Training Opportunity

MA Theatre for Community and Education

This 2-year, part-time MA is a creative and challenging exploration into the power of socially engaged arts. We aim to develop the next generation of cultural leaders and interdisciplinary theatre practitioners. Graduates will lead the way in providing meaningful, inclusive arts experiences that address social, political and educational issues in a broad range of settings.

The course offers a holistic programme that invites creative reflection on the power of storytelling for social transformation. Students address complex issues in critical and creative ways, considering the role of arts in education, migration and exile, health and building communities. You’ll engage with course learning through practical exploration, collaboration, group discussion, independent study and reflective practice. 

Delivered part-time, we welcome applicants from all backgrounds, including professionals working in youth, community and/or education settings as well as performers looking to develop and diversify their practice.

VISITING AND GUEST PRACTITIONERS

In addition to the core Mountview team, students work with visiting lecturers and practitioners from a range world-class organisations. These include Turtle Key ArtsPunchdrunk EnrichmentComplicitéClod EnsembleUnicorn TheatreClean BreakTheatre PeckhamCandoco Dance CompanyBrixton HouseWales Millenium CentreTate ModernGlasshouse Theatre and Access All Areas.

 Topics covered by visiting lecturers are varied and include:  

  • Theatre and Climate Activism – Shybairn Theatre 
  • Community Arts and Sensory Engagement – Amanda Mascarenhas   
  • Theatre for Living – David Diamond 
  • Trauma Informed Practice – Emily Rodriguez 
  • Dramatherapy – Holly Samson 
  • Interfaith Arts – Andrea Tuijten 
  • Headphone Verbatim Theatre – Felix Cross 
  • Intimacy Direction – Sara Green 
  • Refugee Theatre – Mengu Turk 
  • Devising for Text – Ameera Conrad 

Students are supported to discover placements for their independent research projects based on their specific interests and emerging ideas and practice. Recent partnerships include Newham Children In Care Council, Little Fish Theatre Company and Tropical Pressure Festival, among others.

COURSE CONTENT AND DELIVERY

There is one day of in-person teaching each week, with one additional Friday and Saturday each term.

Throughout the course students develop skills in critical thinking, facilitating, devising, leading, producing, discussing and teaching creatively and imaginatively. Study involves workshops, lectures and seminars as well as independent collaborative and solo practice/research. Students are assigned weekly reading materials to digest course themes and engage in learning through independent study.

Reciprocal and collaborative learning is embedded into course practice. Students are provided with opportunities to design and lead practical workshops for one another, to bring topics for facilitated discussion with their Course Leader and to choose areas of focus for specific assessments, based on their interests and experiences.

Practical areas of study include collaborative and ensemble techniques, forum theatre, arts for wellbeing, devised theatre, inclusive and trauma informed practices, arts and money, decolonial feminist approaches, facilitating in multilingual and multifaith spaces, and ethics in artistic practice.

Students gain practical experience running workshops in schools, both in Peckham and further afield – previous locations include Spain and Nigeria.

Students engage in a wide range of texts such as Theatre of the Oppressed by Augusto Boal, Teaching to Transgress: Education as the Practice of Freedom by bell hooks and Theatre for Living: The Art and Science of Community-Based Dialogue by David Diamond. 

Assessments are varied and include essays, talks, education packs, presentations, and workshop samples.

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