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“My museum is your museum” Exploring museums with PWID

“My museum is your museum” Exploring museums with PWID. Mireille Defreyne Coördinator Research Group “Culture at school”. VIVES, Belgium. Day 1.

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“My museum is your museum” Exploring museums with PWID

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  1. “My museum is your museum” Exploring museums with PWID Mireille Defreyne Coördinator Research Group “Culture at school”. VIVES, Belgium

  2. Day 1 • 10.00-11.30: How to understand intellectual disability? Classification/(Young) children an youngsters with an intellectual disability./How do we think about PWID?/Children and youngsters with a mild and moderate retardation: cognitive development, language development, motoric development, social and emotional development.//Pedagogical and educational consequences/ The concept of “Access” and application on people with intellectual disability. /

  3. What defines ID for you? Give a number from 1 – 4 following what you think is what best defines ID. - People that have a cognitive dysfunction - People that cannot (fully) perform the tasks of everyday life • People that cannot satisfy the needs that the society expects from a person • PWID is a term that should not exist. It is discriminatory. In order to concede to a wide diversity of people the society should aim for more inclusion. • Discuss the results in the group.

  4. How do we think about intellectual disability? Short historical overview How do you think about ID? • names reflect attitude • 1850: naïve optimism • 1900: incurable disease • >1950: community-based rehabilitation and deinstitutionalization

  5. What defines ID for you? Give a number from 1 – 4 following what you think is what best defines ID. - People that have a cognitive dysfunction - People that cannot (fully) perform the tasks of everyday life • People that cannot satisfy the needs that the society expects from a person • PWID is a term that should not exist. It is discriminatory. In order to concede to a wide diversity of people the society should aim for more inclusion. • Discuss the results in the group.

  6. Common definition of ID • Definition by the American Society on Mental Retardation (2002): • “Mental Retardation is a disability characterized by significant limitations both inintellectual functioning and in adaptive behavior as expressed in conceptual, social andpractical adaptive skills. This disability originates before age 18.”

  7. Positive descriptors versus negative descriptors • This definition implies that PWID misssome competences: - conceptional competences: the ability to read, write, handle money, to make choices,… - social competences: ability to build relationships, to take responsibility, to follow rules,… - practical competences: carry out daily life activities, eat, hygiene, mobility, use telephone and public transport,…

  8. Classification (if permitted)

  9. Mild mental retardation Cognitive development • A. Meaningful processing of information • B. The understanding of abstract information or virtual events and relationships Language development Motoric development Social and emotional development

  10. Exercise Translate the following text used for normally developed children of about 11 years to the language of children of the same age with an age development of 7 years. • Paleontology is the study of the history of life. Scientists who study paleontology are called paleontologists. Paleontologists use fossils to try to figure out three main things about fossils: Identity and origin of the fossil, the fossil's environment, and what the fossil can tell us about the history of the earth. Because paleontologists are interested in finding out about all life on earth, they study all kinds of fossils, not just dinosaur bones. There are many different types of paleontologists. Some study fossil plants, some study fossil fish, some study fossil mammals, and some study dinosaurs. Pick a type of fossil and there's bound to be a paleontologist that studies that type of fossil.

  11. Consequences for didactics and methodology for children and youngsters with a mild intellectual disability. • step by step assignments • one instruction at the time • repetition for consolidation • 5 phases for new information • explaining new words • keep up motivation • responsible reaction • positive attitude

  12. Moderate mental retardation • Description • Age of development: max 8 y • Write their name, simple words, daily functional handlings • Interested in daily live matters: dog, clothes, food,… • Eye-hand coordination • Socially impulsive and spontaneous • Consequences for didactics and methodology for children and youngsters with a mild intellectual disability.

