Event

Evidence of the Advancement of The Creative Arts in Interdisciplinary Practice: Voices of Survival and Care: Working Together for Change

A lecture by Cheryl McLean, Independent Scholar, Writer, Ethnodramatist
3:00-4:00 p.m.

Responses and Q&A
4:00-5:00 p.m.

  • B Stephen Carpenter II
    Dean, College of Arts and Architecture; Professor of Art Education and African American Studies
  • William Doan
    ADRI Director, professor of theatre, artist-in-residence in the College of Nursing, 2019-20 Penn State Laureate
  • Kimberly Powell
    Professor of Education (Language, Culture & Society), Art Education, Music Education and Asian Studies
  • Darrin Thornton
    Interim Associate Dean for Academic Affairs; Associate Professor of Music

Registration is available at https://psu.zoom.us/webinar/register/WN_Jw57EejlQeCA_QHoZNj5tA

Attendees are invited to join us to view the recorded lecture and participate in the question and answer period from 3:00-5:00 p.m. on November 19, or to view the recorded lecture in advance and join for the question and answer portion beginning at 4:00 p.m. Please contact adri@psu.edu if you would like to receive a link to the recorded lecture prior to this event.

This event was originally scheduled to take place in April 2020, during the Arts, Design, and Health Research Summit sponsored by the Arts & Design Research Incubator and the Hamer Center for Community Design.

Cheryl L. McLean M.A. Independent Scholar, Writer, Ethnodramatist (masters Creative Arts Therapies, Concordia University, Montreal, BA Social Sciences, University of Western Ontario, London) has edited three books on arts and research, Creative Arts in Humane Medicine (2014), Creative Arts for Community and Cultural Change (2011) and Creative Arts in Interdisciplinary Practice (2010), Brush Education Inc., Edmonton. She was founder and publisher of The International Journal of The Creative Arts in Interdisciplinary Practice (IJCAIP) with international board members across disciplines, leaders in the arts, education, healthcare, design and business. She taught the courses Problems in Education Research in Creativity Summer Institute, MEd Acadia University, Nova Scotia, Creativity in Death and Bereavement, University of Western Ontario, London, and has facilitated the workshop, Living Stories for Hope and Change for allied health professionals, physicians, psychiatrists, mental health counsellors as well as sex abuse survivors. She speaks widely about the arts in research and was a guest presenter for The American Medical Association (AMSA) Medical Humanities scholars’ program web podcast and has presented keynotes for The Alberta Psychiatric Association, Congress of The Humanities, University of Western Ontario and Acadia University Summer Institute among others and has helped advance the creative arts in interdisciplinary practice in leading international journals (The Advancement of The Creative Arts in Interdisciplinary Practice, Journal of Curriculum and Pedagogy,V. 12, No. 2 (2015). She is also an ethnodramatist and studied acting under the direction of Muriel Gold, former AD of The Saidye Bronfman Theatre, Montreal. Her research took place while working as a group therapist in residential homes where a number of her clients were Holocaust survivors. She wrote and performed the solo ethnodrama Remember Me for Birds about aging, mental health and autonomy which premiered at McGill Medical School. She has written and performed plays based on dietetic research about aging, care and food issues. She is currently writing a new book, The Walkers: Contemporary Stories of Life in Transition Challenge and Change with essays that explore the contemporary realities of modern living, change and survival.