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Michael Anderson is an associate professor in the Faculty of Education and Social Work at The University of Sydney, Australia. His research and teaching concentrates on how arts educators begin, evolve and achieve growth in their careers and how students engage with arts and technology to learn and create in arts education.?This work has evolved into a program of research and publication that engages with arts classrooms directly. His recent publications explore how aesthetic education is changing in the 21st Century. These publications include?Partnerships in Education Research: Creating Knowledge that Matters (with Kelly Freebody, 2014),Masterclass in Drama Education?(UK),Teaching the Screen, Film Education for Generation Next?(with Miranda Jefferson), Drama with Digital Technology (with John Carroll and David Cameron, 2009) and?Real Players: Drama, Education and Technology (with John Carroll and David Cameron Trentham, 2006).?
David Cameron is Deputy Director of Academic Technologies, the University of Newcastle, Australia. David's research interests are in the areas of drama, digital games, social media and mobile technology. His PhD explored the similarities between some forms of educational drama and digital game-based learning. David has a professional and teaching background in media and communication, including radio journalism and community broadcasting.
Paul Sutton is the Artistic Director of C&T. Mixing applied theatre and digital media, C&T create collaborative online drama projects for schools, colleges and universities. Examples of these projects include the Livingnewspaper.net - a reinvention of the classic documentary form of the Living Newspaper for the internet age, allowing young people to make drama about issues that matter to them, Stratar.net a performance-based digital mapping tool, and Lip Sync where young people use popular music to create ethnographic music videos. Together these schools and projects form the C&T Network: a sequence of partnerships linking schools in the UK, New York, Washington DC, Nairobi, Beijeng and Tokyo enabling young people to collaborate in creating drama that connects with their lives, cultures and aspirations.
Working predominantly through practiced-based research, Paul's interests reflect those of C&T, exploring the synergies that can be built between drama, performance and digital technologies and the potential for learning and development that can be achieved through this work in an age of increasing globalisation. This work embraces process drama, social media, augmented reality, theatre for development, docu-drama and psycho-geography.? ?
Paul is Multi-Media Editor of RiDE: the Journal of Applied Theatre and Performance and an Artistic Assessor for Arts Council England, for whom he acts as an advisor on digital media.? |