Materialities, Textures and Pedagogies

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Actor Network Theory
Audit Work
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Flemish Higher Education
Flemish Teacher Education
Garden Club
Human Technology Relations
Information Infrastructures
Information Overload
Infrastructuring Practice
Invisible Pedagogy
Learning Processes
Lower Limb Atherosclerosis
Material Enactments
Materiality
Online Learning Practices
Paolo Landri
Pedagogic Authority
Pedagogy
Practice-based Learning
Risk Auditing
Self-evaluation Report
Simone's Students
Simone’s Students
Smart Phones
Socio-material Assemblages
Socio-material Practice
Sociomaterial
Sociomaterial Practices
Staff Auditors
Tara Fenwick
Work Support Systems

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138013049
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 19 Feb 2014
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This book joins a developing tradition of ‘practice-based’ conceptions of learning, but with a special interest in foregrounding the materiality of educational processes. It challenges educational views that are preoccupied with developing a particular kind of human subject, and argues that relations among materials – including texts and technologies, embodiment, tools and natural forces - are key to understanding how learning and knowing emerge in collective activity.

To critically examine materiality, the chapter authors draw from orientations associated with actor-network theory, but push forward these conceptions to create an important in-between place of inquiry in sociomaterial/STS studies and education. Most express concerns about visions of education that emphasise output driven learning, performativity, standardisation and representationalist forms of knowledge. They use sociomaterial approaches to make visible the everyday, particular micro-dynamics of education and learning. Their analyses reveal that power relations and the politics that infuse pedagogy are by no means confined to human interests and ideologies, but are created and sustained through materialising processes that are enmeshed with the social and semiotic. Ultimately, these sociomaterial analyses open new directions and vocabularies for reconceptualising what is taken to be pedagogy, where and how pedagogical processes occur, and what effects they have on culture and society.

This book was originally published as a special issue of Pedagogy, Culture & Society.

Tara Fenwick is a professor of education at the University of Stirling, UK, and director of ProPEL, an international network for research in professional practice, education and learning. Her most recent book is Emerging approaches to educational research: tracing the sociomaterial, with R. Edwards and P Sawchuk (Routledge 2012). Paolo Landri is a senior researcher of the Institute of Research on Population and Social Policies of the National Research Council, Italy, and link convenor of the network 28 'Sociologies of Education' of the European Educational Research Association. His most recent book is Rethinking Education Ethnography edited with S. Marques da Silva (2012).