Using found poetry to explore creativity in the professional lives of English teachers

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Abstract

This arts-based research considers creativity in the professional lives of English teachers in a school in England within the context of a progressively performative education system. In addition, it explores how found poetry can represent participants’ voices in an illuminating and authentic manner. The teachers who participated in the study were able to scrutinise, reflect and comment upon the content of poems created from the words found in an initial interview transcript. This recursive process supports a credible way of seeing and knowing the teachers’ voices in a representation that gives a deeper understanding of the participants’ creative experiences. The construction, interrogation, and presentation of the found poems reveal that the teachers of English believe they have reduced freedom to be creative or to act with agency in their professional lives. The reduced freedom to be creative stems from the normalising practices of working within a culture of performance. The restrictions are both tangible and self-imposed by the participants.

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Matthews, M., Bamber, S., & Jones, L. (2023). Using found poetry to explore creativity in the professional lives of English teachers. Teachers and Teaching: Theory and Practice, 29(7–8), 739–752. https://doi.org/10.1080/13540602.2023.2201422

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