Principals Today #131

Page 36

Working & Learning | Performing Arts Learning an instrument builds on skills students can apply to other areas of life beyond school walls.

One of the outcomes of the Creatives in Schools programme is built around the idea of supporting students’ wellbeing through the creative process. According to Scholastic, the performing arts benefit students well after the final curtain and the lights dim. Some skills Scholastic lists include: • Solving problems and improvising solutions • Coping with anxiety and managing stage fright • Building self-confidence • Exploring new emotions, ideas and perspectives. Any one project can involve up to three creatives, various art forms, and multiple schools as long as the programme’s desired outcomes are met.

Creative collaborations The Creatives in Schools programme originally began in 2020 and consists of four rounds of projects. Applications for Round Three of the Creatives in Schools programme opened in June and close on 21 August 2021. Successful applicants for Round Three will implement their projects in the 2022 school year. For those who don’t know, the Creatives in Schools programme partners creatives with schools and kuras to share their skills with students through creative projects. By the end of the programme, four rounds would have taken place, starting in 2020 and ending in 2023. Already, a variety of projects have received funding from the programme ranging from working with textiles, learning and performing Pasifika dances, using technology creatively for game-based learning, and more.

Sensitive to where the children are coming from and the fact that student participation in drama positively affects children’s mental health and language skills, the centre utilised applied theatre to support children in their new life in New Zealand and literacy endeavours. To do this, creatives assisted teachers in their use of applied drama in lesson plans. Like the creatives involved in the previously mentioned project, the programme aids creatives by providing opportunities to collaborate with educational organisations and experience working with students and a source of income. In fact, in response to the pandemic, the Government allocated an additional $4 million to the programme to strengthen the creative arts sector. School staff benefit from the programme by building connections with parents and caregivers, while parents and caregivers get a glimpse

Responding to COVID-19 and its effects on New Zealand’s creative sector, the Government provided an additional $4 million to the programme. The boost in funds increased the initial number of programme projects from 304 to 510, providing more work for creatives and more educational opportunities for students and schools.

of their students’ creative side through participatory and supportive roles. In order to receive funding, projects are expected to deliver on all outcomes as described on Arts Online. Taking part in the programme To apply, schools and creatives must develop a proposal and the school must submit the proposal to the Ministry of Education.

The focus of the programme isn’t so much the art forms themselves but the outcomes they bring to students and everyone involved in their education. Programme purpose and implementation Although there is a wide range of projects that are funded through the programme, they all have the same basic goals to accomplish. Holistic in nature, the outcomes of the programme are expected to serve the creative, students, schools, school staff, parents and, ultimately, communities as a whole. Arts Online lists the programme’s successful school projects, one of them being AUT Centre for Refugee Education Early Childhood Centre. The centre is in a distinctive position when compared to other learning centres because the children who arrive at the centre often speak another language, come with past trauma and a disrupted education.

Performing arts give students the opportunity to express themselves they couldn’t otherwise.

36 | Term 3, 2021   www.principalstoday.co.nz

If the proposal is successful, the creative and school can then plan and implement the project for the following school year. Although many schools have existing relationships with creatives in their communities, it’s not the case for everyone. If your school is looking for a creative to assist in developing and implementing a proposal to the Creatives in Schools programme, your school representative can look through Art Online’s ‘Available creatives’ page. School representatives can narrow their search by selecting the location, art form and language corresponding with the project. The search engine will produce anonymous profiles which match your search criteria. If any of the profiles suits your project’s needs, a request for the creative’s complete profile can be made online. Creative profiles are sourced from expressions of interest. More information on the Creatives in Schools programme and how to apply can be found on the Arts Online website: artsonline.tki.org.nz.


Turn static files into dynamic content formats.

Create a flipbook
Issuu converts static files into: digital portfolios, online yearbooks, online catalogs, digital photo albums and more. Sign up and create your flipbook.
Principals Today #131 by Academy Group - Issuu