The Drama Anti-discrimination Academy
Combating discrimination
Completed
mazowieckie
Warszawa
2014-10-01 - 2016-04-30
277 603,00 PLN
247 600,00 PLN
education system
Project description
Research (Society for Anti-Discrimination Education, 2011; Campaign Against homophobia, 2012; Never Again Association, 2012) proves that empathy- and mutual understanding-targeted innovative methods are required in the field of preventing discrimination. International DICE study results prove that applied drama is one such method – yet it remains vastly unknown in Poland.
The project purpose was to introduce applied drama to anti-discrimination school curricula. The project allowed 282 teachers from 4 Polish regions (Lublin, Pomeranian, Podkarpackie, and Wielkopolska voivodships) to be taught the use of drama in preventing discrimination.
Anti-discrimination trainers working in the formal and informal education systems attended drama method training sessions; 69 teachers attended a 60-hour training course series focusing on the use of drama in preventing discrimination. Two hundred and thirteen teachers participated in 6 webinars on drama, discrimination, and hate speech at school. Regional summary seminars were attended by 139 persons. Project participants drafted 22 sample scripts for drama-based anti-discrimination classes. Eight hundred copies of the “Drama Empowerment” publication were published. A film describing the drama project and method was produced.
Seventeen anti-discrimination trainers and 282 teachers were trained. One hundred and thirty-nine persons were introduced to the drama method during regional seminars; 600 persons were provided with a hard copy of the publication, and 1,041 persons downloaded it from the project website in electronic format.
We use the grant for capacity building
The project purpose was to introduce applied drama to anti-discrimination school curricula. The project allowed 282 teachers from 4 Polish regions (Lublin, Pomeranian, Podkarpackie, and Wielkopolska voivodships) to be taught the use of drama in preventing discrimination.
Anti-discrimination trainers working in the formal and informal education systems attended drama method training sessions; 69 teachers attended a 60-hour training course series focusing on the use of drama in preventing discrimination. Two hundred and thirteen teachers participated in 6 webinars on drama, discrimination, and hate speech at school. Regional summary seminars were attended by 139 persons. Project participants drafted 22 sample scripts for drama-based anti-discrimination classes. Eight hundred copies of the “Drama Empowerment” publication were published. A film describing the drama project and method was produced.
Seventeen anti-discrimination trainers and 282 teachers were trained. One hundred and thirty-nine persons were introduced to the drama method during regional seminars; 600 persons were provided with a hard copy of the publication, and 1,041 persons downloaded it from the project website in electronic format.