Abstract
This study investigates how schoolchildren organise their spatial and epistemic ‘territories’ among peer groups to constitute local social and moral orders in open learning environments. Open learning environments, the result of recent school reforms in Finland, challenge the conventional organisation of traditional classrooms. We use a microanalysis of naturally occurring video-recorded interactions to show the interactional dynamics of how children produce epistemic and spatial territories by creating moment-by-moment unfolding participation frameworks and emotional alliances. We suggest that the lack of institutional structures in open learning environments withholds children from the territorial shelters that exist in more traditional classrooms. Therefore, open learning environments make students and their peer groups more vulnerable in terms of their social face (Goffman, 1955), including their competence and skills, as they are constantly exposed to other people's observations and criticisms of and interventions in their peer groups. Our results shed light on the tendency of human beings to produce spatial and epistemic structures and moral orders where none exist.
Highlights
In this study, we investigate how 11e12-year-old schoolchildren produce group relationships through moment-bymoment moral and emotional negotiations of epistemic and spatial spaces or ‘territories’ (Goffman, 1971)
We explore the connection between displays of emotion and producing moral order in the context of open learning environments
In the study presented in this paper, we investigated how children in open learning environments organise their spatial and personal territories among and within peer groups in embodied ways
Summary
We investigate how 11e12-year-old schoolchildren produce group relationships through moment-bymoment moral and emotional negotiations of epistemic and spatial spaces or ‘territories’ (Goffman, 1971). We draw from and further explore our initial observation (Niemi, 2021) that when children in open learning environments cannot rely on stable physical spaces, routines and pre-given structures, they must locally produce an ongoing interaction order (Goffman, 1983) and establish new practices in order to uphold and protect their personal (Goffman,1971) and epistemic (Heritage, 2012) territories. We analyse the local production of social and moral order by uncovering the ways in which schoolchildren negotiate their epistemic and spatial territories moment-by-moment in open learning environments. We contribute to the research on how a designed environment shapes ongoing activity (Jucker et al, 2018; Yeoman and Ashmore, 2018)
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