16 results on '"Social Space"'
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2. The production of social spaces for children with profound and multiple learning difficulties: a Lefebvrian analysis.
- Author
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Simmons, Ben
- Subjects
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HUMAN rights , *SOCIAL development , *SOCIAL space , *PERSONAL space , *SOCIAL policy - Abstract
There is on-going debate about whether mainstream education is desirable for children with profound and multiple learning difficulties (PMLD). Whilst some hold that 'inclusion' is a human right, and that interaction with mainstream peers leads to socio-cognitive gains, others argue that profoundly disabled learners require developmental curricular provided by special schools. Despite such claims, there is little evidence to support either view. This paper contributes to the debate by presenting research that examined how mainstream schools and special schools, across nursery, primary, and secondary settings, provided alternative social spaces for children with PMLD. It applies a Lefebvrian lens to illuminate how social engagement depended on the extent to which prescribed practices ('abstract spaces') dominated the interaction ('spatial practices'), and the conditions which allowed novel forms of engagement to emerge ('lived spaces'). Novel forms of engagement correlated with positive social development. The conclusion challenges the 'mainstream-special' binary presupposed in inclusion debates. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2021
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
3. PISA ‘Yet To Come’: governing schooling through time, difference and potential.
- Author
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Lewis, Steven
- Subjects
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SCHOOL administration , *SOCIAL space , *INSTITUTIONAL isomorphism - Abstract
This article examines emerging techniques of educational governance - based on time, difference and potential - enabled by the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development’s PISA-based Test for Schools (‘PISA for Schools’). I show how PISA for Schools facilitates the production of difference through comparative test data, allowing educators to imagine, and bring about, different potential futures. Drawing on Deleuze’s thinking around forms of difference, and the governance function of potentiality, and informed by interviews with key PISA for Schools policy actors, I illustrate how the visualisation of difference produces a local desire amongst schools and educators to become other than they currently are across multiple temporalities, and how this ‘impetus to action’ makes new actions and futures possible. This constitutes what I theorise as ‘governing through difference and potential’, where the underlying logic is for teachers to work on themselves in the present to continually improve the future. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2018
- Full Text
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4. Affirmative action in Romania’s higher education: Roma students’ perceived meanings and dilemmas.
- Author
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Pantea, Maria-Carmen
- Subjects
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PSYCHOLOGY of students , *DILEMMA , *SOCIAL space , *ETHNICITY , *HIGHER education - Abstract
This qualitative paper explores Roma students’ perceptions on the policy of assigning ‘special places’ for Roma in Romania’s universities. Findings suggest that Roma see themselves as occupying a precarious social space, concerned not as much to hide perceived merit violation but to handle (alleged) inadequacies given by their stigmatized ethnicity. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2015
- Full Text
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5. Family learning and the socio-spatial practice of ‘supportive’ power.
- Author
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Wainwright, Emma and Marandet, Elodie
- Subjects
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FAMILIES , *EDUCATION of mothers , *GOVERNMENTALITY , *QUALITATIVE research , *NEOLIBERALISM , *SOCIAL space , *EDUCATION - Abstract
Family learning has been an important mode of education deployed by governments in the United Kingdom over the past 20 years, and is positioned at the nexus of various social policy areas whose focus stretch beyond education. Drawing on qualitative research exploring mothers’ participation in seven different family learning programmes across West London, this paper looks at how this type of education is mobilised; that is, how mothers are ‘encouraged’ to participate and benefit from this type of programme. Framed by a neo-liberal policy climate and Foucauldian writings on governmentality and surveillance, we explore how participating mothers are carefully ‘targeted’ for this type of learning through their children and through school/ nursery spaces, and how programmes themselves then operate as a supportive social space aimed at facilitating social networks, friendship and personal development linked to positions of gender, ethnicity, class and migrant status. It is the socio-spatial workings of ‘supportive’ power and power relations that enable family learning to be mobilised that ensures its popularity as a social policy initiative. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
