ABSTRACT

Teaching Strategies for Neurodiversity and Dyslexia in Actor Training addresses some of the challenges met by acting students with dyslexia and highlights the abilities demonstrated by individuals with specific learning differences in actor training.

The book offers six tested teaching strategies, created from practical and theoretical research investigations with dyslexic acting students, using the methodologies of case study and action research. Utilizing Shakespeare’s text as a laboratory of practice and drawing directly from the voices and practical work of the dyslexic students themselves, the book explores:

  • the stress caused by dyslexia and how the teacher might ameliorate it through changes in their practice
  • the theories and discourse surrounding the label of dyslexia
  • the visual, kinaesthetic, and multisensory processing preferences demonstrated by some acting students assessed as dyslexic
  • acting approaches for engaging with Shakespeare’s language, enabling those with dyslexia to develop their authentic voice and abilities
  • a grounding of the words and the meaning of the text through embodied cognition, spatial awareness, and epistemic tools
  • Stanislavski’s method of units and actions and how it can benefit and obstruct the student with dyslexia when working on Shakespeare
  • Interpretive Mnemonics as a memory support and hermeneutic process, and the use of color and drawing towards an autonomy in live performance

This book is a valuable resource for voice and actor training, professional performance, and for those who are curious about emancipatory methods that support difference through humanistic teaching philosophies.

part I|63 pages

The Background to the Investigatory Practice

chapter 1|8 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|10 pages

Pedagogy and Education in Actor Training

Towards an Emancipatory Practice

chapter 4|17 pages

Matters of Dyslexia

part II|143 pages

The Investigatory Practice and Teaching Strategies One to Six

chapter 6|6 pages

The Theoretical Perspectives and Methodology

Attaining a Verstehen through Action Research Underpinned by Case Study

chapter 7|9 pages

Finding the Way In

Picture Thinking

chapter 8|21 pages

Images as Visible Thought, Acting Stimulus, and Mnemonic Pegs

Action Research (Cycle One) and Teaching Strategy One

chapter 9|21 pages

The Physical Path and Stanislavski’s Actions

Action in Pursuit of the Objective or as an Anchor of Verbal Meaning?

chapter 10|26 pages

A Trial of the Physical Actions Method Inspired by Stanislavski

Action Research (Cycle Two) and Teaching Strategy Two

chapter 11|12 pages

Grasping Towards Being Present in the Text, Entangling Meaning into Memory

Action Research (Cycle Three) and Teaching Strategy Three

chapter 13|18 pages

The Micro and Macro Strategy – Deconstructing and Reconstructing Meaning and Significance in Shakespeare’s text Towards Performance

Action Research (Cycles Four and Five) and Teaching Strategies Four and Five

chapter 14|13 pages

Interpretive Mnemonics, Distributed Cognition, and Authenticity of Self

The Research Findings, Action Research (Cycle Six) and Teaching Strategy Six