The matter of the stick: Storying/(re)storying children's literacies in the forest

被引:23
|
作者
Harwood, Debra [1 ]
Collier, Diane R. [1 ]
机构
[1] Brock Univ, St Catharines, ON, Canada
关键词
Posthumanism; matter; early childhood literacy; play; forest schools; PLAY; EDUCATION; GEOGRAPHIES; THINGS; SPACE;
D O I
10.1177/1468798417712340
中图分类号
G40 [教育学];
学科分类号
040101 ; 120403 ;
摘要
Children's intra-actions with the natural world offer an important lens to revisit notions of literacies. They allow for a decentring of humans - here children - as actors. Also, forest schools and nature-based learning programmes are increasingly erupting across North America, although more commonplace in Europe for a longer period. In this presentation of our research, we feature a storying/(re)storying of data from a yearlong research study of children's entanglements with the forest as a more-than-human world. We ask what we might learn if educators, children and researchers think with sticks, not separate from, but in relation to sticks? Eight preschool children, two educators and two researchers ventured into the forest twice a week over the course of a year, documenting their interactions with a mosaic of data generation tools, such as notebooks, iPads, Go-Pro cameras. The forest offered diverse materials that provoked "thing-matter-energy-child-assemblages" that were significant for the children's play and literacy framing. Through post-humanist theorizing, we have paid particular attention to the stick within the children's forest play and illustrate the ways in which the stick was entangled with children's bodies, relations, identities and discourses. The stick was a catalyst, a friend, a momentary and changing text, an agentic force acting relationally with children's play and stories. The post humanism storying/(re)storying of the children's encounters in the forest with sticks invites infinite possibilities for literacy teaching and learning. How might educators foster such relations, enquiring with and alongside children with an openness toward what the sticks (forests) might teach us?
引用
收藏
页码:336 / 352
页数:17
相关论文
共 50 条
  • [21] Storying the suicide of one's child
    McQuaide, S
    CLINICAL SOCIAL WORK JOURNAL, 1995, 23 (04) : 417 - 428
  • [22] Re-storying the Roles of Animals in Cultural Burning
    Baynes-Rock, Marcus
    HUMAN ECOLOGY, 2024, 52 (06) : 1239 - 1249
  • [23] (Re)storying Japanese Canadian Histories: Artistic Engagements
    Chin, Matthew
    Sakamoto, Izumi
    Ku, Jane
    Yamamoto, Ai
    CULTURAL STUDIES-CRITICAL METHODOLOGIES, 2021, 21 (03): : 264 - 275
  • [24] Re-storying the World: Reviving the Language of Life
    Holden, Madronna
    AUSTRALIAN HUMANITIES REVIEW, 2009, (47): : 141 - 157
  • [25] Storying experience: Young children's early use of story genres
    Flynn, Erin Elizabeth
    TEXT & TALK, 2018, 38 (04) : 457 - 480
  • [26] "We're Not Walking Schools": Storying the Pandemic Schooling Experiences of Mothers of Children with Disabilities
    Cheyney-Collante, Kristi
    Chapman, Lindsey
    Duggins, Shaunte
    QUALITATIVE REPORT, 2024, 29 (02): : 535 - 555
  • [27] (Re)Storying Obama: An Examination of Recently Published Informational Texts
    Laura A. May
    Teri Holbrook
    Laura E. Meyers
    Children's Literature in Education, 2010, 41 : 273 - 290
  • [28] Girls fighting trouble: Re-storying young lives
    Kelley, P
    Blankenburg, L
    McRoberts, J
    FAMILIES IN SOCIETY-THE JOURNAL OF CONTEMPORARY HUMAN SERVICES, 2002, 83 (5-6): : 530 - 540
  • [30] Defining desire: (Re)storying a "fraudulent" marriage in 1901 Spain
    de Gabriel, Narciso
    Vazquez Garcia, Francisco
    DePalma, Renee
    SEXUALITIES, 2020, 23 (03) : 287 - 306