"We grew as we grew": visual methods, social change and collective learning over time

Educational research using visual methods has the power to transform the society in which we live and the communities in which we work. We must not naively imagine that having the desire to make change in people's lives will mean that it will happen, as sometimes there may be surprising, uninte...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Shannon Walsh
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Education Association of South Africa 2012-01-01
Series:South African Journal of Education
Subjects:
Online Access:http://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0256-01002012000400007
id doaj-6f74e1978a6c464a8c960ef05a945be5
record_format Article
spelling doaj-6f74e1978a6c464a8c960ef05a945be52020-11-25T01:08:47ZengEducation Association of South AfricaSouth African Journal of Education0256-01002076-34332012-01-01324406415"We grew as we grew": visual methods, social change and collective learning over timeShannon WalshEducational research using visual methods has the power to transform the society in which we live and the communities in which we work. We must not naively imagine that having the desire to make change in people's lives will mean that it will happen, as sometimes there may be surprising, unintended negative repercussions as well. Other constraints, such as structural violence and institutional racism, can also intersect with the possibility of making tangible change through educational research using visual methods. Qualitative assessment with a longitudinal approach is one approach that can reveal both the impact, and the limitations, of educational research on social change. I discuss these issues through grounded examples from an HIV educational project that used visual methodologies with a group of youths in Cape Town, South Africa over a number of years. Almost ten years later we interviewed three of theformer participants about what impact the work has had on their lives. Each has travelled a differentjourney and been faced with different constraints that have implications for the effectiveness of such work. Where are they now, and as adults, what do they have to say about the visual methodologies, memory, and social change?http://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0256-01002012000400007AIDSAtlantisHIV preventionKhayelitshalongitudinal researchmemoryparticipationRondeboschsocial changeSouth Africavisual methods
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Shannon Walsh
spellingShingle Shannon Walsh
"We grew as we grew": visual methods, social change and collective learning over time
South African Journal of Education
AIDS
Atlantis
HIV prevention
Khayelitsha
longitudinal research
memory
participation
Rondebosch
social change
South Africa
visual methods
author_facet Shannon Walsh
author_sort Shannon Walsh
title "We grew as we grew": visual methods, social change and collective learning over time
title_short "We grew as we grew": visual methods, social change and collective learning over time
title_full "We grew as we grew": visual methods, social change and collective learning over time
title_fullStr "We grew as we grew": visual methods, social change and collective learning over time
title_full_unstemmed "We grew as we grew": visual methods, social change and collective learning over time
title_sort "we grew as we grew": visual methods, social change and collective learning over time
publisher Education Association of South Africa
series South African Journal of Education
issn 0256-0100
2076-3433
publishDate 2012-01-01
description Educational research using visual methods has the power to transform the society in which we live and the communities in which we work. We must not naively imagine that having the desire to make change in people's lives will mean that it will happen, as sometimes there may be surprising, unintended negative repercussions as well. Other constraints, such as structural violence and institutional racism, can also intersect with the possibility of making tangible change through educational research using visual methods. Qualitative assessment with a longitudinal approach is one approach that can reveal both the impact, and the limitations, of educational research on social change. I discuss these issues through grounded examples from an HIV educational project that used visual methodologies with a group of youths in Cape Town, South Africa over a number of years. Almost ten years later we interviewed three of theformer participants about what impact the work has had on their lives. Each has travelled a differentjourney and been faced with different constraints that have implications for the effectiveness of such work. Where are they now, and as adults, what do they have to say about the visual methodologies, memory, and social change?
topic AIDS
Atlantis
HIV prevention
Khayelitsha
longitudinal research
memory
participation
Rondebosch
social change
South Africa
visual methods
url http://www.scielo.org.za/scielo.php?script=sci_arttext&pid=S0256-01002012000400007
work_keys_str_mv AT shannonwalsh wegrewaswegrewvisualmethodssocialchangeandcollectivelearningovertime
_version_ 1725181665740849152