]
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Key research findings
•
Language and literacy – communicative purpose
(benefits for oracy and literacy skills), working
towards performance, multiliteracy,
translanguaging, language awareness.
•
Cognition – generating ideas, making crosscurricular links, problem solving, development of
research skills (including online)
•
Intercultural Understanding – understanding of
traditional expectations and practices within the
family in Sikh culture, exploration of different
cultural perspectives, making sense of culture in
personal terms
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Key research findings
• Personal and social development – development of
confidence and pride in identity through:
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legitimising and supporting areas of students’
linguistic and cultural experience which tend to
be excluded from mainstream education
encouragement of learner agency (sense of
responsibility, ownership)
drawing on funds of knowledge in the home and
community
collaborative ethos
community engagement – active citizenship
Key research findings
•
Pedagogy and professional development:
 significant shift involved in teacher-learner roles
 importance of collaborative, process oriented
approach
 need to provide appropriate support (scaffolding)
 potential benefits of cross-curricular approaches
 importance of presentation/performance to an
audience,
 value of involving parents /community members
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Final thought
‘ … in the UK … the school curriculum does not fully
reflect the creative achievements of all the cultural
groups it serves. So many young people lack role
models and learning materials with which they can
readily identify. Disaffection can result. How
creativity is currently defined and developed in UK
education and training tends to reflect a mainly
white, Western approach, rather than our diverse
society. This not only puts people from minority
ethnic groups at a disadvantage, it is everyone’s loss’
(Fryer, 2004: 1)
(Marilyn Fryer, The Creativity Centre Educational Trust)
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Research report and professional development resource to be
mounted on Goldsmiths Centre for Language, Culture and Learning
website (Multilingual Learning)
http://www.gold.ac.uk/clcl/multilingual-learning/
Anderson, J. and Chung, Y-C. (2010) Community Languages, the
arts and transformative pedagogy. In Race Equality Teaching, 28
(3): 16-20.
http://www.gold.ac.uk/clcl/multilingual-learning/creativity/
[email protected]
[email protected]
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