Alternative Science: An Examination of Practice-Linked Identity Formation Within the Context of an Art Science Program

Thesis advisor: Michael Barnett === This dissertation documents the pilot year of an Art Science Program. This study asks: what is possible when we create learning environments modeled for the integration of theatre and other artistic media with science? What, in general, are the affordances of thea...

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Main Author: Suchow, Ariella Flora
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: Boston College 2020
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/2345/bc-ir:108784
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spelling ndltd-BOSTON-oai-dlib.bc.edu-bc-ir_1087842020-09-12T05:01:16Z Alternative Science: An Examination of Practice-Linked Identity Formation Within the Context of an Art Science Program Suchow, Ariella Flora Thesis advisor: Michael Barnett Text thesis 2020 Boston College English electronic application/pdf This dissertation documents the pilot year of an Art Science Program. This study asks: what is possible when we create learning environments modeled for the integration of theatre and other artistic media with science? What, in general, are the affordances of theatre and other art forms for fostering such meaning-making, what are good ways to make it happen, and what are the challenges? We analyze young learners’ participation and attitude changes in the context of the Art Science Program. Findings indicate that (1) access to identity resources impacts learners’ practice-linked identities (Nasir & Cooks, 2009); (2) face-saving behaviors impact practice-linked identities by inhibiting learners’ access to identity resources; (3) the development of practice-linked identities parallels the development of possible selves; (4) the extent to which a learner is able to engage in their learning as a “whole person” (Wenger, 2006) is correlated with a learner’s identity trajectory; (5) learners may fail to form new practice-linked identities despite robust access to identity resources; and (6) learners may succeed in forming new practice-linked identities despite lack of significant access to identity resources because the identity resources that they do access provide a strong hook into new, nascent practice-linked identities. Arts education Interdisciplinary education Learning sciences Program design Science education STEAM Copyright is held by the author, with all rights reserved, unless otherwise noted. Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2020. Submitted to: Boston College. Lynch School of Education. Discipline: Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction. http://hdl.handle.net/2345/bc-ir:108784
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Arts education
Interdisciplinary education
Learning sciences
Program design
Science education
STEAM
spellingShingle Arts education
Interdisciplinary education
Learning sciences
Program design
Science education
STEAM
Suchow, Ariella Flora
Alternative Science: An Examination of Practice-Linked Identity Formation Within the Context of an Art Science Program
description Thesis advisor: Michael Barnett === This dissertation documents the pilot year of an Art Science Program. This study asks: what is possible when we create learning environments modeled for the integration of theatre and other artistic media with science? What, in general, are the affordances of theatre and other art forms for fostering such meaning-making, what are good ways to make it happen, and what are the challenges? We analyze young learners’ participation and attitude changes in the context of the Art Science Program. Findings indicate that (1) access to identity resources impacts learners’ practice-linked identities (Nasir & Cooks, 2009); (2) face-saving behaviors impact practice-linked identities by inhibiting learners’ access to identity resources; (3) the development of practice-linked identities parallels the development of possible selves; (4) the extent to which a learner is able to engage in their learning as a “whole person” (Wenger, 2006) is correlated with a learner’s identity trajectory; (5) learners may fail to form new practice-linked identities despite robust access to identity resources; and (6) learners may succeed in forming new practice-linked identities despite lack of significant access to identity resources because the identity resources that they do access provide a strong hook into new, nascent practice-linked identities. === Thesis (PhD) — Boston College, 2020. === Submitted to: Boston College. Lynch School of Education. === Discipline: Teacher Education, Special Education, Curriculum and Instruction.
author Suchow, Ariella Flora
author_facet Suchow, Ariella Flora
author_sort Suchow, Ariella Flora
title Alternative Science: An Examination of Practice-Linked Identity Formation Within the Context of an Art Science Program
title_short Alternative Science: An Examination of Practice-Linked Identity Formation Within the Context of an Art Science Program
title_full Alternative Science: An Examination of Practice-Linked Identity Formation Within the Context of an Art Science Program
title_fullStr Alternative Science: An Examination of Practice-Linked Identity Formation Within the Context of an Art Science Program
title_full_unstemmed Alternative Science: An Examination of Practice-Linked Identity Formation Within the Context of an Art Science Program
title_sort alternative science: an examination of practice-linked identity formation within the context of an art science program
publisher Boston College
publishDate 2020
url http://hdl.handle.net/2345/bc-ir:108784
work_keys_str_mv AT suchowariellaflora alternativescienceanexaminationofpracticelinkedidentityformationwithinthecontextofanartscienceprogram
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