Conference 2025 Workshops

Workshops on Friday and Saturday are 2,5 hours, on Sunday are 2 hours long, for a limited number of participants.

For workshop details (description, day, time, language, facilitators' CVs, etc) click on the title.

HOW TO RESERVE A PLACE IN WORKSHOPS 
The available places in each Workshop are limited.
Reserving a place in a WORKSHOP will take place after the general Conference Registration via a personal email.
Priority will be given based on the order of the date of Conference Registration.

After you have completed the Registration process, you will receive a personal email. This email will be sent based on the priority of your registration date and will allow you to choose the workshop you wish to attend.
Check language, date, hours, before reserving a place
Note: all workshops are offered in parallel sessions in the same time slot each day. Participants may choose one each day


 

 

 

"Everyday stories through trace, movement, and sound”

"Everyday stories through trace, movement, and sound”

Athens, 22/03/2025, conference workshop, Vagelis Kolotsios, Elina Vafeiadi

Event date: 3/22/2025 9:30 AM - 12:00 PM Export event


"Everyday stories through trace, movement, and sound”

An inclusive approach inspired by local pedagogy, kinesiology, and the work of Trisha Brown.

 

Vagelis Kolotsios, educator, Greece
Elina Vafeiadi educator, Greece

 

WORKSHOP

Athens International Conference ‘Theatre/Drama & Inclusive Education”

Athens, March 21 - 23, 2025

Hellenic Theater/Drama & Educational Network (TENet-Gr)

 

Language: Greek

Limited number of participants

Workshop Description

This workshop combines local pedagogy, the creation of personal multimodal maps through kinesiology and sound-mimicry practices, and the artistic technique of Trisha Brown from her work “It’s a Draw.” This approach focuses on creating an artistic activity that allows students to capture their personal experiences on large sheets of paper through embodied visual expression, using their own bodies. It aims to foster intercultural interaction, exploring and shaping a space of free expression and inclusion.

 

The methodology of this approach draws inspiration from local pedagogy, emphasizing students’ connection with local experiences and the creation of personal maps. Children exchange and explore different experiences, stories, and values from their daily lives, identifying shared or differing milestones that open avenues for discussion. Trisha Brown’s technique, blending choreography with visual art, transforms bodily movements into visual representations. This process enables emotional and artistic expression, fostering intercultural communication by transcending language and cultural barriers.

 

This program, designed specifically for teenagers, consists of three stages:

In the first stage, students are introduced to the works of Trisha Brown as a starting point, along with various types of maps, sparking discussions about their personal experiences in the city. In groups, they are then invited to capture a typical day from their lives on large floor papers, drawing a line that represents memorable events throughout their day. Here, cognitive mapping will be used, enabling participants to document their daily experiences within their local area.

 

In the second stage, children navigate these maps, using their bodies and movements to express the experiences they recorded on paper. As each individual moves across their map, they interact with their peers, traversing shared stops and gradually creating a choreographed sequence. Their movement pathways, reminiscent of a game of “charades,” will be accompanied by body-generated sounds, followed by sound-motion exercises in small group interactions.

 

The third stage allows students to freely color their maps using their bodies, drawing inspiration from Trisha Brown’s work. Oil pastels will be scattered across the paper, and participants will experiment by coloring their mapped experiences, but this time using their bodies instead of their hands. This restriction, inspired by Trisha Brown, promotes a more liberating and abstract visual outcome, as colors and traces emerge on the paper.

 

To conclude, the children will observe their creations, discuss, and suggest any changes or additions to their map journeys. Through this workshop’s blend of techniques, the program aims to enhance children’s creativity, emotional expression, and interaction, crossing language and cultural boundaries. Participants are expected to develop mapping and artistic expression skills, along with a deeper understanding of their city and culture.

 

The above program is designed for school classes or mixed groups of students who speak various languages, including refugee students.

 

Note: This workshop is intended for teachers and whoever wants to integrate creative and intercultural methodologies into their teaching, enhancing the expression and interaction of their students. No prior artistic experience is required; however, participants should wear comfortable clothing that allows for free movement. The workshop includes exercises that may involve physical contact.

 

Bibliographic references:

Demarest, A. B. (2015). Place-based curriculum design: Exceeding standards through local investigations. Routledge.

Harmon, K. (2004). You are here: Personal geographies and other maps of the imagination. Princeton Architectural Press.

McInerney, P., Smyth, J., & Down, B. (2011). ‘Coming to a place near you?’ The politics and possibilities of a critical pedagogy of place-based education. Asia-Pacific Journal of Teacher Education, 39(1), 3–16.

Rosenberg, S. (2016). Trisha Brown: Choreography as visual art. Wesleyan University Press.

Turchi, P. (2007). Maps of the imagination: The writer as cartographer. Trinity University Press.

