Izoom reggio emilia2/20/2023 Os Anais do Simpósio Internacional de Musicologia da UFRJ seguem a proposta de coletâneas temáticas vinculadas ao evento científico de mesmo nome e tem por objetivo publicar os trabalhos selecionados mediante submissão. What is more, I came to understand that living assessment not only supports a practice that is creative, playful, and discursive, but also entices young learners to experience joy, wonder, and passion with the arts through an ongoing participation in the art of living assessment. Artfully inspired, autoethnographic assessment practices also enable an ongoing reflexive process of professional development for the teacher. Moreover, living assessment provides opportunities for parents to participate in and better support their child’s learning and meaning making. In our learning community, many of the students saturated themselves in the aesthetics of art making, and were able to respond to what they made and learned through aesthetic criticisms. This inquiry also elucidates how living assessment advocates meaning making through the arts, which better corresponds with the learning at hand, and with children’s cognitive capacities-i.e., through play-based learning, drawing, painting, music, and drama. Findings from the study illuminate how this practice of assessment respects and values the individual child and enables a democratic means of assessment for the entire learning community. The stories focus on the artful assessments of Kindergarten, Grade 1, Grade 4/5, and Grade 6 student music learning experiences. Over the course of a school year, I composed over 500 creative non-fictional, autoethnographies of my journey with living assessment. That foundation evokes three guideposts-documentation, artistry, and augmentation- to support teachers as they engage with artistic practices, tools, and frameworks to creatively illuminate values and judgments of their students’ creativity, imagination, and meaning making in arts learning experiences. Living assessment encourages l’art pour l’art, and is rooted in underpinnings of pedagogical documentation, learning stories, and living inquiry. Therefore, guided by a framework of artography and autoethnography, I developed a novel, formative means of assessment grounded in artistic thinking, doing, and making-living assessment. However, conventional practices (i.e., rating scales, rubrics, and checklists) struggle, or are unable, to meaningfully assess students’ creativity, imagination, and meaning making. Arts learning experiences often embrace a canvas of colourful interpretations and creativity that necessitate assessment practices unique to the arts.
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