Last week I attended a national
conference on theatre education. It was
an illuminating and frustrating experience.
And this fall, I started attending graduate school in applied theatre at CUNY in New York, where I am participating in a wonderfully illuminating course, Group Theatre. Part of the ongoing dialogue and work in Group Theatre has centered on
challenging ourselves as facilitators and educators to push the boundaries, to
ask difficult questions, to encourage student-based learning, to promote
critical questioning and dialogue.
Sitting in a group of secondary and university theatre educators from
across the country, I was struck at how strongly the field was focusing on
banking education…still. Freire
identifies banking education as “the scope of action allowed to the students
extending only as far as receiving, filing and storing the deposits…it is the
people themselves who are filed away through the lack of creativity,
transformation, and knowledge in this (at best) misguided system.” (Freire, Paolo.
Pedagogy
of the Oppressed. New York, NY: Continuum International Publishing, 1970).
The workshops consisted of theatre
teachers sitting in small rooms with facilitators in front of them feeding them
information to file away and apply later.
Every time ideas were brought up that suggested socially responsible
practice or truly comprehensive theatre education, as elucidated by Joan
Lazarus in Signs of Change, a full
fifty percent of educators shifted physically away from the presenter. The discomfort in the room grew
palpable. The challenge to use theatre
to engage students as members of society and citizens of school and the world
seem to puzzle some teachers. The idea
of a holistic educational practice that allows students to learn and practice
collaboratively in all roles from actor to researcher to audience frightened
some. It makes me question how we can continue to argue for arts education in
our nation when we are so resistant to education and change ourselves. If we
are not willing to be part of a bigger, holistic educational process, which
includes shared decision making, dialogue, collaboration, risk-taking and
experimentation as part of socially responsible theatre practice than of what
use are we? The national debate of
changing educational pedagogy from the industrial age of training workers for
an economic factory environment to creating critically thinking creative
members of global society centers around a holistic approach to not just
theatre but all areas of education. Why then are people so resistant to
Zemelman’s list of principles of best practice outlined in Ms. Lazarus’
article? The argument seems to
center around “character education” versus “cognitive development.” Zemelman’s list includes such ideas that
learning must be expressive, reflective, social, collaborative and
democratic. The current educational
system with standardized testing focuses more on math, reading and IQ –
measurable skills with empirical data. So,
if future success depends on these cognitive skills, why have the arts at
all? Why have discussions about
holistic, reflective, social learning?
There is an interesting study
occurring that fascinates me and ties in directly with Ms. Lazarus’
article. James Heckman, a Nobel Prize
winner, started a study to look at the success rates of GED graduates versus high
school. He discovered that by our
society’s measure of success – money earned successful jobs, marriage and
family life – that high school graduates were consistently more
successful. He questioned why? The GED tests the same cognitive skills that
the high school standardized tests do.
So why the disparity? He came to
the conclusion that the difference came in the reflective, social and
democratic educational practice – i.e. character education. So he has set out on a journey to empirically
measure the impact of the United States’ shift of focusing on cognitive
education in order to maximize standardize testing scores versus those schools
who are still including more holistic collaborative, student-centered and
constructivist learning. He is attempting
to find empirical data that there is a link between the holistic education,
what Zemelman calls Principles of Best Practice Learning and Lazarus calls Best
Practice in Theatre Education, and “success” in post graduate life.
I agree with Lazarus that theatre
has an ability to offer students the best of Zemelman’s practices – a holistic,
student centered, catalyst for social and civic dialogue that offer students
genuine challenges and an opportunity to re-create and reinvent the systems
they encounter. By analyzing existing
theatrical forms, reimagining published scripts, devising new scripts, staging
and designing technical solutions to theatrical problems; students can apply
existing skills to new and creative problems.
They can find analogies between the fictional stories they explore and
the very real world in which they struggle.
They can use the safety of creativity and “drama” in the theatre
environment to explore and build solutions and dialogue about the challenges
they perceive.
The debate and discussion offered
not just by Lazarus but by Heckman and others is relevant and necessary. The pushback from the current educational
community is real and based not just on a resistance to change but on real fear
for the repercussions. We can debate and
dialogue and dream of a utopian system but we live in this very flawed
one. I am stuck in the dichotomy of what
I am learning from the readings and the class and what I am experiencing in my
job. I am reaching a point of crossroads. How do
I resolve my desire for change and personal evolution within an antiquated and
resistant system? How do I navigate the
waters I find myself treading?