Title: Lets Perform: Making Literature Education Alive
1Lets Perform Making Literature Education Alive
- Huzaina Abdul Halim
- Malaysian Imperial Doctoral Programme (MIDP)
- huzaina_at_um.edu.my
2Reading literature should be a source of pleasure
and a stimulus to personal development.
3Most students do not appreciate the reading of
literary texts and they build an emotional and
critical distance towards literary texts.
- Carvalho and Coutinho (2001)
4CHALLENGES for teachers
- To find new ways for students to explore,
experience analyze literature - To develop stimulating literary experiences to
create divergent and critical thinkers - To expose students to different literature-based
activities - To activate meaning making with various
interpretation of the texts
5 A working model of the text as products
processes
(Rob Pope, 2002)
- Relationships to the rest of
the world - (Texts are
about things) -
Process - Text as
Products - (notes, drafts, publications,
performances, etc.) - (Texts are things)
- Process Process
- Producers Receivers
- (author, artist, director, performer)
(readers, audiences, viewers) - (Texts are made) (Texts are responded to)
6Effective teaching of literature must be based on
better understanding of the process of the
readers response.
7Reader Response Theory(Rosenbalt 1982)
- Stresses the importance of the readers role in
interpreting texts. - Individual creates his or her own meaning through
a transaction with the text based on personal
associations. - All readers bring their own emotions, concerns,
life experiences and knowledge to their reading.
8(No Transcript)
9Literary Texts
- Objects of beauty
- Sources of pleasure
- Conveyers of messages and information
- Allow readers to bring in their personal
experience as they read the texts - Create meaningful interpretation of the texts
- (Carter Long 1991, Wilhelm
1997)
10Effective instructors select alternative
strategies that involve students as active
participants in the learning process.
- Silberman (1996)Bradford Peck(1997)
Becker(1997) Hake (1998) McKeachie, Pintrich
(2002)
11Why use Performance???
- Enhances students vocal-physical expressive
skill, imaginative abilities critical thinking - Helps students understand appreciate literature
in a special way - Allows students to communicate with and
understand others in new ways
12The future of our nation depend on our ability
to create and to be creative. During the coming
decades our most important national resources
will be human resource. If our nation is to
continue to meet the challenges of the future,
todays schools need to develop creative leaders.
- From Performing together The Arts and Education,
The American Association of School
Administrators, The Alliance for Education and
The John F. Kennedy Center for the Performing
Arts (1985)
13Sebesta, Monson Senn (1995)
- Students merely required an outlet to display
their knowledge and capabilities - What the students crucially needed were the
opportunities that enabled them to display their
latent potential
14Types of Performance
- Readers theatre
- Coral reading
- Jazz chants
- Puppetry
- Dramatization
- Story telling
- Role-play etc.
15Basic Ingredients in Theatrical Performance
- Inherent dramatic appeal
- Degree of action
- Quality of visual images
- Catalogues of attitudes, actions or mood
- Nature of the language
- Sequence of events incidents
- Three-dimentional character potrait
16The background of the Study
- Trainee teachers who came back from their
practicum found out that students in the
secondary schools encounter difficulties in
comprehending the content of the literary text. - There is a need to find ways to help them to
comprehend and visualize the content of the
literary texts and assist them to overcome this
problem.
17Objective of the Study
- To clarify the trainee teachers experience and
perception on the use of performance to enhance
the understanding of the literary texts in the
literature classes
18Other Aims
- To give awareness to the participants of the
benefits of using performance in the literature
classes - To enable the participants to explore a range of
possible meanings and interpretations of the
literary texts - To exercise freedom and spontaneity in their
response - To enhance their vocal-physical expressive skill,
imaginative abilities, and critical creative
thinking
19Research Design
- Qualitative approach
- ? Observations
- ? Interviews
- Methodological triangulation
- Multiple data gathering procedures (Brown
Rogers, 2003)
20Implications
- Define their personal aesthetic of performance in
literature - Use creative dramatic exercises to regain the
spirit of childhood enhance imagination - Perform different genres of literature to reach,
stimulate excite children adult - Increase knowledge of performance appreciate
literature more
21The Participants Feedback
- More persuasive in their communications
- More empathy tolerance to others
- More positive with confident self image
- Listen to others accept different viewpoints
- Enhance their motivation to go back to school
assist students to overcome barriers in learning
English Literature
22Conclusion
- The findings generated insights on the use of
performance to enhance students understanding of
literary texts - The idea of opportunity emerged repeatedly
suggesting that students needed the opportunity
to think learn independently - Performance can work as a catalyst of thinking
appreciating literary texts
23 THANK YOU