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Hip-hop pedagogy promises to turn tables on traditional teaching

Open University report suggests using rap lyrics as texts and explaining content like an MC

Published on
January 7, 2021
Last updated
January 11, 2021
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After a year in which lecturers tried their best to keep students engaged with their education in difficult circumstances, help may come from a surprising source: hip hop.

The of the Open University鈥檚 (OU) annual Innovating Pedagogy report tracking trends in teaching, published on 7聽January, says that bringing the New York-born artistic and cultural movement into the classroom can promise 鈥済reater student engagement, motivation and social and emotional learning; increased literacy development and critical thinking; and improvement in teacher and student relationships鈥.

Examples of its use include using rap lyrics as texts or taking elements such as DJ-ing or MC-ing and using them as a way 鈥渢o describe or explain content [and] develop classroom activities鈥.

The trend may also help to engage students from minority and disadvantaged backgrounds in courses. The underlying idea is that if students are already immersed in a culture, they can bring elements of their experiences and traditions into the classroom and incorporate them into course materials and curriculum.

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Student co-creation of teaching and learning, highlighted as a broader trend in the report, can lead to 鈥済reater empowerment of students and better relationships among students and between students and teachers鈥, the paper says.

鈥淓ducators, scholars and students involved in hip-hop education challenge traditional educational systems and structures and attach particular value to the power of youth voice, culture and agency,鈥 adds the paper, produced in collaboration with researchers at Beijing Foreign Studies University.

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However, the authors caution that it is important to avoid 鈥済immicky鈥 strategies, such as 鈥渋mplementing hip-hop terminology out of context or showing a rap video that has nothing to do with the course subject鈥, and acknowledge that academics 鈥渕ay not have experience or in-depth knowledge of hip hop鈥.

It is also important to critically examine negative aspects of hip hop that encourage sexism and violence, they add.

Agnes Kukulska-Hulme, professor of learning technology and communication at the OU and a co-author of the report, said hip-hop-based education connected with another trend in the report, equity-orientated pedagogy.

鈥淏y widening the scope of what鈥檚 possible within the classroom, you are also potentially widening participation. You are giving more opportunities to people of different backgrounds to be included in the educational experience,鈥 she told 糖心Vlog.

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The report references a study which found that students 鈥渁ppreciated鈥eachers鈥 acknowledgement of a lack of hip-hop experience and their ability to prioritise students鈥 perspectives and voices over their own鈥.

鈥淚f a teacher or instructor lacks (and can acknowledge their lack of) experience, then both students and teachers can explore and enhance their understanding collaboratively,鈥 it adds.

anna.mckie@timeshighereducation.com

POSTSCRIPT:

Print headline: Hip hop to it: rap goes new school

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