6. Practising leadership in newly multi-ethnic schools: tensions in the field?
- Author
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Devine, Dympna
- Subjects
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LEADERSHIP , *MULTICULTURAL education , *SOCIAL space , *SUBJECTIVITY , *IMMIGRANT children - Abstract
This paper explores the leadership practices of three principals following a period of intensive immigration in Ireland. Drawing on the work of Bourdieu, it conceptualises schools as structured social spaces and of their leadership work as a form of practising. This practising is an outcome of the intersection between deeply embedded subjectivities operating in diverse fields of action that shape, constrain and transform each principal’s practices. Presenting an analytical model that highlights the circular and capillary-like dimension to such practising, the paper explores how principals’ recognition of immigrant children (their recognitive practices) as well as investment in supporting their learning (distributive practices) are shaped by the logics of practice across different fields, as well as by their own evolving habitus and struggle to be authentic in a period of rapid social change. Practising effective leadership in newly multi-ethnic schools must be conceived as layered and multiple but must be underpinned by an ethic of justice, if the minoritised status of ‘ethnic’ others is to be challenged and overcome. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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7. Making ‘space’: young people put at a disadvantage re-engaging with learning.
- Author
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Smyth, John and McInerney, Peter
- Subjects
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SOCIAL space , *PSYCHOLOGICAL disengagement , *SCHOOL dropouts , *SCHOOL dropout attitudes , *NONFORMAL education , *PSYCHOLOGY of learning , *PSYCHOLOGY - Abstract
Young people who disengage or disconnect from school are often demonised within the media and the wider public imagination, from a largely individualized and pathological positioning. Policy explanations and responses are often unhelpful in their focus on a range of ‘deficit’ attributes – poverty, poor parenting, dysfunctional families, low familial achievement, aspiration and motivation, and other ‘at risk’ categories. This paper offers a different explanatory framework that foregrounds the experiences of some young people who had disengaged from school and resumed learning under a very different set of conditions to the ones that had exiled them from schools in the first place. Using a socio-spatial framework, the paper explores the notion of ‘relational space’ as it was appropriated and reclaimed by these young people, in explaining how they saw themselves as constructing viable and sustainable learning identities for themselves. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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8. Behind the bike sheds: sexual geographies of schooling.
- Author
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Allen, Louisa
- Subjects
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SPATIAL behavior , *SOCIAL space , *SEXUAL psychology , *HUMAN sexuality & society , *YOUTHS' sexual behavior , *STUDENTS' sexual behavior - Abstract
This paper is concerned with extending existing understandings about the role of schools as sexualising agencies. It seeks to uncover previously undisturbed spatial and material dimensions of schooling with regards to sexualities and their implication for how young people learn about sexualities at school. In this regard, the paper asks: how do apparently mundane spatial and material schooling arrangements constitute particular sexual meanings and identities for students? A visual methodology is employed to capture schooling places that students identify as constitutive of sexual meanings and identities. How students’ embodied sexual practices negotiate and contest these spatial/material configurations is also investigated. Through this analysis, the paper makes a theoretical contribution to an understanding of space as an in process materiality. It is concluded that the spatial and material arrangements of schooling contribute to a larger schooling project concerned with muting and regulating young people’s sexual subjectivities. [ABSTRACT FROM PUBLISHER]
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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9. I, Teacher: re-territorialization of teachers' multi-faceted agency in globalized education.
