This book shows how creative methods, drawing on innovative arts-based and design-based approaches, can be employed in health education contexts. It takes a very broad view of ‘health education’, considering it as applying not only in school settings but across the lifespan, and as including physical education and sexuality education as well as public health campaigns, health activist initiatives and programmes designed for training educators and health professionals. The chapters outline a series of case studies contributed by leaders in the field, describing projects using a wide variety of creative methods conducted in a variety of global contexts. These include a rich constellation of arts-based and design-based methods and artefacts: sculptures, dance, walking and other somatic movement, diaries, paintings, drawings, zines, poems and other creative writing, body maps, collages, stories, films, photographs, theatre performances, soundscapes, potions, rock gardens, brainstorming, debates, secret ballots, murals and graffiti walls. There are no rules or guidelines outlined in these contributions about ‘how to do’ creative approaches to health education. However, the methods in the case studies the authors describe are explained in detail so that they can be adopted or re-invented in other contexts. More importantly, these contributions provide inspiration. They demonstrate what can be done in the field of health education (however it is defined) to go beyond the often stultifying and conventional boundaries it has set for itself. Creative Approaches to Health Education demonstrates that creative approaches can be used to inspire those working and teaching in health education and their publics to think and do otherwise as well as advance health education research and pedagogies into new, exciting and provocative directions. It will be of interest to postgraduate students and researchers in education and health-related fields who want to explore and experiment with creative methods and craftivism in applied inquiry.
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This book shows how creative methods, drawing on innovative arts- and design-based approaches, can be employed in health education contexts.
1.Thinking, Making, Doing, Teaching and Learning: Bringing Creative Methods into Health Education 2. Materialising Mental Health: Design Approaches for Creative Engagement with Intangible Experience 3. Enacting a Feminist Pause: Interrupting Patriarchal Productivity in Higher Education 4. Arts-based Participatory Research in the Perinatal Period: Creativity, Representation, Identity and Methods 5. Body Mapping as a Feminist New Materialist Intra-vention: Moving-Learning with Embodied Confidence 6. Graffiti Walls: Arts-Based Mental Health Knowledge Translation with Young People in Secondary Schools 7. Re-assembling the Rules: Becoming Creative with Making ‘Youth Voice’ Matter in the Field of Relationships and Sexuality Education 8. Feminist Craftivist Collaging: Re-Mattering the Bad Affects of Advertising 9. Poetry and Health Education: Using the Poetic to Write the Body and Health 10. Health on the Move: Walking Interviews in Health and Wellbeing Research 11. Loved Objects and Beyond: Using Art Workshops in a Women’s Refuge 12. Children's Views on Digital Health in the Global South: Perspectives from Cross-National, Creative and Participatory Workshops
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780367648299
Publisert
2021-11-26
Utgiver
Vendor
Routledge
Vekt
453 gr
Høyde
234 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Aldersnivå
UP, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
196

Om bidragsyterne

Deborah Lupton is SHARP Professor in the Centre for Social Research and Social Policy Centre. She is leader of the Vitalities Lab at the University of New South Wales (UNSW) Sydney and leader of the UNSW Node and Health Focus Area as well as co-leader of the People Program in the Australian Research Council Centre of Excellence for Automated Decision-Making and Society, Australia.

Deana Leahy is Associate Professor in Health Education in the Faculty of Education, Monash University, Melbourne, Australia.