Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Pedagogies of belonging in an anxious world: A collaborative autoethnography of four practitioners

View through CrossRef
The concept of belonging has found prominence in higher education learning environments, as the COVID-19 pandemic continues to have an unprecedented impact on educational provision. In times of disruption, alienation and isolation, the most basic of our psychological and physiological needs have come to be almost universally recognised as critical factors that must be considered and examined. Experiencing belonging is integral to human existence, and knowing where, with whom, and how we belong, is a salient driver for learning and self-actualisation. We recognise there are a number of ways to frame and approach the idea of belonging in the educational experience. We also recognise that there are multiple understandings of what belonging means and therefore how it is enacted within the curricula and the “classroom” in its varying forms - physical, online, digital, work-based. This Editorial takes a critical perspective to our own intellectual standpoint in relation to pedagogies of belonging. As co-editors, we have outlined our respective conceptions and experiences of belonging as a collaborative autoethnography, capturing our individual views of pedagogies of belonging in a collaborative context. Our collaboration has allowed us to situate ourselves both theoretically and practically, as well as ontologically, and advance our understanding of practices that promote student belonging in all its possible forms within the higher education experience. We suggest that the possibilities for belonging offered by interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary approaches are ripe for inquiry, and the place of non-traditional, Indigenous, iterative and emergent methodologies to examine belonging requires further exploration.
Title: Pedagogies of belonging in an anxious world: A collaborative autoethnography of four practitioners
Description:
The concept of belonging has found prominence in higher education learning environments, as the COVID-19 pandemic continues to have an unprecedented impact on educational provision.
In times of disruption, alienation and isolation, the most basic of our psychological and physiological needs have come to be almost universally recognised as critical factors that must be considered and examined.
Experiencing belonging is integral to human existence, and knowing where, with whom, and how we belong, is a salient driver for learning and self-actualisation.
We recognise there are a number of ways to frame and approach the idea of belonging in the educational experience.
We also recognise that there are multiple understandings of what belonging means and therefore how it is enacted within the curricula and the “classroom” in its varying forms - physical, online, digital, work-based.
This Editorial takes a critical perspective to our own intellectual standpoint in relation to pedagogies of belonging.
As co-editors, we have outlined our respective conceptions and experiences of belonging as a collaborative autoethnography, capturing our individual views of pedagogies of belonging in a collaborative context.
Our collaboration has allowed us to situate ourselves both theoretically and practically, as well as ontologically, and advance our understanding of practices that promote student belonging in all its possible forms within the higher education experience.
We suggest that the possibilities for belonging offered by interdisciplinary and transdisciplinary approaches are ripe for inquiry, and the place of non-traditional, Indigenous, iterative and emergent methodologies to examine belonging requires further exploration.

Related Results

Bringing Autoethnography to Undergraduates
Bringing Autoethnography to Undergraduates
The label “autoethnography” has been applied to a wide range of knowledge-producing practices, from what might be considered “normal” science to narrative-driven writing to perform...
Thank You, Tony E. Adams, Stacy Holman Jones, and Carolyn Ellis, for Offering the Handbook of Autoethnography
Thank You, Tony E. Adams, Stacy Holman Jones, and Carolyn Ellis, for Offering the Handbook of Autoethnography
I offer this review on autoethnography for various social science disciplines for readers, writers, and novice and experienced researchers. The second edition of the Handbook of Au...
How Should College Physical Education (CPE) Conduct Collaborative Governance? A Survey Based on Chinese Colleges
How Should College Physical Education (CPE) Conduct Collaborative Governance? A Survey Based on Chinese Colleges
Background and Aim: College physical education (CPE) is a Key Stage in the transition from school physical education to national sports. Collaborative governance is an effective ne...
Living in a Material World
Living in a Material World
This article explores the nuances of applying Actor-Network Theory (ANT) to autoethnography. The authors argue that ANT-informed autoethnography may broaden the understanding of ho...
“Belonging analytics”: A proposal
“Belonging analytics”: A proposal
Students’ sense of belonging is associated with successful transition into higher education and a range of positive outcomes including enhanced learning, well-being, and demonstrat...
Detecting Anxiety and Defensiveness from Visual and Auditory Cues
Detecting Anxiety and Defensiveness from Visual and Auditory Cues
ABSTRACT Defensive individuals have been shown to differ from non‐defensive individuals on a number of physiological and behavioral measures. We report two studies on observers' in...
P01-112 - Affective Temperaments in Epilepsy
P01-112 - Affective Temperaments in Epilepsy
ObjectiveAffective temperaments (AT) are suggested as antecedents of mood disorders (MD) currently. MD especially depression is very common in epilepsy. In this study we investigat...
Reassessing the Role of Anxiety in Information Seeking
Reassessing the Role of Anxiety in Information Seeking
Previous research of the theory of Affective Intelligence holds that anxiety in individuals causes learning behavior. If people are anxious they will actively seek new information....

Back to Top