Full Description
In company with its sister volume, this book explores arts-based approaches to research across media, including film and comics-related material, from a variety of geographic locations and across a range of subdisciplines within the field of education. This second volume has a focus exclusively on visual output and image-based research and methods.
The book aims to highlight some of the approaches that are not always centered in arts-based research. The visual takes center stage as authors lead with comics-based representations, among other forms of arts-based inquiry. These chapters follow on from the first collection and serve to expand thinking about merging creative methods with analysis and exploration in the world of education. From mixtapes to the curatorial, these chapters showcase the ways in which scholars explore the multitude of human experiences. This second volume covers, among other topics: comics in qualitative research, visual journaling, multimodal fieldnotes and discourse, and creative visual outputs.
It is suitable reading for graduate students and scholars interested in qualitative inquiry and arts-based methods, in education and the social sciences.
Contents
Introduction: The Words (and Images) Mean Me Section I: Comics and Static Visuals 1. Clearer and clearer and clearer still: The promise and providence of comics-based research methods in education 2. Classroom Marvels: Exploring Comics in Middle School Literacy Instruction 3. What Drawing Can Lead Us to See: Drawing Cartoons with Student Researchers 4. Bringing Children's Play into Literacy Events: Critical Multimodal Discourse Analysis as a Tool for Understanding 5. Visual Critical Topography in Comics Worlds Section II: Journals and Notes in the Field 6. Visual Journaling as Method 7. Through the Looking-glass: Creating and Reading Multimodal Fieldnotes Section III: Exploring (Even) Further Methods 8. When a Single Song Just Won't Do: The Mixtape as Research Methodology 9.What the Concepts of Curating and the Curatorial Can Do 10. Resilience and Solidarity Building on Instagram: Exploring Art, Activism, and Participatory Analysis with Indigenous Peoples and 2SLGBTQ+ Youth in the Wabanaki Confederacy