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Book chapters authored by Dr. Ardra Cole.
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- ItemArts-informed research(Sage Publications, 2008) Cole, Ardra; Knowles, J. GaryExcerpt from chapter: "The transformative potential of artsinformed research speaks to the need for researchers to develop representations that address audiences in ways that do not pacify or indulge the senses but arouse them and the intellect to new heights of response and action. In essence, and ideally, the educative possibilities of arts-informed work are foremost in the heart, soul, and mind of the researcher from the onset of an inquiry"
- ItemContext Matters: Visual Inquiry and Qualities of Engagement(Backalong Books/Centre for Arts-Informed Research, 2007-01-01) Cole, Ardra; McIntyre, Maura
- ItemInstallation Art-As-Research(Sage Publications, 2008) Cole, Ardra; McIntyre, MauraExcerpt from chapter: "Join us in a look at installation art as one of the many art forms that has found its way into social science research as a methodological challenge to modernist perspectives on knowledge and knowing. Our chapter is a virtual tour of several research installations including our own. Through our experiential rendering of this art form, we consider how our work and the work of other installation artist-researchers advances knowledge in unique ways, paying particular attention to the qualities of accessibility, inclusion, audience engagement, and sociopolitical commitment. During the journey we explore some issues and challenges peculiar to installation art-as-research. We also make particular reference to the role of installation art as articulated by a number of contemporary artists whose work reflects intentions and “attitude” that echo some of the qualities of installation art-as-research."
- ItemMoney Worries: Tackling the Challenges of Funding Arts-Related Research(Sage Publications, 2008) Cole, Ardra; Gray, RossExcerpt from Chapter: "No handbook on research methodologies would be complete without at least a nod to money matters. But because the “starving artist” phenomenon is just as apt a description of researchers who variously incorporate the arts into their work, we did not see ourselves writing a guide to successful procurement of pots of money; nor did we imagine writing an issues-based essay on the “whys,” “wherefores,” and “whethers” of seeking funding for alternative genre research.1 Rather, we were more interested in getting a sense of the overall funding picture in the small but growing international community of artist-researchers."
- ItemProvoked by Art(Backalong Books/Centre for Arts-informed Research, 2004) Cole, Ardra
- ItemReform and “being true to oneself”: Pedagogy, professional practice, and the promotional process(Cado Gap Press, 1998) Knowles, J. Gary; Cole, Ardra
- ItemReforming Teacher Education through Self-Study(Caddo Gap Press, 1998) Cole, Ardra; Knowles, J. GaryExcerpt from Chapter: "In this chapter we provide an overview of the general nature and purposes ofself-study research and work, its current role and status in the academy, and its emerging role and status in the teacher education community. In so doing we hope to characterize the self study ofteacher education practices as a vehicle for teacher education reform, and offer some ideas on how those involved in self-study work might advance the reform agenda through a course of individual and collective action."
- ItemResearch, practice, and academia in North America(Kluwer Academic Publishing, 2004) Cole, Ardra; Knowles, J. GaryThe self-study of teacher education practices has found its place on the teacher education landscape as a principled, scholarly practice that has begun to shift understandings about the nature and significance of teacher educators’ work and what counts as acceptable academic scholarship. Selfstudy scholars have brought their individual career histories and commitments to teacher education to bear on their academic roles within the context of the university and, in so doing, have taken up a challenge to shift status quo perspectives on the role and status of teacher education in the academy. Through individual and collective action self-study scholars have responded to criticisms levied against the place of teacher education in the academy, dilemmas presented by the nature of their work and roles, and challenges facing them in their professional and academic work. In this chapter we focus on the tenure system in North American universities and the role it plays in monitoring, mediating, and moderating the individual and collective practice of teacher educators. We offer a framework for reconsidering the norms of academic convention and the socializing forces that govern teacher educators’ work in the academy and a vision of what such a reorientation might mean in practice. We then draw on this framework to explore how the self-study of teacher education scholarship and practice, as a genre, has positioned itself to challenge the status quo of academic convention for schools, departments, and faculties of education.
- ItemSetting and Defining the Context of Reform(Caddo Gap Press, 1998) Cole, Ardra; Knowles, J. Gary
- ItemWriter's Block, Procrastination, and the Creative Process: It's All a Matter of Perspective(Backalong Books/Centre for Arts-informed Research, 2001) Cole, Ardra