- Author
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Vongalis-Macrow, Athena
- Subjects
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TEACHERS , *HUMAN territoriality , *ETHNOLOGY , *SOCIAL space , *SOCIAL policy , *GLOBAL studies , *EDUCATIONAL change , *EDUCATIONAL planning , *EDUCATIONAL innovations , *EDUCATION policy - Abstract
Analysis of teachers' agency as multifarious change, embedded in educational reform in the global era, stands largely unexamined in educational policy. Although the concept of teachers as agents has political implications, beyond this, examining teachers' agency offers ways of describing and reviewing changes to teachers' work and relations within evolving education systems. Local systems draw from globally orientated education policies, which continue to influence to the way that local systems redesign education. In the global context, education systems are complex interactions between structure and agency, evidenced as 'multiplicity undergoing change'. In other words, there is dynamic and dialectic interplay between structure and agency. Teachers' agency, germane to dynamic interplay, means that teachers are not only engaging in the reproduction of structural change aligning globalization-driven reforms to their work and practice, but also, in adapting and reacting to new structural conditions, they are transformed through their actions. In this paper, the focus becomes teachers' agency as a framework for understanding how teachers are redesigned and reassembled to do things differently within restructured education systems. Finally, the discussion considers the possible consequences of teachers work and practice, given teachers' agency relative to the macro policy of superfigures and the transitional national/global structures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2007
- Full Text
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10. Girls’ workplace destinations in a changed social landscape: girls and their mothers talk.
- Author
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Walshaw, Margaret
- Subjects
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WOMEN'S education , *FEMINISM , *WORK environment , *SOCIAL space , *SOCIAL conditions of women , *EDUCATIONAL sociology , *EDUCATION , *SELF-efficacy , *HUMAN territoriality - Abstract
Changes in participation and achievement patterns mark a turning point for girls in schooling and place female empowerment squarely in the public domain. Using data from a longitudinal study of girls, this paper looks at female empowerment by exploring the relationship between the production of female subjectivity and the processes operating in social spaces. Findings relating to aspirations for girls’ future careers are placed within a context of decile school ratings, and from those findings insights are offered about how the rhetoric of ‘girl power’ is lived and spoken into existence in relation to categories of social class. By examining how schooling, family and classed processes weave through hopes and dreams, the intent is to contribute towards a line of discussion about the shaping of female subjectivities. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2006
- Full Text
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11. The Reproduction of Class in Canada's Elite Independent Schools.
- Author
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Maxwell, James D. and Maxwell, Mary Percival
- Subjects
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EDUCATION , *SCHOOLS , *SOCIAL classes , *SOCIAL reproduction , *CULTURAL maintenance , *SOCIAL space - Abstract
The changing forms and processes of social reproduction undertaken by Canada's elite independent schools are examined. Ideology, values, recruitment, and socialization processes and mechanisms in the member schools of the Canadian Association of Independent Schools are analysed. The focus is on reproduction theory (both the reproduction of the structure of classes and the intergenerational reproduction of families). The various forms of reproduction are examined in relation to class, ethnicity and gender. All have undergone considerable change; while the schools have remained critical agents for the reproduction of elites in Canadian society, the rise of meritocratic ideology and recruitment have had a paradoxical effect. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1995
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
12. Social space, gender inequalities and educational differentiation.
- Author
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Shilling, Chris
- Subjects
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EDUCATIONAL sociology , *SOCIAL space , *GENDER , *EQUALITY , *SEX discrimination against women , *ETHNOLOGY - Abstract
The spatial dimensions of social interaction and reproduction have received increasing attention from sociologists in recent years. However, these issues remain largely implicit in most studies of classrooms, schools and the education system. In this paper, I argue that the study of social space should be integral to analyses of the relationship between educational differentiation and social reproduction. After examining the position of space in Gidden's theory of structuration, I focus on how space is used in schools as a resource in the production of unequal gender relations. Space is viewed not simply as a context in which interaction occurs, but as a phenomenon which both produces and is produced by, gendered power relations. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 1991
- Full Text
