Abstract
This project explores how immersive and Forum Theatre can be used to help resolve conflict in school. Kate Beales and Dawn Ingleson worked with 8–11 year-old children from a London Primary School Federation. Inspired by the picture book, Voices in the Park, by Anthony Browne, workshops included applied theatre methodologies and drew on conflict resolution models including, Nonviolent Communication (Rosenberg, 2015), Systems Theory (Walker, 2012) and Philosophy for Children (Lipman, 1988, Glina, 2012) to create a simultaneous community of inquiry and practice using versions of Forum Theatre (Boal, 2019) and Process Drama (Taylor, 2005) via a journey of immersive practice.
The children were invited to resolve a conflict having chosen a character to follow. In immersive theatre, ‘Audiences must make choices about where they go, the characters they follow and the rooms they find. They choose the show they see’ (Higgin, 2017). The experience involved the audience deliberately privileging some aspects of the narrative over others—just as participants would in a conflict.
This paper discusses the findings of the project demonstrating that the children could explore broader perspectives than those visible and express empathy in their reflections on character behaviour. Findings are valuable for Headteachers looking to improve school ethos, inclusion and inhibit social barriers to learning.
Original language | English |
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Pages (from-to) | 185-199 |
Journal | ArtsPraxis |
Publication status | Published - 15 Jul 2021 |
Keywords
- Conflict resolution, immersive theatre, participatory theatre, theatre in education