谢谢星洲日报-动力青年副刊版的报导
来!我们一起 CLAP 一个吧!
CLAP 是Arts-ED 25 年在社区导向(Community-based Learning) 方法论的结晶。
CLAP 网站提供老师一个整合的资源。老师可以参考此网站,得到一些启发和案例,设计学习项目,让学生通过CBL 可以锻炼思辨能力,创造力和与社交技能,也培养学生的在21世纪世界公民必备的责任心和同理心。
谢谢星洲日报-动力青年副刊版的报导
来!我们一起 CLAP 一个吧!
CLAP 是Arts-ED 25 年在社区导向(Community-based Learning) 方法论的结晶。
CLAP 网站提供老师一个整合的资源。老师可以参考此网站,得到一些启发和案例,设计学习项目,让学生通过CBL 可以锻炼思辨能力,创造力和与社交技能,也培养学生的在21世纪世界公民必备的责任心和同理心。
The Star, 14 August 2024
Elsewhere, local non-profit organisation Arts-ED is seeking to bring real-life experiences and awareness into classrooms all over the country.
Its recently launched community-based learning action portal (CLAP) is a free online resource that offers community-based learning kits for primary and secondary school teachers and educators.
The portal contains concise, project-based resources modelled on programmes the organisation has carried out in Penang over the last 25 years.
Read MoreSangSaeng - No.61 | 2023
What is the meaning of “harmony”? What can we learn about ourselves and our identity as a society from the stories of the houses of worship at the Seberang Jaya Street of Harmony?
These were the two driving questions behind our recent Jelajah Harmoni (Journey of Harmony) Seberang Jaya programme. For someone living outside Malaysia, it might seem unusual to have various houses of worship in close proximity to each other. Yet there are several such “Streets of Harmony”—areas where various houses of worship can be found clustered together—scattered across the state of Penang. Which begs the question: why, then, the need for this programme?
Read MoreThe Star- 4 July 2023
“When was the last time you went to the market?”
Far from a passing enquiry, the answer to this may just put you one step ahead in Bansan, the latest board game from arts and culture groups Arts-ED and LUMA.
Whichever player who has most recently set foot in a wet market or “bansan” in the local northern Hokkien dialect, is designated the starting player or market vendor in this fresh, new game that is based on Penang’s famed Chowrasta Market.
Read MoreOptions, The Edge, 7 June 2023
Bansan is the brainchild of media artist-cum-video producer Goh, who spread the initial sketches on her bed and worked out the mechanics and playing experience through the pandemic. The game will be launched officially on July 15 at Penang’s Chowrasta Market during the George Town Festival; July 16, Seberang Jaya Market; July 18, Air Itam Market on the main island.
Designed for one to five players, it is inspired by the multisensory experience one encounters at a bustling local market. Players are vendors who bao ka liao (take charge of everything): deal with fellow vendors, wholesalers, customers and municipal council officers; buy and sell ingredients; and cook and serve a variety of hawker stall dishes, drinks and desserts.
Read MoreThe Star; Metro News - April 2023
HARI Raya Aidilfitri at Jalan Sungai People’s Housing Project (PPR) is brighter this year, thanks to its residents. More than 40 children made over 100 star lanterns, which were hung at common areas and distributed to residents in the PPR. The children aged seven to 15 made the lanterns at workshops seven weeks before Hari Raya. There were 10 of these workshops, with some parents also joining in.
Non-profit organisation Arts-ED collaborated with local artisans to run these workshops as part of its community-based arts and culture programme called “Gempak 100”. This particular initiative was called “Nur. Light.” and was intended to rejuvenate a communal tradition.
Read MoreBASKL, 26 August 2023
Board games are always an enjoyable way to spend an evening with friends. In recent years, many Malaysians have also created board games of their own that reflect local culture and aesthetics. Recently, Arts-ED has published Bansan, a board game inspired by Malaysian wet markets. Bansan is a Hokkien word for market commonly used in Penang and other Northern states. It literally translates to tens of thousands of mountains filled with goods.
Read MoreBFM, 12 July 2023
Most Malaysians would recognise the bustling and unique atmosphere of a local wet market. What happens when this experience is incorporated into a board game? We explore this, with the creators of a local board game, Bansan (Hokkien for "wet market"), and hear about the process of capturing this experience in gameplay
Read MoreThe Star; Metro News - June 2022
CHILDREN living at the River Road People’s Housing Project (PPR) in Penang unleashed their creative side through an arts showcase called Gempak 100.
Their exciting “Wayang Bayang” and “Tari Gempak” performances that told stories about their lives at the flats received a positive response from the audience, who comprised family members, neighbourhood folk as well as outsiders. The children aged eight to 15 also put up a photography exhibition featuring interesting snapshots of surrounding areas.
Read More