Arts and Performance
Rochele Royster | School of Art Visiting Artist Lecture Series
September 26, 2024 at 6:30pm – 7:30pm EDT
Shaffer Art Building, Shemin Auditorium
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Rochele Royster, Ph.D, ATR-BC is an assistant professor of art therapy in the Department of Creative Arts Therapy.
Prior to joining Syracuse University, Royster was a learning behavior specialist in Chicago Public Schools (CPS) and lecturer in the Department of Art Therapy and Counseling at the School of the Art Institute of Chicago, Depaul University (Department of Education), and Adler School of Psychology (clinical psychology department doctoral program).
Royster has worked for the last 20 years integrating art therapy into the educational setting and has worked with youth, adolescents, and young adults with various learning differences. Using a trans-disciplinary approach, she is interested in community and school-based art therapy; race, power and policy in education; multi-sensory methods in reading and literacy; trauma-informed classrooms; environmental justice; black disability; and special education as it relates to decolonization of pedagogy and practice in institutional and public settings.
Royster’s dissertation developed as a grassroots approach to arts-based social change and addresses gun violence, death, and grief through memorials of resistance. She assisted in creating transformative art-based social justice curriculum for Cities of Peace/Jane Addams Hull House, the Teacher Institute/Museum of Contemporary Art, and the Office of Arts and Education at CPS and has conducted workshop series for Chicago Park District teaching artists. She has also worked with sexual, domestic violence, and human trafficking survivors and Cambodian youth refugees.
This event was published on September 12, 2024.
Event Details
- Category
- Arts and Performance
- Region
- Campus
- Open to
- Public
- Cost
- Free
- Organizer
- School of Art
- Contact
- Professor Christopher Wildrick
cwildric@syr.edu
- Accessibility
- Contact Professor Christopher Wildrick to request accommodations