Encounters with the World through Cultural Schoolbag Workshops for Teacher Students

This article raises some questions about encountering the world and subjectivation in art educational practices. Gert Biesta recently criticised the continuing emphasis on expressive and self-centred approaches and pedagogies in art education (2017, 2018). Biesta calls for a world-centred approach...

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Main Author: Lisbet Skregelid
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: OsloMet — Oslo Metropolitan University 2021-05-01
Series:Nordic Journal of Art and Research
Online Access:https://journals.oslomet.no/index.php/information/article/view/4449
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spelling doaj-0fffcf59aa1c48a1ab422428045bdae12021-05-19T12:17:03ZengOsloMet — Oslo Metropolitan UniversityNordic Journal of Art and Research2535-73282021-05-0110210.7577/information.4449Encounters with the World through Cultural Schoolbag Workshops for Teacher Students Lisbet Skregelid0University of Agder This article raises some questions about encountering the world and subjectivation in art educational practices. Gert Biesta recently criticised the continuing emphasis on expressive and self-centred approaches and pedagogies in art education (2017, 2018). Biesta calls for a world-centred approach to education in general, as well as art education practices that move the focus from oneself to a greater openness towards the world. In my own art education practice, I attempt to enable this shift from what I see as an emphasis on merely the self to an emphasis on the world—a more sustainable approach to art education. I practise turning students towards the world that explores the possibility for subjectivation: that is, for subjects to come into existence. I frame this teaching strategy as educational dissensus (Skregelid, 2016, 2019a, 2019b, 2020a, 2020b, 2020c). This article discusses the notion of world-centredness in relation to the initial stages of a pilot study involving teacher students in The Cultural Schoolbag (TCS) workshops. The TCS workshop Teiporama, by the artist Sandra Norrbin, had an explorative character and was oriented towards process rather than focused on developing skills and an artistic object. At first glance, what happened in the workshops might seem like the expressive approach to art education that Biesta criticizes. However, I still believe the workshop revealed something more. This leads me to asking: How can an art practice having the self, the I, as a point of departure at the same time be a world-centred educational practice? https://journals.oslomet.no/index.php/information/article/view/4449
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Lisbet Skregelid
spellingShingle Lisbet Skregelid
Encounters with the World through Cultural Schoolbag Workshops for Teacher Students
Nordic Journal of Art and Research
author_facet Lisbet Skregelid
author_sort Lisbet Skregelid
title Encounters with the World through Cultural Schoolbag Workshops for Teacher Students
title_short Encounters with the World through Cultural Schoolbag Workshops for Teacher Students
title_full Encounters with the World through Cultural Schoolbag Workshops for Teacher Students
title_fullStr Encounters with the World through Cultural Schoolbag Workshops for Teacher Students
title_full_unstemmed Encounters with the World through Cultural Schoolbag Workshops for Teacher Students
title_sort encounters with the world through cultural schoolbag workshops for teacher students
publisher OsloMet — Oslo Metropolitan University
series Nordic Journal of Art and Research
issn 2535-7328
publishDate 2021-05-01
description This article raises some questions about encountering the world and subjectivation in art educational practices. Gert Biesta recently criticised the continuing emphasis on expressive and self-centred approaches and pedagogies in art education (2017, 2018). Biesta calls for a world-centred approach to education in general, as well as art education practices that move the focus from oneself to a greater openness towards the world. In my own art education practice, I attempt to enable this shift from what I see as an emphasis on merely the self to an emphasis on the world—a more sustainable approach to art education. I practise turning students towards the world that explores the possibility for subjectivation: that is, for subjects to come into existence. I frame this teaching strategy as educational dissensus (Skregelid, 2016, 2019a, 2019b, 2020a, 2020b, 2020c). This article discusses the notion of world-centredness in relation to the initial stages of a pilot study involving teacher students in The Cultural Schoolbag (TCS) workshops. The TCS workshop Teiporama, by the artist Sandra Norrbin, had an explorative character and was oriented towards process rather than focused on developing skills and an artistic object. At first glance, what happened in the workshops might seem like the expressive approach to art education that Biesta criticizes. However, I still believe the workshop revealed something more. This leads me to asking: How can an art practice having the self, the I, as a point of departure at the same time be a world-centred educational practice?
url https://journals.oslomet.no/index.php/information/article/view/4449
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