The New Zealand Herald

12 Questions

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- Continued from A28 What was your childhood like?

to think about how we want them to come out. Prisons dehumanise people. The arts help people remember they’re human.

You taught applied theatre to Palestinia­n teachers last year. What did they want to learn?

Palestine is the world’s largest prison. It’s really hard for little ones there to play. Palestinia­n teachers want their children to feel safe and have the chance to be children. Palestinia­n children are brought up to hate Israeli children and vice versa so how do you teach empathy? The best way is through the arts.

You’ve addressed family violence and abuse with more than 60,000 intermedia­te school children in your Everyday Theatre programme. How does that work?

We get kids to play a game with a fictional family where a young boy is getting bashed by his dad. His mum pretends she doesn’t know. Friends don’t know what to do. In an average week our four actor-teachers work with around 500 kids and and lots of children seek help as a result. It sounds corny but we know we’ve saved lives in the 14 years we’ve been doing this in decile 1 to 3 schools.

I grew up in a large Irish Catholic family. Dad was the police sergeant in Ponsonby and we lived above the station at Three Lamps. I could read from age 4. Dad was in the Labour Party and he’d get me to come downstairs to the station and read the newspaper to Norm Kirk and Hugh Watt. When I was 9 Dad was paralysed by a stroke so we moved to a state house on the Shore. We had bugger all money. Mum often went hungry and I ended up in health camp to fatten up, but it was a rich childhood full of adventure and play.

You’ve published several books this year. What’s A Pedagogy

about?

It’s about how the joy and wonder have been taken out of teaching. Teachers now spend most of their time planning and testing and ticking boxes. When I was a boy the nuns used to take us on nature study walks. We found treasures which became ways for us to discover things about the world. We covered the curriculum but in different ways than “Here are the five facts you need to know about a rock”. Teachers need to be able to take risks, get things wrong on occasion and start things without knowing where they will end up. It’s not just schools that have become like that. Things only matter if they can be counted.

Can you measure creativity?

You can. The University of Auckland’s Creative Thinking Project is making the first real attempt to measure the relationsh­ip between how creative a school is and how well the kids are learning. We’ve collected data from 1000 Auckland kids so far. The aim is to get a national picture of how creative New Zealand schools are and compare them to other countries to shift the debate away from just literacy and numeracy. It’s a groundbrea­king piece of research.

What’s wrong with our education system?

We’re too focused on building skills for the future but a lot of our kids can’t see a future. What they really need is help to make sense of their lives now and how to imagine the world differentl­y. Sadly, the focus on literacy and numeracy means teachers don’t have the time to teach this way any more. I consider myself an arts activist. Teachers know the Government reforms are wrong and the research backs them up. They need every advocate they can get.

Why do you spend so much time teaching applied theatre in China and Singapore?

The biggest revolution in arts education is happening there. They’ve worked out that for economic success you don’t just need compliant workers, you need creative people who can think outside the square. There’s been huge investment in the past five to 10 years. I was asked if I had the capacity to train 10,000 teachers in applied theatre in six months. China has whole provinces where the arts are now compulsory in schools and they start the day with arts. They’ve worked out it’s the edge and we’re running in the opposite direction.

What’s your new book Playing about?

Part of it is about the importance of play for adults. At what age do we stop skipping? Research shows really successful workplaces are where people laugh a lot. Despite all the promise of technology, the world has become more factory-like. We’ve become a society that celebrates individual achievemen­t ahead of public good. Children are told constantly from the age of 5 whether they meet standards. If they don’t achieve they’re not a valuable human being. We have the second-highest rate of youth suicide in the world and we lock up young people more than anywhere else in the world except the US.

How did you use theatre to help 5 and 6-year-old Christchur­ch children after the earthquake­s?

I taught a group of children on their first day back at school while 20 teachers watched. I asked them to help a little girl who wakes up one morning and sees her cloth of dreams is torn. They suggested we loan her our dreams until the cloth was fixed. So they drew their dreams on a big blank cloth. One girl who lost family in the quake drew herself flying on a unicorn over The Land of Everything That’s Good. Then we thought about how to fix the cloth. One boy suggested magic thread so they wrote a list of ingredient­s to mix in a cloud bowl. There were: three bales of belief; 17 giggles you have with your mum at bedtime; and one little girl said, “A teaspoon of light from the darkest tunnel.” She stood on her tiptoes, leaned over the imaginary bowl and said, “You sprinkle it — like this. See, the light goes through everything.” The teachers standing behind us were moved to tears. So I created the Teaspoon of Light Theatre Company and we spent three years working in Christchur­ch schools.

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