Spark: UAL Creative Teaching and Learning Journal
Not a member yet
102 research outputs found
Sort by
Becoming-Supervisor Becoming-Supervised
PhD supervisors and PhD students from UAL were invited to take part in an experimental research study entitled Becoming-Supervisor Becoming-Supervised. This study was co-authored by two PhD supervisors at UAL, and an alumni UAL PhD student. The purpose of this research study was to gather their thoughts about interactions with PhD supervision. A questionnaire was sent out and below is the anonymous, randomised, unedited and verbatim assemblage of the answers given by 15 respondents. We hope it gives a snapshot of some of the reasons for being involved in doctoral research and supervision in an art and design context
I Supervise and I am Supervised
This article explores the roles of power in creative exchange. In it I reflect on my dual role of being both supervisor and supervisee. Written during the early-2021 COVID lockdown, I relate Foucault’s interpretation of Bentham’s panopticon to both academic supervision and to my commercial illustration practice. When working for art-directors and creative teams, a distant powerbroker (and their approval) offered certainty and security; in a PhD, that might not necessarily be the case. At that stage in my PhD, I felt uncertain of the hierarchies at work: was I working for my supervisors, or with them?
Supervising PhDs in the arts in an age of ‘global challenges’: a question of permissions
UAL Research Season 2021 was dedicated to the theme of ‘Earth and Equity: integrating environmental and racial justice’. This short essay raises the issue of how we should supervise PhDs in the arts in the era of ‘global challenges’, suggesting that the question of ‘integration’ and the intersection of environmental and racial justice that ‘Earth and Equity’ offers points to the question of a ‘permission to research’, in which global challenges can be addressed by a focus on who has permission to engage in practice-based research in the arts and under what conditions
Editorial
This is the editorial for the tenth issue of Spark: UAL Creative Teaching and Learning Journal, a special issue on PhD Supervision
Unlearning, learning, learner: a provocation for super vision
Considered and effective supervision of practice-based PhDs requires an expansion of and challenge to established modes of hierarchical academic and peer relationships. The production of knowledge, especially in this form-breaking field, cannot be separated from the means by which that output is assessed and circulated. This paper explores these tensions through case-studies based directly on the writer’s experience. It proposes embodied learning - a revisioning of earlier parameters of scholarship – and an informed overhaul of the perspectives, positions and priorities of institutional expectation. It proposes instead a spectrum-wide inclusivity whose radical generosity and creative openness benefits all involved
“See you on the other side”: researcher identity, threshold concepts and making a ritual of confirmation
With the requirement of making a contribution to new knowledge in the field, in doing a PhD the researcher creates a curriculum. The researcher is also changing, in relation to what matters to them and the world they are making. But when the ritual of the ‘PhD confirmation’ is instrumentalized, the format of confirmation doesn’t relate to the scholarship of doing a PhD as ‘doctorateness’, threshold concept, or liminal process. If the PhD and its supervisory processes are to remain relevant, we need to re-situate the centrality of the pedagogical and ontological practices at stake in original knowledge production.  
Exploring the doctoral journey and good supervisorial practice
Drawing from my own doctoral journey, this paper examines some key challenges facing doctoral students and what they mean for good supervisorial practice. These include high levels of pressure and uncertainty, resulting in often strong unmet emotional needs made visible through feelings of imposter syndrome. These challenges can be manifested in writing, in part because writing is complex, involving a writing-into-being of the professional self and authorial voice. These kinds of challenges appear to be commonplace in the doctoral journey, indicating that good supervisorial practice must account for students’ different contexts and relationships to their current and emerging professional identities.
\u27Digital Pedagogies Open Studio\u27: disruptions, interventions and techno-empathy
This article shares a recent collaborative project, which explores a set of questions emerging from move to online/virtual forms of learning and teaching during the Covid-19 pandemic. These questions include: 1) How do you disrupt the digital space pedagogically? and 2) How can you replicate chance happenings or an interruption online? Referring to the shift to online teaching forms as generating a space of empathy between tutors and students during lockdown, the article refers to an iteration of the studio where members of the UAL LGBTQI+ student network were invited to experience a piece of live immersive storytelling via Zoom.
Introducing technical Architecture digitally
Architects design art on a scale like no other medium. Big enough for people to enter and able to last over 6,000 years. Architecture requires an understanding of site and a number of technical challenges to make it a reality, from understanding the available light to incorporating a structure to hold the building up. How best to introduce first year students to university life, to architecture and to working online all at the same time? This article explores the combination of a digital ecosystem, collaboration and balancing different tools to teach large cohorts