Full metadata
Title
Looking out the window: toward a visual understanding of school grounds as place
Description
This study looked at ways of understanding how schoolyards might act as meaningful places in children's developing sense of identity and possibility. Photographs and other images such as historical photographs and maps were used to look at how built environments outside of school reflect demographic and social differences within one southwest city. Intersections of children's worlds with various socio-political communities, woven into and through schooling, were examined for evidence of ways that schools act as the embodiment of a community's values: they are the material and observable effects of resource-allocation decisions. And scholarly materials were consulted to examine relationships in the images to existing theories of place, and its effect on children, as well as to consider theories of the hidden curriculum and its relationship to social reproduction, and the nature of visual representation as a form of data rather than strictly in the service of illustrating other forms of data. The focus of the study was on identifying appropriate research methods for investigating ways to understand the importance of the material worlds of school and childhood. Using a combination of visual and narrative approaches to contribute to our understanding of those material worlds, I sought to expose areas of inequity and class differences in ways that children experience schooling, as evidenced by differences in the material environment. Using a mixed-methods approach, created and found images were coded for categories of material culture, such as the existence of fences, trees, views from the playground or walking in the neighborhood at four Tempe schools. Findings were connected to a rich body of knowledge in areas such as theories of space and place, the nature of the hidden curriculum, visual culture, visual research methods including mapping. Familiar aspects of schooling were exposed in different ways, linking past decisions made by adults to their continuing effects on children today. In this way I arrived at an expanded and enriched understanding of the present worlds of children communicated as through the material environment. Visually examining children's worlds, by looking at the material artifacts of everyday worlds that children experience at school and including the child's-eye view in decision processes, has promise in moving decision makers away from strictly analytical and impersonal approaches to decision making about schooling children of the future. I proposed that by weighting of data points, as used in decision-making processes regarding schooling, differently than is currently done, and by paying closer attention to possible longer-term effects of place for all children, not just a few, there is the potential to improve the quality of life for today's children, and tomorrow's adults.
Date Created
2013
Contributors
- Walsum, Joyce Van (Author)
- Margolis, Eric M. (Thesis advisor)
- Green, Samuel (Thesis advisor)
- Collins, Daniel (Committee member)
- Arizona State University (Publisher)
Topical Subject
- Educational Psychology
- Sociology Of Education
- Critical Mapping
- Hidden Curriculum
- Materiality of Schooling
- Qualitative Methods
- Social Reproduction
- Visual Methods
- Schools--Social aspects--Arizona--Tempe.
- Schools
- School environment--Social aspects--Arizona--Tempe.
- School environment
- Educational anthropology--Arizona--Tempe.
- Educational anthropology
Resource Type
Extent
ix, 116 p. : ill. (chiefly col.), maps (chiefly col.)
Language
eng
Copyright Statement
In Copyright
Primary Member of
Peer-reviewed
No
Open Access
No
Handle
https://hdl.handle.net/2286/R.I.18080
Statement of Responsibility
by Joyce Van Walsum
Description Source
Viewed on Mar. 23, 2015
Level of coding
full
Note
thesis
Partial requirement for: M.A., Arizona State University, 2013
bibliography
Includes bibliographical references (p. 110-116)
Field of study: Educational psychology
System Created
- 2013-07-12 06:29:07
System Modified
- 2021-08-30 01:39:29
- 3 years 3 months ago
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