Wattchow, B., & Brown, M. (2011). A pedagogy of place: Outdoor education for a changing world. Monash University Publishing.

 

 

Elina Vafeiadi is a mathematician and dancer specializing in percussive forms of expression, tap dance, and body music. Working in non-formal education with refugee and migrant populations, she focuses on interdisciplinary education through STEAM, combining the sciences with creative movement and sound. She also has extensive experience teaching tap and body music to children and adults, aiming to enhance rhythmic perception and bodily expression. Her participation in musical projects as a tap dancer and her use of the body as a musical instrument drive her to explore the historical connections between music and dance and their ongoing evolution.

 

Vagelis Kolotsios is an educator specializing in teaching the Greek language to refugees and migrants. He holds a master’s degree in Human Rights, Cultural Informatics, and Digital Forms of Art, and has developed and implemented educational approaches based on communicative teaching and action- and project-oriented activities. He specializes in creating educational materials for both in-person and online classes and has integrated artistic activities to enhance the educational process. Additionally, he engages in illustration and the creation of ethnographic comics, combining professional experience with artistic expression.

 
FRIDAY 21/3/2025, 16.30-19.00

"The Raft Game"
Georgia Antoniou,
teacher at 5th High School Corfu Greece
Angeliki Kladi teacher at 5th High School Corfu Greece
Language: Greek
Room: 5405 (wheelchair accessible)

The acceptance of self through the affirmation of others
Lambros Arapakos, social worker, Greece
Giouli Douvou, theatre pedagogue, Greece
Language: Greek
Room: 131 (no wheelchair accessible

"we all can…supporting diversity through enhancing the general self-confidence of adolescents in secondary education"
Aikaterini Asimidou, teacher, Music School of Piraeus, Greece
Antonios Lenakakis, Professor of Theatre Arts and Education, Department of Preschool Education Sciences, Faculty of Education, Aristotle University of Thessaloniki, Greece
Angelos Souliotis, music teacher,  Music School of Piraeus, Greece
Language: Greek
Room: 5407 (wheelchair accessible)

"Biography Based Language Teaching Through Creative Drama"
Ferah Burgul-Adıgüzel Assoc. Prof. Gazi University Gazi Faculty of Education, Turkey
Language: English
Room: 132 (no wheelchair accessible)

"The theatrical educational model through the neurological approach of acting"
Annita Capousizi, 
Instructor of the inclusive performing arts, Artistic director of the theatre group ARTimeleia, Greece

Language: Greek
Room: 5404 (wheelchair accessible)

"Oficina Manta plus democracy and modern slavery"
Hugo Miguel Coelho
, ExQuorum, Portugal
Language: English
Room: 127 (no wheelchair accessible)

"I am Malala - a process drama approach to address gender-based violence in classrooms"
Adam Cziboly, 
associate professor Western Norway University of Applied Sciences, Norway
Language: English
Room: 310 (wheelchair accessible)

The Navel of the Earth- A workshop on inclusion” 
Maria Frangi,
University of Patras Department of Theatre Studies, Greece 
Language: Greek
Room: 313 (wheelchair accessible)

"Lotus Project yoga meets poetry"
Bruno Freyssinet 
artistic director of Transplanisphere France
Foteini Dimitriou Yoga Family Violet Alignment school, Greece
Language: English/Greek/French
Room: 311 (wheelchair accessible)

"Who Was My Granny"
Sunčica Milosavljević, theatre director, drama pedagogue, Serbia
Nataša Milojević, drama and dance pedagogue, Serbia
Mladen Brekić, Youth Drama Club POKUS, Serbia
Sara Prodanović, Youth Drama Club POKUS, Serbia
Language: English
Room: 5204-nykton organon (wheelchair accessible)

"POWER! - Exploring and blocking racism within and around us” 
George Moschos,
Director of Youth Engagement Scheme YES, CAMHI, Greece 
Olga Orfanidou, primary school teacher, Greece 
Language: Greek
Room: 410 (wheelchair accessible)

"A Thousand Languages of Dance: Dance as a Tool for Inclusion"
Maria Papadopoulou,
Movement Teacher / Trainer, InDancEdu, Greece
Language: Greek
Room: Estiatorio (wheelchair accessible with some difficulty)

"Journey to the Water"
Tríona Stokes, 
Drama Lecturer, Maynooth University, Ireland
Language: English
Room: 312 (wheelchair accessible)

"Devised Theatre - new meanings and new narratives"
Sofia Vgenopoulou, child psychiatrist, director, theatre educator-group animator, Greece
Language: Greek
Room: 409-chorodias (wheelchair accessible)

 

 


SATURDAY 22/3/2025, 09.30-12.00

"The things couldn't fit in my suitcase"
Ömer Adıgüzel, Prof. University Faculty of Educational Sciences, Turkey
Zeki Özen, Assoc. Prof.  Ankara University Faculty of Educational Sciences, Turkey
Language: English
Room: 131 
(no wheelchair accessible)

