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2020 AATE National Conference
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Keynote Pre-Conferences Master Classes
Monday, July 27-Wednesday, July 29th
$300
AATE has joined with the Arts Administrators of Color Network (AAC) to present the first-ever Accomplices Leadership Institute (ALI) during AATE's 2020 conference.
ALI is a three-day intensive for white arts leaders who are:
Participants will arrive in Phoenix on Monday, July 27. Over three days, facilitators will build a nurturing environment of learning through self-reflection and healthy risk-taking; participants will examine their personal complicity in white supremacy, learn strategies to dismantle white supremacy in the arts, engage in visioning exercises for creating an equitable arts field, and co-create customized strategies and action steps for their organizations.
If you are interested in learning more about the Accomplices Leadership Institute, visit http://aacnetwork.org/accomplice-leadership-institute/.
Wednesday, July 29th, 8:30 am-5:30 pm
$100
AATE’s Leaders of Color Institute (LOCI) is a space for theatre professionals and administrators who will lead or are currently leading artistic organizations, programs and schools. This dedicated space only for people of color will provide professional development opportunities that includes peer exchange and leadership skill development. It is also an opportunity to share your work, successes, and challenges and make new connections with potential collaborators. The LOCI will help shape the next generation of theatre to better reflect the communities’ present. This program will run in tandem with the Arts Administrators of Color Network Accomplice Training.
Thursday, July 30th, 9am-2pm
$100
Childsplay invites AATE conference attendees to a pre-conference workshop focused on early childhood education. This interactive day will focus our community of learners on unpacking and reflecting upon best practices for drama in preschool spaces. Topics will include language and literacy development, emergent bilingualism, and trauma-informed practice. We will draw from Childsplay’s decade of working with preschool teachers through its EYEPlay professional development program, as well as special presentations by early childhood experts.
Thursday, July 30th, 9am-4pm
$100
This concise overview of the history of Theatre for Youth will provide you with the opportunity to Immerse yourself in primary sources in the Child Drama Collection, the largest archive in the world documenting the field’s history back to the 16th century. Founding archival curator Katherine Krzys will be your guide chronicling theatre for young audiences and theatre education historical benchmarks and trends. Participants will walk away with an annotated historic timeline, appropriate images on their camera, and new advocacy ideas. If you teach TFY history or have always wanted to know about the field’s past, this is the workshop for you.
Class – 9-noon – Theatre for Young Audiences history (plays, playwrights, theatres)
Lunch provided by ASU Library – noon-1
1-4 – Theatre Education history and trends (Heathcote, Way, O’Neill, university education, Evanston School District, Ward, Madame DeGenlis, Gary Indiana auditorium program, Southeast Center for Education in the Arts, AATE history, etc.)
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