Conference papers:
HAY, M. (2015) The performance of being: the emerging practice and perception of a speaking female contemporary dancer at the Boundaries: Transgression, Authority,
Performance conference, ˽·¿¾ãÀÖ²¿, 22 June 2015.
HAY, M. (2011) Designing assessment for autonomous learning at the Democratic learning conversations conference, ˽·¿¾ãÀÖ²¿, 16 December 2011. Research funded by the Centre for Excellence in Performance Arts and a Research in Teaching Award.
HAY, M. (2011) Interpreting embodied dance practice at the Dance and Somatic Practices conference, Coventry University, 8-10 July 2011. Research funded by the Centre for Excellence in Performance Arts and a Research in Teaching Award. Conference attendance funded by faculty research committee.
HAY, M. & MATHERS, L. (2011) Designing assessment for autonomous learning at the Assessment in Higher Education Conference. University of Cumbria, 6 July 2011. Research funded by a Research in Teaching Award. Conference attendance funded by faculty research committee.
HAY, M. (2009) Assessment and feedback: aligning dance practice with pedagogic research. In: Global Perspectives On Dance Pedagogy: Research And Practice. ˽·¿¾ãÀÖ²¿, Leicester, UK 25-27 June 2009. Illinois, University of Illinois Press, pp. 92-97. Research funded by the Centre for Excellence in Performance Arts.
HAY, M. (2009) Assessment and feedback for autonomous learning in dance practice at the Eighth CLTR Learning & Teaching Research Conference, Edge Hill University, 3 June 2009. Research funded by the Centre for Excellence in Performance Arts and a Research in Teaching Award.
HAY, M. (2008) Assessment for reflective learning in the creative arts, at 15th International Conference on Learning, University of Illinois, Chicago. June 2008. Research funded by the Centre for Excellence in Performance Arts.
Conference presentations
Solo performances of ‘speakingdance’ have been shared in ˽·¿¾ãÀÖ²¿’s Borderlines Conferences and Cultural Exchanges Festival. The first international performance was at the Performance Philosophy conference in Prague which then prompted invitations for Marie to perform in Croatia, teach in Beijing and collaborate with the Philosophy and Visual Arts Research Centre at Kings College, London.