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PresentersHomeHotel and TravelScheduleMealsKeynoteDeveloping Wonder: The Developmental Psychology of TheatreKeynote: Thalia R. Goldstein, Saturday 9:30-10:30 am Thalia will talk about what aspects of developmental psychology could be useful for theatre makers and theatre scholars to think about and investigate more as they’re creating work for Young Audiences! Welcome, Come Again Description: Show, Not Tell: Using Sensory-Based Techniques to tell Nonverbal Stories in TVY Led By: Stacy Steyaert, Saturday 2:00-4:00 pm Description: Hatched by Treehouse Shakers We will also explore WHY these techniques are so effective with the very young, and how this information can inform how we work with and/or teach our youngest learners. Following a discussion and analysis, artists will practice these techniques, working from story prompts I will provide to create their own sensory, nonverbal vignettes for the very young.
Making the Familiar New!Led By: Patricia Zimmer, Saturday 4:15-6:15 pm Description: Teddy Bear TalksModerated by: Sandy Asher, Sunday 9:30-10:30 am John Newman: Academic and Research Applications of the Digital Festival BiosThalia R. Goldstein, Ph.D. is an Assistant Professor of Applied Development Psychology at George Mason University and the director of the Social Skills, Imagination and Theatre Lab. She studies how children participate in and create fictional worlds, how actors construct characters onstage, and the effects of these activities on empathy, theory of mind, emotion regulation, compassion and altruism. Her other work focuses on how children and adults understand social categorization at the fiction/reality border, and how children react to watching fictional worlds. Her work has been supported by the National Endowment of the Arts, The John Templeton Foundation, Arts Connection, the National Science Foundation, American Psychological Foundation and the Department of Homeland Security. She has won awards from the Society for Research in Child Development, American Psychological Association, and the International Society for the Empirical Study of Literature and Media. She is editor of the journal Psychology of Aesthetics, Creativity and the Arts (APA Division 10). Dr. Goldstein earned her B.A. from Cornell University in Theatre and Psychology, her Ph.D. from Boston College in Developmental Psychology, and completed a postdoctoral fellowship Yale University. She spent several years as a professional actress and dancer in New York City. Sandy Asher's plays have been honored with an NEA grant, three AATE Distinguished Play Awards (A Woman Called Truth, In the Garden of the Selfish Giant, and Jesse and Grace: A Best Friends Story), the IRT/Bonderman Award, NETC’s Aurand Harris Award, AATE's Charlotte Chorpenning Award for a distinguished body of work, and an Aurand Harris Fellowship grant from the Children's Theatre Foundation of America. Sandy is also the author of books for young readers and the editor of several anthologies. Six plays are included in Tell Your Story: The Plays and Playwriting of Sandra Fenichel Asher. Visit Sandy at http://sandyasher.com. Dr. John Newman is a theatre professor at Utah Valley University and director of the UVU Theatre for Youth and Education Center. He taught and directed theatre at Highland High School for eighteen years. He earned his M.A. from the University of Texas and his Ph.D. from New York University. Newman is the author of Playwriting in Schools: Dramatic Navigation and co-author of Tell Your Story: The Plays and Playwriting of Sandra Fenichel Asher. He chairs the Playwrights In Our Schools project and has served on the board of the American Alliance for Theatre and Education. Along with his work at Millersville University, Barry Kornhauser is a TYA playwright and theatre educator. Recognitions include the AATE’s Chorpenning Cup, the Children’s Theatre Foundation of America’s Orlin Corey Medallion, and most recently the ‘Artist of the Year’ designation at the 2017 Pennsylvania Governor’s Awards. Barry’s work has taken him everywhere from a one-room Amish school house to the White House where his youth theater for at-risk and disabled teens was honored as one of the nation’s top arts education programs. His plays have been commissioned/produced by the Kennedy Center, Tony-Award winning regional stages, and theatres worldwide. Stacy Steyaert, Early Childhood Program Coordinator at Imagination Stage, specializes in teaching first-exposure arts experiences for ages 0-10. Hailing from Littleton, Colorado, Stacy has worked as an arts administrator and educator for several organizations across the DC, Chicago, Hartford, and Denver metro areas. Stacy was also the 2016 & 2017 Co-Coordinator of the TVY Special Interest Group for AATE, where she founded the TVY SIG newsletter to feature North American work in theatre for ages 0-7. She holds a BFA in Theatre Management and her MEd in Early Childhood Curriculum and Instruction. Patricia Moore Zimmer teaches, writes and directs theatre for young and intergenerational audiences at Eastern Michigan University, where she is a professor in the Applied Drama and Theatre for the Young program. Some of her recent and ongoing professional interests include theatre for very young audiences, professional development for directors, the nature of creativity, and new play development in Theatre for Young Audiences. She is an active member of the American Alliance for Theatre and Education as well as TYA/USA (the U.S. Center for ASSITEJ).
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