RMIT University
Browse

Curricula of value - in place and in service

conference contribution
posted on 2024-11-03, 12:30 authored by Wendy Fountain, Karen Hall, Christopher WiseChristopher Wise, Kate Tregloan
Flowing from a curriculum review and strategic re-direction of the School of Creative Arts from 2015 to 2017, this paper details an approach to designing 'valuable' degrees in the service of futureoriented, place-based concerns. The place in focus could be equally labelled 'wicked Tasmania' for its demographic and educational attainment challenges, or 'design island' for its rich traditions and cultures of making, beginning with the Aboriginal Tasmanians. Amid a phase of unprecedented creative production in Tasmania, four themes have been deemed 'valuable' to the island state: creative communities, creative technology, creative health, and creative industries. In our thematic and post-disciplinary conception of curricula, once discreet disciplines are wilfully subsumed and re-oriented to intersect with 'foreign' disciplines such as health, science, community services and tourism, and socially-located practices outside the university. Such boundary crossing pursued via these thematics is not an end in itself; rather it is positioned in the service of the Tasmanian communities and industries with which we partner, as well as institutional goals for graduates. Taking perspectives from curriculum design, place and cultural value, we outline the re-design of a statewide degree targeting the educational goals of Tasmania: the Bachelor of Creative Arts (BCA). We highlight the thematic underpinnings, course design principles, and dialogue between disciplinary and contextual curriculum elements. Finally, we propose that discerning and delivering value, through the critical engagement of creativity with the specifics of place, becomes the key transferable skill of our future BCA graduates.

History

Start page

1

End page

12

Total pages

12

Outlet

ACUADS

Name of conference

ACUADS Conference Program

Publisher

ACUADS

Place published

Australia

Start date

2017-09-28

End date

2017-09-29

Language

English

Copyright

© 2017 the authors and ACUADS.

Former Identifier

2006088950

Esploro creation date

2020-06-22

Fedora creation date

2019-04-30

Usage metrics

    Scholarly Works

    Categories

    Keywords

    Exports

    RefWorks
    BibTeX
    Ref. manager
    Endnote
    DataCite
    NLM
    DC