"Learning & Improving from Experience"
"Learning & Improving from Experience"
Finalità
The purpose of this module is to provide performing artists with processes that can help them recognise, reflect, and judge achievements and failures building on their previous experiences and interactions with others so they can improve their abilities.
Alla fine del presente modulo dovresti essere in grado di...
Conoscenza
Abilità
Attitudini
Concetti chiave
Lifelong learning
All learning activities undertaken throughout life with the aim of improving knowledge, skills and attitudes, within personal, social or career development perspectives.
The intention or aim to learn is the critical point that distinguishes these activities from non-learning activities, such as cultural or sport activities.
Achievement
A thing done successfully with effort, skills, or courage. Until someone achieves something is common to go through failures and having to overcome them.
In the performing arts, in a wider sense, an achievement of a certain magnitude confers a certain degree of merit that can be distinguished, e.g., through a local public recognition or a national or international award.
Feedback
Information about reactions to a product, a person’s performance of a task, etc. which is used as a basis for improvement. It allows to identify flaws which can be worked in the future.
Feedback on art performances is crucial to improve their quality and to self-development.
Evaluation
The assessment of strengths and weaknesses to improve the effectiveness of something. It is a judgement about the amount or value of something.
Evaluation is a formal systematic method for collecting and analysing information about the impact of an activity and assessing if it reaches its objectives.
Which are common causes of failure in performing arts entrepreneurship activities?
Common causes of failure in performing arts
How to overcome common causes of failure in performing arts entrepreneurship activities?
Overcoming common causes of failure in performing arts
“Training, work, effort and luck” – Daniela Ruah
Daniela Ruah is a Portuguese-American actress that grew up in Portugal and now lives in the USA, starring in NCIS: Los Angeles TV series since 2009. In an interview she gave, she said that to get there was a matter of “Training, work, effort and luck”.
Daniela invested a lot in training since she was a kid. As her parents noticed her aptitude for being a show-off and she loved dance, she started taking tap dancing classes. Her interest later turned to ballet and gymnastics and she also attended acting classes. When she was 16, she got her first job in a soap opera and loved it.
At age 18, she decided to move to London to study Performing Arts at the London Metropolitan University. In 2007, she moved to New York to further her studies at the Lee Strasberg Theatre and Film Institute. She is a great example that pursuing dreams by investing in learning can be fruitful.
Lifelong learning in the performing arts
How to filter feedback
Receiving and implementing other people’s constructive feedback is a worthwhile investment. It improves the relationships that you have with others and encourage an healthy self-reflection.
Filter first
Start by separating facts from opinions. Even well-intentioned feedback is influenced by the biases of the people giving it. You must look at the feedback from a holistic perspective. Feedback mainly reveals information about the person who is giving it.
Reinterpret the information
Try to reinterpret what the person giving you feedback has said in terms that make sense to you. Everyone talks about technical concepts differently, and it is important that you understand them. Reinterpreting the opinions of others is important before you decide whether or not the information is helpful.
How to filter feedback
Respond consciously
Feedback can be positive or negative. If you feel upset with the feedback that you receive, it can be because it feels like a negative comment on who you are instead of what you do.
We can adjust our behaviour to ease friction with those around us but we cannot change who we are, nor should we. It is up to the feedback receivers to manage their reaction.
Feedback is better when it is immediate
The reason it is helpful for people to receive feedback immediately after they do something is because they just completed an action that is fresh in the other people’s minds.
If someone gives you feedback on something you did some days ago, they probably will not remember all the details. Furthermore, people tend to modify stories as they recall them.
How to filter feedback
Feedback is helpful when it is specific
If the feedback givers provide concrete examples they can be helpful as the receiver can clearly understand them and identify points of change. If they speak in generalities it is vague feedback, and it can be easily dismissed.
Get a second opinion
Do not change something based only in one person’s feedback. Collect more opinions. If different people tell you about the same things, then it is safe to believe that there is room for progress. Feedback is only valuable if it is about how you do things, not about who you are as a person.
Evaluating your experiences in performing arts
Piano d’azione
Think about your experiences
Think about your past experiences in performing arts: the staff involved in the projects, the participating organisations, and the audiences. What did work well and what did not with each experience?
List indicators
Now that you have recalled your experiences, list the indicators that could be used to evaluate the success of those experiences considering the three mentioned dimensions. Provide the data source for each indicator also.
Define how to implement them
Having the indicators ready, decide in which phase of the experiences it would be more relevant to evaluate them and who would be responsible for the evaluation. Always keep in mind what worked in the past and what did not.