Creative industries careers: shifting aspirations and pathways from high school to university—a NSW case study

Author:

Kerrigan SusanORCID,Grushka KathrynORCID,Chand AriORCID,Street Kristi,Shadbolt JaneORCID,Lawry MirandaORCID

Abstract

AbstractCreative careers are responding rapidly to new creative practices, new audiences, emerging digital platforms and technologies. These careers are well paid, resistant to automation and permeate all aspects of society. Yet students’ and teachers’ perceptions and attitudes are not in alignment with the reality of a job in Australia’s Creative Industries. Research exploring the perceptions of a creative career in high schools showed there was a significant disconnect between perceived jobs and actual jobs, impacting on student aspirations to work in the creative industries. Current narratives in schools need to shift beyond an outdated idea of traditional “Arts” towards the realities of a contemporary creative workforce which combines digital, entrepreneurial and creative skills. A mixed method Australian state case study, was conducted in regional school communities, collecting data from across creative classroom practice, surveys and interviews. The findings point to a limited understanding of creative careers held by specialist teachers, careers advisors and students. This resulted in severely limited advice being provided to high school students in terms of choices of secondary curriculum and educational pathways for a creative career.

Funder

The Higher Education Participation and Partnerships Programme

Swinburne University of Technology

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC

Subject

Education

Reference32 articles.

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