“Follow Through”: Poetic Representation of Action Planning for Social Justice

During an historic semester of student led protests for social justice, the University College of Education (pseudonym) facilitated an action planning session for diversity, inclusion, and social justice. This paper is guided by the question, how can data gathered from an action planning meeting on...

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Main Authors: Christopher Daniel Murakami, Andrea Hawkman, Crystal Kroner, Jo Anna O'Neill
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Alberta 2018-03-01
Series:Art/Research International
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.library.ualberta.ca/ari/index.php/ari/article/view/29248
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spelling doaj-3a93612583cf452791d15ed0ed949a672020-11-25T00:08:07ZengUniversity of AlbertaArt/Research International2371-37712018-03-0131698910.18432/ari2924819727“Follow Through”: Poetic Representation of Action Planning for Social JusticeChristopher Daniel Murakami0Andrea Hawkman1Crystal Kroner2Jo Anna O'Neill3University of MissouriUniversity of MissouriCradle to Career AllianceUniversity of MissouriDuring an historic semester of student led protests for social justice, the University College of Education (pseudonym) facilitated an action planning session for diversity, inclusion, and social justice. This paper is guided by the question, how can data gathered from an action planning meeting on diversity, inclusion, and social justice be a/r/tographically (Irwin & De Cosson, 2004) represented to support self-awareness and transformative learning experiences? The four co-authors engaged in poetic representation (Ward, 2011) and describe how the data analysis and poem construction yielded opportunities for critical reflection in pursuit of educational equity. This work calls for continued dialogue, action, and emotional commitment to address issues of marginalization in education. The potential of arts-based research to help mediate transformative and lifelong learning regarding diversity and inclusion are discussed.https://journals.library.ualberta.ca/ari/index.php/ari/article/view/29248social justice, found poetry, arts-based research, higher education, campus climate
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Christopher Daniel Murakami
Andrea Hawkman
Crystal Kroner
Jo Anna O'Neill
spellingShingle Christopher Daniel Murakami
Andrea Hawkman
Crystal Kroner
Jo Anna O'Neill
“Follow Through”: Poetic Representation of Action Planning for Social Justice
Art/Research International
social justice, found poetry, arts-based research, higher education, campus climate
author_facet Christopher Daniel Murakami
Andrea Hawkman
Crystal Kroner
Jo Anna O'Neill
author_sort Christopher Daniel Murakami
title “Follow Through”: Poetic Representation of Action Planning for Social Justice
title_short “Follow Through”: Poetic Representation of Action Planning for Social Justice
title_full “Follow Through”: Poetic Representation of Action Planning for Social Justice
title_fullStr “Follow Through”: Poetic Representation of Action Planning for Social Justice
title_full_unstemmed “Follow Through”: Poetic Representation of Action Planning for Social Justice
title_sort “follow through”: poetic representation of action planning for social justice
publisher University of Alberta
series Art/Research International
issn 2371-3771
publishDate 2018-03-01
description During an historic semester of student led protests for social justice, the University College of Education (pseudonym) facilitated an action planning session for diversity, inclusion, and social justice. This paper is guided by the question, how can data gathered from an action planning meeting on diversity, inclusion, and social justice be a/r/tographically (Irwin & De Cosson, 2004) represented to support self-awareness and transformative learning experiences? The four co-authors engaged in poetic representation (Ward, 2011) and describe how the data analysis and poem construction yielded opportunities for critical reflection in pursuit of educational equity. This work calls for continued dialogue, action, and emotional commitment to address issues of marginalization in education. The potential of arts-based research to help mediate transformative and lifelong learning regarding diversity and inclusion are discussed.
topic social justice, found poetry, arts-based research, higher education, campus climate
url https://journals.library.ualberta.ca/ari/index.php/ari/article/view/29248
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