"Uninstall the installs: deconstructing the roots of fascism"
Katerina Alexiadi, 
educator, drama teacher Greece
Vasilis Klissiaris educator, drama teacher Greece
Language: Greek
Room: 5405 
(wheelchair accessible)

"Theatre as an Awareness Practice: 1955 - 2024, a Bus Ride"
Maria Olga Athinaiou
, Theatre Practitioner, Processworker, Greece
Language: English
Room: 5404 
(wheelchair accessible)

"Oratio Mix, intercultural dialog at school"
Noémie Besace
, artist, pedagogue, France
Bruno Freyssinet, artistic director Transplanisphère, France
Language: English/French
Room: 132 
(wheelchair accessible)

Theatre with singing as a vehicle
Aris Biniaris, 
Director, actor, Greece 
Language: Greek
Room: Estiatorio 
(wheelchair accessible with some difficulty)

"Embodied Storytelling: Exploring Kathabhinaya for Empowering Vulnerable Social Groups"
Janardan Ghosh, 
story performer, creative director, education officer, India
Language: English
Room: 409-chorodias 
(wheelchair accessible)

"Everyday stories through trace, movement, and sound” 
An inclusive approach inspired by local pedagogy, kinesiology, and the work of Trisha Brown.

Vagelis Kolotsios, educator, Greece
Elina Vafeiadi, educator, Greece
Language: Greek
Room: 127 
(no wheelchair accessible)

"The prince and the prince"
George Konstantinidis, Child Psychologist, Actor, Volunteer at the Rainbow School, Greece
Elena Skarpidou, Sexual Education Trainer, Head of Education Department at the Rainbow School, Greece
Language: Greek
Room: 5407 
(wheelchair accessible)

"Devising as a Process of Inclusion and Developing Group Harmony" 
Sanja Krsmanović Tasić, 
choreographer, dance-theatre practitioner, Serbia 
Language: English
Room: 5204-nykton organon 
(wheelchair accessible)

"The Red Lantern Festival, or How the Emperor’s Maidservant changed his Mind and Saved the People"
John O’ Toole, Professor University of Melbourn, Australia
Language: English
Room: 410 
(wheelchair accessible)

Truth or Lie’ - simple responses to a complex world
Lutz Pickardt
director, theatre pedagogue, BuT, Germany
Language: English
Room: 313 
(wheelchair accessible)

"Elements of applied theater and technique by Ivana Chubbuk 12 Tools in drama pedagogy on examples of scenes from plays by A.P. Chekhov"
Arma Tanovic-Brankovic Professor on Academy of Performing Arts, Bosnia and Herzegovina
Language: English
Room: 311 
(wheelchair accessible)

"One Well, One World: Activating Water Justice in the Global Textile Industry"
Philip Valle 
Lecturer - Department of Theatre and Dance, California Polytechnic State University, USA
Phyllis Wong Lecturer - Department of Theatre and Dance, California Polytechnic State University, USA
Jenna Brock Student, Research and Teaching Assistant - California Polytechnic State University, USA
Sara Sjoblom Student and Research Assistant - California Polytechnic State University USA
Language: English
Room: 312 
(wheelchair accessible)

“Me, You, Together!” 
Eirini Zoi,
philologist, drama teacher, Greece 
Foteini Papacharalampous, psychologist, psychotherapist, Greece 
Melina Hadjigeorgiou, drama teacher, educator, Greece 
Language: Greek
Room: 310 
(wheelchair accessible)

 


SUNDAY 23/3/2025, 09.30-11.30

“Getting into improv theatre”
Frank Hohl, theatre pedagogue, Germany
Language: English
Room: 313 
(wheelchair accessible)

Where is mum? - Applying Drama for Gender Equality Education” 
Martha Katsaridou,
Assistant Professor of Drama/Theatre Education at the Department of Early Childhood Education, University of Thessaly, Greece 
Koldo Vio, Drama Educator, Theatre director, Greece/Spain 
Language: English /Spanish/Greek
Room: 132 
(no wheelchair accessible):

“Codes Under the Shadows”
Aglaia Naka,
drama-pedagogue, Greece
Christos Rachiotis, actor, animator, teacher, Greece
Language: Greek
Room: 127 
(wheelchair accessible)

"Play Jam"
Eleni Papaioannou, Movement Educator, Choreographer, Performer, Greece
Language: English
Room: 131 
(no wheelchair accessible)

“Talking about the ideas of hate in the classroom” 
Kostis Papaioannou,
director ofSIMEIO: for the Study and Confrontation of the Right-Wing Extremists”, Greece 
Aspasia Kalisora, teacher, member ofSIMEIO: for the Study and Confrontation of the Right-Wing Extremists”, Greece 
Language: Greek
Room: 5204-nykton organon 
(wheelchair accessible)


 

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