  13. Who will we meet? 1, Paul: ° 1981 – enjoyable social character – syndrome of Down – moderate to severe disability 2, Luc: ° 1981 – moderate disability – participative – positive – not very autonomous in decisions… 3, Luc - ° 1977 – severe disability – communicates by gestures and sounds, will help others – motivated 4, Wojciech - ° 1977 – severe disability – enjoyable – social – something behaves childish – doesn’t criticize himself – not very motivated 5, Elzbieta - °1979 – moderate disability – underestimates her own abilities – not very self confident – right hand is partially paralyzed 6, Cathrine - °1974 – moderate disability – impulsive – emotionally instable – sensible – low aggression threshold

  14. Information about the people that come tomorrow • Who are they? • What age do they have? • What can they do? • What are they good at? • What do they like? • What they don’t like? • What do they do during daily life? • What are they afraid of? • Do they have a pet? • …

  15. The idea of “access”

  16. The idea of “access” • Make it easy for me to find my way around • I want to learn something new • I don’t want to feel helpless • Make me feel welcome

  17. The idea of “access” 5. Accept me for who I am and what I know” • “Help me to understand and let me talk too” • “Let me choose, give me some control” 6. “Let me participate” 7. “Meet my basic needs” “I came to spend time with my family/with my friends”

  18. Visiting the museum to evaluate accessibility for the group of PWIDfor the next day. • Taking in account all things that have been mentioned here above (description of competences, pedagogical consequences, accessibility):

  19. Day 1 • 11.45-12.30: :/new ways of thinking aboue heritage education for PWID/ • - Ken Robinson (pojęcie myślenia dywergencyjnego) /(divergent thinking)/ • - Koestler (asocjacja – prowokacja – bisocjacja) (association – provocation – bisociation)/

  20. Ken Robinson: divergent thinking https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zDZFcDGpL4U RSA Animate - Changing Education Paradigms http://www.amara.org/en/videos/w9hDNpwpZu6H/info/rsa-animate-changing-education-paradigms-ken-robinson/ (Ukrainian version)

  21. “I want to learn something new!” • Dove or ape?

  22. To explain or to let explain • Explication to the public • The art/context/content is difficult to explain • The guide/educator knows what is important • The guide/educator decides what will be shown, explained,… • The public has to do an effort to understand • Explication by the public • The public does no effort to understand difficult (for him/her) matters • The public chooses what he/she will look at/read • The public let its imagination/thoughts freely go when looking at the art objects

  23. Koestler: association – provocation - bisociation ASSOCIATION • Shoe: • Snowman:

  24. Koestler: association – provocation - bisociation PROVOCATION Shoe and wheel of a bike Snow; snowstorm; snowball and movement and movement Actual environmental problems and

  25. Association – provocation – bisociation (Arthur Koestler (1964) • Bisociation: looking for a common field of meaning(thinking) /common field of experience (acting)  connecting two fields (the world of the individual and the artwork) • Shoe – lace, snake, mouse, nest, bed, bedroom, lamp, electricity, fuse • Replace tyre with brush, brush at bottom, 2 brushes and polish tube

  26. Day 1 • 13.00-14.30: /Towards a new educational methodology: impression – processing – expression. Theoretical scheme and interactive example./

  27. In the museum • 1, Impression • Association of movement with • Look for other things that turn in the room

  28. Do your hand before your eyes – I will lead you to a statue and you feel it • Without and with gloves • Do the same for me (participate!)

  29. Imitate

  30. 2, Processing • What trophy would you like to win? For doing what? What are you good at?

  31. Look in the mirror  taking a photograph: you are in the castle!

  32. 3, Expressing • Make the clothing of the poor child colorful

  33. TheCaféTracé, QuadrupleTrace, TheFacebookProfile./

  34. Day 1 • 15.30-16.30:/Discovering the museum./ • /Application of new methods of divergent thinking on your own museum: TheCaféTracé, QuadrupleTrace, TheFacebookProfile./

  35. How to be an explorar of the “Museum/World” (Kery Smith) • Proceed in any order • All indications are free to interpretation • Always be looking (notice de ground beneath your feet) • Feel free to add, alter or ignore • Consider everything alive (is not the same a animate) • Everything is interesting (look closer) • Alter your course often • Notice the stories going on around you • Notice patterns, make connections • Create a personal dialogue with your environment • Use all of your senses • There are no rules, only suggestions • Treat everything as an experiment • Start with whatever makes you feel a twinge of exitement (waaw or zap) • Trace things back to their origins

  36. Day 1 • 16.30-18.00: /Exercise in the museum on the methodology impression – processing – expression: working in groups./  The educators and the lecturor develop an activity for the following day with the PWID (impression-processing-ordening)

  37. Day 2 • 10.00- 11.30:Exercise with the PWID  visiting the museum: • part I impression and part II processing and part III expression

  38. Day 2 • 11.45-13.15: • Sharing the experiences • Conclusionsandquestions

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