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By Center for the Study of Childhood Art
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The podcast currently has 13 episodes available.
In this episode, we are joined by Dr. Jaye Johnson Thiel, an Assistant Professor of Early Childhood Studies at the University of Alabama. Growing up as a woman from a Southern working-class family, she is deeply committed to justice- oriented approaches to childhood studies. Her scholarship works against deficit discourses about young people and their families, theorizes place- based and arts-based practices for community research, and explores the playful and artistic engagements of young people growing up in the Southeastern United States.
We also had a special guest for this episode, Dr. Christine Marmé Thompson.
If you have not yet had the pleasure of reviewing her earlier presentation, please take some time to visit our website at www.centerforthestudyofchildhoodart.com. There, on the Childhood Art Speaker Series page, you will find a recording of her presentation, which links to the CSCA YouTube Channel. We highly recommend you take the time to listen to and reflect on the ideas shared as part of this presentation, and to consider, too, the generative possibilities of Kortney's work.
Hosts: Dr. Christopher M. Schulte and Dr. Hayon Park. Music by penguinmusic from Pixabay
In this episode, we are joined by Dr. Kortney Sherbine, an independent researcher interested in the play and literacies of young children. With eighteen years of experience as an early childhood teacher and teacher educator, Kortney's teaching and research interests invoke posthumanist perspectives on language and literacy, which take into account the material intra-actions between young children and things that they encounter in their personal ecologies, particularly related to popular culture. Across her work, Kortney is concerned with what comes to "count" as meaningful literacy and play and the conditions under which certain literacies and play are ostracized or "othered."
If you have not yet had the pleasure of reviewing her earlier presentation, please take some time to visit our website at www.centerforthestudyofchildhoodart.com. There, on the Childhood Art Speaker Series page, you will find a recording of her presentation, which links to the CSCA YouTube Channel. We highly recommend you take the time to listen to and reflect on the ideas shared as part of this presentation, and to consider, too, the generative possibilities of Kortney's work.
Hosts: Dr. Christopher M. Schulte and Dr. Hayon Park. Music by tobylane from Pixabay
In this episode, we are joined by Dr. Tyson Lewis, professor of Art Education at the University of North Texas, where he teaches courses in dialogue and inquiry into the arts, educational philosophy, philosophy for children, critical phenomenological research methods, and continental aesthetic philosophy. He is author of 7 books, most recently Walter Benjamin’s Antifascist Education: From Riddles to Radio (SUNY Press, 2020). Tyson will appear on the Childhood Speaker Series in Fall 2022. For more information, please visit our website at www.centerforthestudyofchildhoodart.com.
Hosts: Dr. Christopher M. Schulte and Dr. Hayon Park. Music by tobylane from Pixabay
In this episode, we sit down with Dr. Brent Wilson, who was recently named the inaugural recipient of the CSCA’s Christine Marmé Thompson Distinguished Research Award. International in scope, the Christine Marmé Thompson Distinguished Research Award recognizes a scholar in Art Education or related field whose research has made significant and impactful contributions to the study of childhood art.
Dr. Brent Wilson is Pennsylvania State University School of Visual Arts Art Education Professor Emeritus. His research includes studies of visual cultural influences on children’s artistic development and self-initiated drawings, cross-cultural studies of children’s visual storytelling, Japanese and Taiwanese teenagers’ doujinshi/manga clubs and comic markets, studies of children’s interpretations of artworks, the evaluation of art educational outcomes, internet visual ethnography, pedagogical theory, and formal and informal pedagogical practices. He delivered the National Art Education Association “Studies Lecture” (1983), was elected an NAEA “Distinguished Fellow” (1988), the NAEA “Art Educator of the Year” (1989), received the NAEA “Lowenfeld Award” (1993), and the NAEA “Eisner Lifetime Achievement Award” (2017). He received the US Society for Education through Art “Edwin Ziegfeld Award” (1991) and was invited to deliver the International Society for Education through Art “Edwin Ziegfeld Keynote Lecture” in Osaka (2008). He keeps visual journals, makes and exhibits artist-books and folios.
In this episode, we return to dialogue with Dr. Hannah Dyer. If you have not yet had the pleasure of reviewing her earlier presentation, please take some time to visit our website at www.centerforthestudyofchildhoodart.com. There, on the Childhood Art Speaker Series page, you will find a recording of her presentation, which links to the CSCA YouTube Channel. We highly recommend you take the time to listen to and reflect on the ideas shared as part of this presentation, and to consider too the generative possibilities of Dr. Dyer's work. Hosts: Dr. Christopher M. Schulte and Dr. Hayon Park. Music by tobylane from Pixabay
In this episode, we return to dialogue with Dr. Gail Boldt. If you have not yet had the pleasure of reviewing her earlier presentation, please take some time to visit our website at www.centerforthestudyofchildhoodart.com. There, on the Childhood Art Speaker Series page, you will find a recording of her presentation, which links to the CSCA YouTube Channel. We highly recommend you take the time to listen to and reflect on the ideas shared as part of this presentation, and to consider too the generative possibilities of Dr. Boldt's work. Hosts: Dr. Christopher M. Schulte and Dr. Hayon Park. Music by tobylane from Pixabay
In this episode, we return to dialogue with Dr. Mona Sakr. If you have not yet had the pleasure of reviewing her earlier presentation, please take some time to visit our website at www.centerforthestudyofchildhoodart.com. There, on the Childhood Art Speaker Series page, you will find a recording of her presentation, which links to the CSCA YouTube Channel. We highly recommend you take the time to listen to and reflect on the ideas shared as part of this presentation, and to consider too the generative possibilities of Dr. Sakr’s work.Hosts: Dr. Christopher M. Schulte and Dr. Hayon ParkMusic by tobylane from Pixabay
In this episode, we return to dialogue with Drs. Tran Templeton and Vivel Vellanki. If you have not yet had the pleasure of reviewing their earlier presentation, please take some time to visit our website at www.centerforthestudyofchildhoodart.com. There, on the Childhood Art Speaker Series page, you will find a recording of their presentation, which links to the CSCA YouTube Channel. We highly recommend you take the time to listen to and reflect on the ideas shared as part of this presentation, and to consider too the generative possibilities of Drs. Templeton and Vellanki’s work. Hosts: Dr. Christopher M. Schulte and Dr. Hayon ParkMusic by tobylane from Pixabay
In this special episode, which we are calling the Summer Spotlight Session, we are joined by Maribel Lucero-Sanchez and Jorge Lucero. Typically, those who join us on Childhood Art do so as a follow-up to their more formal appearance as part of the Childhood Art Speaker Series. While Maribel and Jorge did not first appear on the Childhood Art Speaker Series, they did recently contribute a chapter to the anthology Visual Arts with Young Children: Practices, Pedagogies, and Learning edited by us (Hayon Park and Christopher M. Schulte). Should our listeners be interested in learning more, their chapter is titled “Retrospective: Selections from the Lucero-Sanchez family archive.” Some of what we discuss today may bring into being aspects of what Maribel and Jorge have so thoughtfully shared in their chapter. However, we suspect that much of what we discuss will serve as an extension to these ideas and experiences.
The podcast currently has 13 episodes available.