Creating Student Spaces for emancipatory practice
Debbie Holley (Anglia Ruskin University)Tom Burns (London Metropolitan University)Sandra Sinfield (London Metropolitan University)
Charles Darwin
A bee in a 3D world classroom
We will talk about:
David Willetts
Our presentation
Introduction: emancipatory pedagogyLocating our work in current literature on
space and placeTheorists we are drawing uponCase studiesDiscussion (with the audience)
Background policy agenda
We argue that current policy issues in the UK for HE calls for
a reconfiguration or rehabitation of learning spaces that
is politically, economically and ecologically sustainable.
Intensified by David Willetts,
Universities Secretary
Where is the student?
Before University: AAB and you are OK The ‘right’ subject
and you are funded The ‘widening
participation’ student excluded and/or alienated
Fear of debt
At University: Knowledge for work,
not work for knowledge
High stake assessment
Independent learning Needs of future
workplace paramount
Emancipatory pedagogy
Significant Social Learning Spaces can be seen in the work of: Brecht (1967) theatre/ experiential learning Paulo Frieire (1996) the rural (peasant/ literacies) / Castelles
(1979) /urban Dario Fo (1997) the esperanto of the oppressed Sitcoms and reflexivity (Essex University 1997) Gunther Kress (2001& 2004) Multimodalities
The above would argue you cannot have learning without the place, space and context that embodies ‘the actor’.
In our case studies, we return to the student as both ‘actor’ and ‘agent’
In terms of conceptualising student spaces:
We argue creative spaces for learning are being withdrawn and pressure applied for more ‘work based’ curricula
Eisner – pedagogic spaces confined by formal curriculum – no creative space for students
Temple and designing lovely learning spaces – follows ‘lovely’ learning [outcomes] will take place?
Lefebvre/ Soja space is contested domain; we are drawing upon the transformative potential of his ‘third space’
Lefebvre & Soja (Trialectics)
First Space‘Spatial Practice’
Spaceand commonsensical
view
Third SpaceSpatial representations
(Lebfebvre/Soja)Potentialities that
come out of 1 and 2
when acted with, upon,subverted that
leads to the imagined space this could become‘imagined futures’
Second SpaceRepresentations of Space
PlaceIdeological, political,
cultural, social attributes and meanings
Adapted from Rob Shields
http://www.ualberta.ca/~rshields/f/lefebvre.htm
A new debate:
In the Web 2.0 world, the themes of physical and pedagogic spaces have now been drawn into this debate
What are the pedagogic opportunities and limitations when spaces move to online environments? Are the same factors at work in that these spaces too are named, occupied, inhabited, controlled and contested?
What happens when we (and our students) leave our physical space and start to engage with our learning in cyberspace?
Case Studies
From Second Life, a 3D Virtual World (www.secondlife.com)
Why I chose a bee It's not easy to find a single reason why I
chose that Avatar - I partly chose it because a bee is quite an out of the ordinary avatar in SL..and it's such a big, rather clumsy but at the same time beautiful bee - it's made up of a lot of complex shapes/pieces - it must have taken someone a long time to make and design it...
And it takes a long time to build up over my original avatar, so I get to appreciate the complexity every time I change into a bee, and see the transformation in slow motion (also a little bit rotesque).
When I'm flying it buzzes it's wings, unlike people avatars whose arms don't really do anything
Finally I really enjoy seeing a bee sitting in a lecture theatre for example There is something a little bit absurd about virtual worlds, and I like to make the most of that :)
Lefebvre
Here we can see the space (the lecture theatre) a traditionally passive and controlled space with the mind and body being acted upon
Transformed into a space that can be used as a tool for thought and action
However Lefebvre would be critical in the way space acts on thought as the real life lecture theatre has been replicated
HMS Beagle
The original model was seen on a student trip to a museum, as part of an assessment
3D modelling would enable this quality of reproduction
http://HMS Beagle
Students created this HUGE ship!
Theoretical Implications
Here we are encountering Sojas trialectic and potential of third space
Beagle before – sailing through the sea in it is ‘natural’ but not neutral.
Students have disrupted the epistemology by grounding it; they disembowel it (disembody); they have done this in a postmodern playground as part of leisure activity (deckchairs and bonfire on the beach);
This narrative tableau has potential to transform production and consumption (students have shipwrecked the ship and now the goods are potentially subject to “salvage”; and they are producers and consumers of their own products “labour”
Why I dress as a Klingon…
One student chose to come to class dressed as a Klingon.
This places this students identity within western popular culture- at the same time, in opposition to it
The virtual allows visual hermeneutics as a research analytical tool as these examples demonstrate, there are still many debates
Eco warrior
Man in suit
Or a student!
Visual Hermeneutics
a reflective/reflexive tool which allows for reflective commentaries which encourage a third person perspective
Reflexive in which it is prompting action and change (avatar changed into the Klingon; may change clothing; nothing is fixed and fluidity is possible)
Research tool (cf recent BERA 10 year update) – gives a point of analysis in fields of gender, masculinities; popular culture
On the bridge – the potential of the ‘other’
Identity constructions/imaginary friends
Our avatar throws up some challenges for us viewing the avatar in its space.Role play of Captain, possible femininities/ masculinities – challenging
male role models by being there (ie an (assumed) woman on the bridge of a ship);
Hybridity (cf Bhabha) The informal clothing (American, informal, leisure active wear western jeans) Branded t-shirt (her reflexive device showing her links with expert institution) University fitted white t-shirt oppositional to blue stocking women from
universities (spice girls & girl power challenged male masculinities) The formal hair (sculpted in headdress; possibly cf the Polynesaian islands
the Beagle visited) Imaginary friend (cf My avatar my imaginary friend (Taylor) through the
‘friend’ it is possible to risk take and experiment ) Soja “Thirding produces what might best be called a cumulative trialectic
that is radically open to additional otherness
Discussion“The process of cultural hybridity gives rise to something different, something new and unrecognizable, a new area of
negotiation of and representation meaning”“The Third Space. Interview with Homi Bhabha” Identity: Community, Culture,
Difference London: Lawrence & Wishart 1998 p211
The student fashion show 2010
Challenges for teachers and researchers
(1) Different schools of thought emerging about the potentials of virtual worlds
- the total ‘real life’ immersion in the virtual world
- the augmentation of the virtual into the real
(2) Methodological challenges as “epistemological assumptions are blown apart” (Jester [blog] The Unlimited Dream Company 24/04/2011)
(3) The methods by which to research and comprehend visual literacies in a social media world
(4) Risk contingency within multi modality pedagogies (cf Kress)
Selected References
This powerpoint is available for downloading from slideshare (search debbie holley)
Kress, G. and Van Leeuwen, T.(2001) Multimodal Discourse: the modes and media of contemporary communication. Edward Arnold.
Paulo Friere Pedagogy of the oppressed
Mistero Buffo : The Collected Plays of Dario FoDario Fo, Stuart Hood, Ed Emery A & C Black
The Urban Question: A Marxist Approach by Manuel Castells
Brecht On Theatre. Bertolt Brecht The Development Of An Aesthetic. Translation And Notes By John Willet. With Plates, Including Portraits by (Paperback - 1967)
Homi Bhabhas theory of cultural hybridizationhttp://prelectur.stanford.edu/lecturers/bhabha/reviews.html