Sounding Shakespeare: An Interdisciplinary Educational Design Project in English and Music

This article outlines Sounding Shakespeare, an interdisciplinary project in Music and English, carried out with student teachers in Norway. The aims of the project are to explore and develop new ways of working with Shakespeare cross-curricularly through educational design research, focusing on cre...

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Main Authors: Marthe Sofie Pande-Rolfsen, Anne-Lise Heide
Format: Article
Language:deu
Published: Bergen Open Access Publishing 2020-01-01
Series:Early Modern Culture Online
Subjects:
Online Access:https://boap.uib.no/index.php/emco/article/view/2830
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spelling doaj-ec64efc175b4493b82de2b6157a05d002020-11-25T01:49:00ZdeuBergen Open Access PublishingEarly Modern Culture Online1892-08882020-01-017110.15845/emco.v7i1.2830Sounding Shakespeare: An Interdisciplinary Educational Design Project in English and MusicMarthe Sofie Pande-Rolfsen0Anne-Lise Heide1Norwegian University of Science and TechnologyNorwegian University of Science and Technology This article outlines Sounding Shakespeare, an interdisciplinary project in Music and English, carried out with student teachers in Norway. The aims of the project are to explore and develop new ways of working with Shakespeare cross-curricularly through educational design research, focusing on creative and aesthetic processes in order for student teachers to gain experience in working across subjects, and to decrease their fear factor of using Shakespeare in the classroom. The current curriculum changes in Norwegian primary and secondary education (Fagfornyelsen) focus on experimentation, exploration and creative processes, and these are guiding educational principles that also provide a foundation for the Sounding Shakespeare project. Our research into student teachers’ experiences of working with Shakespeare’s texts, constitute the starting point for this article. In the project, students worked in two different workshops with Speech and Music Composition to collaborate and devise a performance based on A Midsummer Night’s Dream as their focus text. Through voice and prosody, students explored the musicality of Shakespeare’s text, and through music composition, students experimented with soundscapes in creative processes. In the final part of the workshops, students collaborated towards performances. Based on our collected data, our main finding shows how music can become a guiding agent for a meaningful experience of literature.   https://boap.uib.no/index.php/emco/article/view/2830Shakespeare in EducationEnglishMusicTeacher EducationDesign-based researchcreative processes
collection DOAJ
language deu
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Marthe Sofie Pande-Rolfsen
Anne-Lise Heide
spellingShingle Marthe Sofie Pande-Rolfsen
Anne-Lise Heide
Sounding Shakespeare: An Interdisciplinary Educational Design Project in English and Music
Early Modern Culture Online
Shakespeare in Education
English
Music
Teacher Education
Design-based research
creative processes
author_facet Marthe Sofie Pande-Rolfsen
Anne-Lise Heide
author_sort Marthe Sofie Pande-Rolfsen
title Sounding Shakespeare: An Interdisciplinary Educational Design Project in English and Music
title_short Sounding Shakespeare: An Interdisciplinary Educational Design Project in English and Music
title_full Sounding Shakespeare: An Interdisciplinary Educational Design Project in English and Music
title_fullStr Sounding Shakespeare: An Interdisciplinary Educational Design Project in English and Music
title_full_unstemmed Sounding Shakespeare: An Interdisciplinary Educational Design Project in English and Music
title_sort sounding shakespeare: an interdisciplinary educational design project in english and music
publisher Bergen Open Access Publishing
series Early Modern Culture Online
issn 1892-0888
publishDate 2020-01-01
description This article outlines Sounding Shakespeare, an interdisciplinary project in Music and English, carried out with student teachers in Norway. The aims of the project are to explore and develop new ways of working with Shakespeare cross-curricularly through educational design research, focusing on creative and aesthetic processes in order for student teachers to gain experience in working across subjects, and to decrease their fear factor of using Shakespeare in the classroom. The current curriculum changes in Norwegian primary and secondary education (Fagfornyelsen) focus on experimentation, exploration and creative processes, and these are guiding educational principles that also provide a foundation for the Sounding Shakespeare project. Our research into student teachers’ experiences of working with Shakespeare’s texts, constitute the starting point for this article. In the project, students worked in two different workshops with Speech and Music Composition to collaborate and devise a performance based on A Midsummer Night’s Dream as their focus text. Through voice and prosody, students explored the musicality of Shakespeare’s text, and through music composition, students experimented with soundscapes in creative processes. In the final part of the workshops, students collaborated towards performances. Based on our collected data, our main finding shows how music can become a guiding agent for a meaningful experience of literature.  
topic Shakespeare in Education
English
Music
Teacher Education
Design-based research
creative processes
url https://boap.uib.no/index.php/emco/article/view/2830
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