Abstract

This paper qualitatively analyses the implication of urban sensorium as a pedagogic mode in the teaching of Urban Studies. Underpinned by the frames of smart learning environments, the paper reiterates experiencing urban ontologies as spatial learning environments. By drawing from a range of transdisciplinary and experiential modes of learning, this paper maps how an undergraduate course on Bangalore city in India served learners to critically engage with and experience spatial urban ontologies both digitally, and in real-world experiences of learning, furthering learner autonomy and reflection. The methodological prisms of this paper are autoethnography and critical reflection. It is organised around enabling learners recognize the experiential, embodied urban spaces through the urban sensorium via real-life engagements with urban spaces, and creation of digital portfolios that map this learning. Findings from the learners’ knowledge of sensory learning, the city’s intersectional aspects, and the student’s embodied and emplaced self in built environments and digital spaces are analysed via cognitive and affective-reflection levels; the course instructor's reflection is analysed via a process-reflection level. These reflections hold implications for the pedagogy of urban studies in undergraduate classrooms by foregrounding spatiality and urban sensorium as significant critical and affective pedagogic tools. The paper has also accommodated critical engagement with an external faculty member as a co-author, in order to manage any bias or researcher subjectivity in the design.

Highlights

  • Classrooms have always been characterised by a dynamic spatiality that encourages focused interactions and learner involvement

  • Guided by autoethnography (Hughes et al, 2012) and teacher reflection as methodological pegs (Jakeman et al, 2017), this paper explores the following questions: 1. What pedagogical implications does the urban sensorium approach hold out for the integration of a kinaesthetic, affective learning mode in the facilitation of introductory urban studies courses?

  • Foregrounding the urban sensorium as a smart learning environment, an important implication of this reflective research has been in recognizing the success of the pedagogic mode of the urban sensorium

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Summary

Introduction

Classrooms have always been characterised by a dynamic spatiality that encourages focused interactions and learner involvement. Literature points to a significant development in research on pedagogy that learning is a cognitive as well as emotional experience (Hascher, 2010; Tyng et al, 2017). There is an increased need to Jayagopalan and Mukherjee Smart Learning Environments (2022) 9:4 evaluate learner-learning experiences in higher education spaces. In this context, redefining learning spaces and re-designing pedagogy to empower cognitively as well as emotionally competent learners and enable them to make their own learning choices is a step towards learner autonomy. Learning is an amalgamation of cognitive and emotional processes; a learning process where students learn through engagement with the process and reflection of the process is essential to creating a holistic learning environment (Fomichov & Fomichova, 2017)

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