The Score is a theatre performance and workshop program produced by ILBIJERRI Theatre Company—Australia’s leading First Nations theatre company. The aim is to create a community-engaged, participatory model for theatre in health education (THE) that will address sexual health for First Nations young people, to be delivered in communities, schools, prisons, and health settings. This paper will present the model, as well as preliminary findings from a tour of The Score into rural Victorian communities.
Dr Sarah Woodland is a researcher, practitioner and educator in applied theatre, participatory arts and socially engaged performance. She is currently Dean’s Research Fellow in the Faculty of Fine Arts and Music, University of Melbourne, investigating how the performing arts can promote social justice and wellbeing in institutions and communities.
Exploring the kitchen as a space for the consumption and creation of art and beauty. Viewing a mundane chore through the lens of fascination, curiosity and creativity and finding wellbeing through the process of preparing and serving everyday meals.
Anushka Fernando-Goonetilleke is passionate about exploring the nexus between art and wellbeing in the kitchen. She is an advisor to Learn for Life Lanka, promoting social and emotional learning skills in Sri Lanka. Anushka has a Master of Education from Harvard University and is based in the United Kingdom
This presentation will provide a short overview of our research examining the role of community language radio in Australia during the COVID-19 pandemic. Drawing data from an examination of press reporting and a case study of presenters at a community language radio station in Melbourne, our findings indicate that community language radio has played a vital role in promoting listener wellbeing by communicating information about COVID-19; and by providing a sense of comfort, entertainment and companionship through regular broadcasting. We use crisis communication and resilience theory to consider the vital role community language radio plays for migrant communities during crises.
Dr Amanda E. Krause is a Lecturer (Psychology) in the College of Healthcare Sciences at James Cook University (Queensland, Australia). As a music psychology scholar, she studies how we experience music and the radio in our everyday lives. Her research asks how these experiences influence our health and well-being
Many young people rely on music to support their wellbeing, including university students. Prior research has identified that this strategy is not successful for all people, and particularly for those who are inclined to ruminate. A recent investigation has once again highlighted the tendency for more unhappy people to persist with unhelpful music listening habits, rather than adjust them, compared to those who are stressed, but happy, satisfied and with high life satisfaction. This interesting finding suggests that the search for the most helpful approach to distressed young people needs further investigation, and one strategy developed through our research was to create a series of VLOGs, produced by young people, as another approach for raising awareness and increasing motivation to adjust unhelpful music listening habits.
Dr Katrina Skewes McFerran is Professor and Head of the Creative Arts Therapy program at the university of Melbourne. She is a qualified music therapist who specializes in work with young people and has published 4 books, more than 100 research articles, a TEDX talk on returning from the Dark Side with music, and a free access MOOC on How Music Can Change Your Life with Coursera.
This presentation will report on the findings of a recent CAWRI initiative in which onshore and offshore international students (undergraduate and post-graduate) took part in a series of stand-up comedy workshops and the ways in which the initiative enhanced the emotional wellbeing of the participants.
Dr Richard Johnson Sallis is Head of Drama Education in The University of Melbourne's Graduate School of Education (MGSE). Richard is an internationally recognised expert in the area of Research-Based Theatre with special interests in drama/theatre education; drama for wellbeing; theatre history; Theatre for Young People; diversity and inclusion in teaching and learning; and initial teacher education.
Group assessments are an integral part of law programs throughout Australia. Collaboration skills are also a Threshold Learning Outcome (TLO). However, few law students seem to have positive experiences when doing group assignments. Many seem to resist it. The first half of the presentation will discuss the literature on group/collaborative learning and assessment. The focus will be on designing effective assessment of group learning tasks. The latter part of the presentation explores the connection between student wellbeing and group learning.
Dr Victoria Lambropoulos is Senior Lecturer in Law at CQ University's College of Law, Criminology and Justice. She is also a practising Barrister at the Victorian Bar. Her prime area of expertise is employment and discrimination law. Her current interests include mental health and student well-being
This project invited autistic people aged 18 to 25 years old to participate in five music workshops led by a qualified music therapist in Melbourne, Australia. The collaborative workshops included a variety of music making experiences, such as: song sharing; singing; song writing; and jamming. We collected qualitative and quantitative data, with results indicating that participants felt welcomed and included in the social music making experiences. They also felt connected to other people in the group and made suggestions for how to improve music workshops in the future.
Dr Grace Thompson is Associate Professor in Music Therapy at the University of Melbourne. Grace has lived experience of disability, and has worked with disabled children, young people and families for over 20 years. Her research focuses on understanding how accessible music making can foster relationships and social connection.