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13. Putting working-class mothers in their place: social stratification, the field of education, and Pierre Bourdieu's theory of practice
- Author
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Mary O’Donoghue
- Subjects
Practice theory ,Sociology and Political Science ,Inequality ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Field (Bourdieu) ,Gender studies ,Social stratification ,Education ,Social space ,Working class ,Embodied cognition ,Sociology ,Social theory ,media_common - Abstract
This article explores how a small sample of working-class mothers encounters the field of education. In the management of family and their children's schooling, mothers bring to bear and replicate ways of knowing that are embodied, are historical and that offer many-sided insights into profoundly stratified societies. Here I draw on Bourdieu's theory of practice as a heuristic device and focus only on the field while leaving in suspension his other conceptual arsenal. Bourdieu argued that understanding the social space in which interactions occur is pivotal, characterised as it is by ‘permanent relationships of inequality'. This study shows that mothers bring to the field their embodied history, their habituated practice, and their access to capitals. The women I interviewed know the precariousness of how they occupy the field of schooling, negotiated through a matrix of intersected positionings and classifications that are embodied.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
14. Well-founded social fictions: a defence of the concepts of institutional and familial habitus
- Author
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Nathan Emmerich, Ciaran Burke, and Nicola Ingram
- Subjects
Social space ,Individualism ,Sociology and Political Science ,Field (Bourdieu) ,Collectivism ,Flexibility (personality) ,Habitus ,Sociology ,Relation (history of concept) ,Social psychology ,Education ,Epistemology ,Social theory - Abstract
This article engages with Atkinson's recent criticisms of concepts of collective habitus, such as 'institutional' and 'familial' habitus, in order to defend their conceptual utility and theoretical coherence. In so doing we promote a flexible understanding of habitus as both an individual and a collective concept. By retaining this flexibility (which we argue is in keeping with the spirit of Bourdieuian philosophy) we allow for a consideration of the ways in which the individual habitus relates to the collective. We argue that, through recognition of the complexity of the interrelated habitus of individuals, collective notions go beyond individualist accounts that perceive only the relational aspects of the individual with the social field. Our approach allows us to consider social actors in relation to each other and as constitutive of fields rather than as mere individuals plotted in social space. These arguments will be woven through our responses to what Atkinson calls the three fatal flaws of institutional and familial habitus: namely, homogenisation, anthropomorphism, and substantialism.
- Published
- 2013
- Full Text
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15. Cultural capital: strengths, weaknesses and two advancements
- Author
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Herman G. van de Werfhorst and Institutions, Inequalities, and Life courses (IIL, AISSR, FMG)
- Subjects
Social reproduction ,Social space ,Sociology and Political Science ,Economic capital ,Sociology ,Cultural capital ,Positive economics ,Social class ,Social mobility ,Social psychology ,Education ,Social theory ,Social capital - Abstract
In this paper I discuss two weaknesses in Bourdieu’s work on cultural capital, both of which are related to his integration of the multidimensional nature of social space in different domains of life: social mobility, lifestyle differentiation, and political orientation. First, there is an anomaly between the work on social mobility and on lifestyles. Multiple dimensions of social origin (cultural and economic capital) are related to uni‐dimensional outcomes (e.g. schooling levels), whereas it would be more appropriate to study multidimensional schooling outcomes too. Secondly, although Bourdieu sees a close resemblance in the type of resources affecting lifestyle preferences and political orientations, I argue that these outcomes are affected by two different types of resources: cultural and communicative resources. Proposals for progress, including a review of the empirical results supporting these, are given.
- Published
- 2010
16. Securing the self: risk and aspiration in the post‐16 curriculum
- Author
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Chris Richards
- Subjects
Sociology and Political Science ,business.industry ,Self ,media_common.quotation_subject ,Education ,Negotiation ,Social space ,Framing (social sciences) ,Perception ,Sociology ,business ,Social psychology ,Curriculum ,Social influence ,media_common ,Mass media - Abstract
This paper examines the social meaning of subject choice in the post‐16 context through a case study of Media Studies in a selective school. Students' accounts are discussed in terms of both their enjoyment of the subject and their negotiation of its ‘legitimacy’. The analysis of their comments in interviews stresses the subject's precarious position in a school where a relatively traditional hierarchy of subjects still prevails. It also considers the strength of family ‘projects’ in framing children's educational ‘choices’. Media Studies is discussed as a negotiable option primarily facilitating projections into a new middle‐class sense of self‐hood.
- Published
- 2005
- Full Text
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