Education News Autumn2017web (2) | Page 10

“If it is performative, it has to work within the parameters of its artistic discipline. It has to work as music, as a play, and as research." (Photo L-R: Kelley Jo Burke and Scott Thompson) Cutting-edge, arts-based research explores experience of autism through a play with music Cutting-edge, arts-based research explores the trauma and transformation of being a parent of a child with autism through a play with music. As a seasoned researcher and prolific author, Dr. Scott Thompson, a full professor in the Faculty of Education at the University of Regina, throughout his career, has been involved in a broad range of research into inclusive education, including SSHRC-funded research projects and a pan-Canadian disability policy study. However, Thompson had reached a stage in his career where he was looking for new research avenues and methodologies to explore inclusive education. After a conversation about arts-based educational research (ABER) with colleague Dr. Valerie Triggs, an assistant professor in arts education, Thompson says, “I began reading in this area and...It was surprising to me that there was this whole other way of doing research. I had known of music therapy; I had known of the relationship between music education and math, and taking bits of music and making it a therapy, but...this [ABER] is a whole different way of constructing research.” On the side, under the name Scott Anthony Andrews, Thompson has been developing his love of music through singing and song writing, and he is about to release his third CD, I Don’t do Lazy Like That. Other artists have told Scott Anthony that his songs have a musical/theatrical bent. However, Thompson points out, there is a huge difference between people saying this and actually writing music for a play. When Thompson saw the award- winning playwright Kelley Jo Burke perform, Ducks on the Moon, a one- woman performative memoir based on her traumatic and transformative experience as a parent of a child with autism, he recognized a way to bring his academic interests and his song-writing abilities together: He was inspired to write a musical reproduction of Burke’s play. "Kelley Jo is a powerhouse [and] I knew there was power in the story,” says Thompson. So, he contacted Burke. Alumna Kelley Jo Burke (BEAD, 1990), after many years as a host and producer of CBC Saskatchewan’s radio arts performance hour, SoundXchange, had moved on to complete a Master’s of Fine Arts in playwrighting and dramaturgy (MFA, 2013), and, using her educational background, had developed and argument for Page 10