๐ Ethnoacting in VR for Resilience in Acting Students
๐ Ethnoacting in VR for Resilience in Acting Students
Pilot Study | University of East London | January 2025
๐ช Why Resilience?
Acting students often face high levels of stress, anxiety, and self-doubt, which can impact both their mental health and career progression. This project addresses that challenge by offering an innovative intervention grounded in dramatic practice and psychological theory.
๐ญ The Approach
Rooted in the Interacting Cognitive Subsystems (ICS) theory from psychology, the intervention combines:
Ethnoacting โ performance of lived experiences and real-life testimonies
Virtual Reality โ immersive environments that simulate public performance settings
Resilience Modelling โ repeated exposure to narratives of perseverance and growth
Through embodied storytelling, students encounter and internalise attitudes of resilience, self-belief, and emotional regulation โ key traits for sustaining a creative career.
๐งช The Pilot
The pilot was delivered at the University of East London in January 2025. It involved:
Immersive VR sessions featuring real-world testimonies
Experiential learning grounded in actor training traditions
Survey-based evaluation of wellbeing and skill development
The results underscore the value of soft skill development through experiential learning, particularly for students from underrepresented backgrounds.
๐ Forthcoming Publication
Findings from the study will appear in the following Routledge volume:
Stamatiou, E., Thoma, V., & Sanni, O. (forthcoming 2025).
Ethnoacting in VR for Resilience in Theatre Students: A Vakhtangov-inspired Intervention.
In Stamatiou, E. & Carnicke, S. M. (Eds.), Stanislavsky and Actor Training for the Screen. Routledge.