Through the creation of a set of speaking objects which tell the stories of people and their place the ‘Our Story-in-a-Box’ project has been connecting students in rural and regional Australia with their peers in Arab world countries. The aim of the project is to give voice to those who are often unheard, and to affirm cultural identity and develop intercultural empathy. It’s a simple idea with enormous potential. What creative layers could be added to the objects? Could we use this approach to encourage intergenerational dialogue and mitigate social isolation? Let’s talk!
Sharyn Volk is an Egyptologist, object-inspired learning specialist, and passionate advocate for disadvantaged students. She is co-founder of the not-for-profit Hands-on-Humanities Project and leader of the ‘Our Story in a Box’ initiative. Sharyn believes in the power of objects and story-telling as pathways to opening dialogue and developing intercultural empathy
Imagination and creativity are important elements in the experience of wellbeing. And yet understandings of these terms are often still largely Eurocentric and focused on conventionally-abled bodies. This webinar stems from a project that brought together Indigenous and settler artists, writers, and musicians, as well as those interested in the history and philosophy of imagination/creativity and/or creativity and disability. It reflects on the roles played by research methodologies centred on process, in which each participant owns their story; on the ebook designed to echo these conversations; and on the contexts in which an understanding of the varieties of creativity and wellbeing is crucial.
Dr Frederic Kiernan is a Melbourne Postdoctoral Fellow at the Melbourne Conservatorium of Music, the University of Melbourne. His research background is in musicology and the history of emotion, and he is currently working on a 3-year project which investigates how music engagement may help reduce loneliness in young Victorian adults.
Professor Aaron Corn PhD is Inaugural Director of the Indigenous Knowledge Institute at the University of Melbourne. He has a background in music and collections management and collaborates closely with Indigenous colleagues and communities in Indigenous knowledge research. His work engages with legal and knowledge traditions that remain fundamental to Indigenous cultural survival and new strategies for strengthening human cultural diversity in the digital age. He currently serves as Director of the National Recording Project for Indigenous Performance in Australia and as a Board Director of the International Council for Traditional Music Study Group on Indigenous Music and Dance.
Professor Peter Otto is Redmond Barry Distinguished Professor at the University of Melbourne, Executive Director of the Arts Faculty’s Research Unit in ‘Enlightenment, Romanticism, and Contemporary Culture,' and a member of the Australian Academy of the Humanities. He teaches and researches in the literatures and cultures of modernity, from Romanticism to the new media of today—activities informed by his interest in the histories and futures of imagination/creativity, virtual reality, and plural humanity.
Dr Anthea Skinner holds a PhD in musicology and is currently a McKenzie Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the Victorian College of the Arts, University of Melbourne. Her research interests include disability music culture and education, organology (the study of musical instruments) and heritage archiving. Anthea is the coordinator of Melbourne Youth Orchestra's Adaptive Music Bridging Program which provides instrumental music education to young people with disability. She is also a registered archivist, and won the Australian Society of Archivists 2021 Margaret Jennings Award.
This presentation will examine the process of producing and directing a feature length documentary film about the CAWRI seed funded project, Left Write Hook. The film follows the journey of eight female identifying adult survivors of childhood sexual abuse who came together to participate in a boxing and writing workshop as part of a creative arts/ sport recovery and empowerment intervention. Documentary filmmaking is positioned as a form of creative practice research using a reflexive and ethically engaged documentary methodology. Here, the participants are viewed as collaborators within the process (rather than as subjects) so that participants can regain agency through the process of filmmaking.
Dr Donna Lyon is a film producer, senior lecturer in the master of producing at The University of Melbourne, Faculty of Fine Arts and Music (FFAM), VCA Film and Television School and Deputy Associate Dean - Academic, FFAM. Donna is Founder of the participatory arts project Left, Write, Hook - an evidence based creative arts and sports intervention program for survivors of childhood sexual abuse and trauma that uses boxing and writing to recover and heal from trauma.
Shannon Owen s a filmmaker and researcher working across documentary and animation. Her film production experience ranges from big budget theatrical release docs to award winning animated shorts and her work has screened nationally and internationally at film festivals, on television and in galleries. Recent credits include Guy Bourdin Image Maker (2022) & Left Write Hook (in production).
Loneliness is now a pressing public mental and physical health concern in many developed nations. Young Australians (aged 18-25) are reporting the highest levels of loneliness in the country. Music engagement can reduce loneliness and foster experiences of social connection, but how this occurs is not well understood. Does the way we think about musical quality — what counts as ‘good’ and ‘bad’ music, and how this informs our behaviour and experiences — play a role? This talk presents some preliminary theoretical and methodological considerations that have arisen in the early stages of a 3-year research project which examines how music might be used better to reduce loneliness in young Victorians
Dr Frederic Kiernan is a Melbourne Postdoctoral Fellow at the Melbourne Conservatorium of Music, the University of Melbourne. His research background is in musicology and the history of emotion, and he is currently working on a 3-year project which investigates how music engagement may help reduce loneliness in young Victorian adults.