135 research outputs found

    From Community Artist to Leadership Bricoleur

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    This abstract comes with a warning. This thesis is not conventional. Although the writer has chosen to give a nod to the more recognisable format of a PhD thesis she has also chosen to discard many of the accepted academic conventions in her pursuit of a more authentic exploration of creative research. In doing so she is forecasting much more varied audiences for this thesis. The thesis offers a demonstration-in-action of her role as a creative disrupter of both form and function. After a successful career as a community artist, Lisa Philip-Harbutt wondered if the skill-set she had honed in a wide range of community contexts could be useful in another setting. Needing a challenge as far from both community and the arts as possible, Lisa headed to university and the School of Business. From her work in the community, Lisa was aware of many of the ‘wicked’ problems currently being faced by society. Within academia she found people searching for new models of leadership but still working within systems that were biased toward the charismatic hero (e.g. middle-aged, white, confident male interested in the bottom line). Lisa wondered if the current leadership focus, which was based on analytics and a bottom-line business model might be exacerbating the mismatch between how we train leaders and the expectation of their followers. She set about exploring alternative options that could contribute to more useful training for our would-be leaders. The research described in this thesis explores Lisa’s primary question of ‘How useful is a community artist in leadership development?’ This thesis is both explorative and experiential, calling on the reader to join in and play along with the many participants that attended workshops and presentations across Australia and overseas. Combinatory play is offered as a way to attract participants and advocate for a different style of researching. The empirical approach undertaken drew on methods from Action Research (AR) to provide iterative and reflective opportunities for interactions with others and Arts-based Research (ABR) to inform the creative workshops process. These provided substantive material for an autoethnographic (AE) style of story-telling, used at both conferences and in the presentation of this thesis. This thesis collages the many playful interactions Lisa had on her creative journey from community artist to leadership bricoleur and in doing so offers insights into how a creative disrupter can support the development of leaders. As a final AR cycle Lisa offers some contributions this research has made. She is at pains to outline that these are the ones that strike her as useful in the lasts moments of this process, suggesting that a few months earlier the list would have been different and into the future it will change on every re-reading. For this is not a definitive rendering of a piece of research. It is instead an art-work, collaged together to explore a field of practice and offer up multi- readings and alternative ways of seeing and being seen. It calls on the reader to engage with it differently.Thesis (Ph.D.) -- University of Adelaide, Business School, 201

    Enfermidades determinadas pelo princípio radiomimético de Pteridium aquilinum (Polypodiaceae)

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    Photograph taken by Salt Lake Tribune staf

    Ethics = ?

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    This photograph originally appeared in the 2016 Research student photography and image competition held to celebrate National Science Week (Aug 13-21). Blurb: The image is a still from a video presentation that is called "Am I an ethical arts worker?". In my research I use spoken word with large screen video projection to introduce an idea to groups of participants who have come together to work on an issues they have identified. After the video presentation we tackle the issue - in this case ethical practice in the workplace - through art-making and storytelling. The participants are not artists, so starting the workshop with an abstracted video and spoken word presentation takes them out of their usual thinking and allows then to tackle the issue from different directions. I have been using these sorts of techniques in community contexts for over 35 years. In my PhD I am exploring their potential in professional development contexts. This image depicts my ongoing exploration for definitions of ethical behaviour
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