Children’s ‘eye views’ of an archaeological site: A multimodal social semiotic approach to children’s drawings

This paper presents eight-year-old children's ‘eye views’ of the archaeological site of the Agora in Athens, Greece, based on drawings made during an educational programme on site. Complementing a significant body of research on drawings, we introduce a multimodal social semiotic perspective to...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Sophia Diamantopoulou, Dimitra Christidou
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Leicester 2018-11-01
Series:Museum & Society
Online Access:https://journals.le.ac.uk/ojs1/index.php/mas/article/view/2793
id doaj-6e2eaa8390414861b8bb1d7925ee69ee
record_format Article
spelling doaj-6e2eaa8390414861b8bb1d7925ee69ee2020-11-24T21:16:00ZengUniversity of LeicesterMuseum & Society1479-83602018-11-0116333435110.29311/mas.v16i3.27932650Children’s ‘eye views’ of an archaeological site: A multimodal social semiotic approach to children’s drawingsSophia DiamantopoulouDimitra ChristidouThis paper presents eight-year-old children's ‘eye views’ of the archaeological site of the Agora in Athens, Greece, based on drawings made during an educational programme on site. Complementing a significant body of research on drawings, we introduce a multimodal social semiotic perspective to explore drawings as ‘designed’ accounts of children’s ‘eye views’. We argue that each account arises as an agentive response to their interests and prompts in the environment framing their experience, such as features of the site and the educational programme. Based on four drawings, we identify salient elements of children’s experience in their representations which we analyze as material realizations of (i) their interests and agency, (ii) their visual and embodied engagement with the archaeological site, and (iii) the framing of the educational task and overall programme. Our findings contribute to research on the importance of visual in learning.https://journals.le.ac.uk/ojs1/index.php/mas/article/view/2793
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Sophia Diamantopoulou
Dimitra Christidou
spellingShingle Sophia Diamantopoulou
Dimitra Christidou
Children’s ‘eye views’ of an archaeological site: A multimodal social semiotic approach to children’s drawings
Museum & Society
author_facet Sophia Diamantopoulou
Dimitra Christidou
author_sort Sophia Diamantopoulou
title Children’s ‘eye views’ of an archaeological site: A multimodal social semiotic approach to children’s drawings
title_short Children’s ‘eye views’ of an archaeological site: A multimodal social semiotic approach to children’s drawings
title_full Children’s ‘eye views’ of an archaeological site: A multimodal social semiotic approach to children’s drawings
title_fullStr Children’s ‘eye views’ of an archaeological site: A multimodal social semiotic approach to children’s drawings
title_full_unstemmed Children’s ‘eye views’ of an archaeological site: A multimodal social semiotic approach to children’s drawings
title_sort children’s ‘eye views’ of an archaeological site: a multimodal social semiotic approach to children’s drawings
publisher University of Leicester
series Museum & Society
issn 1479-8360
publishDate 2018-11-01
description This paper presents eight-year-old children's ‘eye views’ of the archaeological site of the Agora in Athens, Greece, based on drawings made during an educational programme on site. Complementing a significant body of research on drawings, we introduce a multimodal social semiotic perspective to explore drawings as ‘designed’ accounts of children’s ‘eye views’. We argue that each account arises as an agentive response to their interests and prompts in the environment framing their experience, such as features of the site and the educational programme. Based on four drawings, we identify salient elements of children’s experience in their representations which we analyze as material realizations of (i) their interests and agency, (ii) their visual and embodied engagement with the archaeological site, and (iii) the framing of the educational task and overall programme. Our findings contribute to research on the importance of visual in learning.
url https://journals.le.ac.uk/ojs1/index.php/mas/article/view/2793
work_keys_str_mv AT sophiadiamantopoulou childrenseyeviewsofanarchaeologicalsiteamultimodalsocialsemioticapproachtochildrensdrawings
AT dimitrachristidou childrenseyeviewsofanarchaeologicalsiteamultimodalsocialsemioticapproachtochildrensdrawings
_version_ 1716743767120150528