FEEL'D NOTES IN PUBLIC PLACES:

Stephanie Mason
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Abstract

   For my doctoral research into adults’ informal learning through material objects in four public places in Halifax, Nova Scotia, I used sketchbooks as fieldnote journals. In contrast to objective observations, I recorded during my site visits a panoply of overheard conversations, drawings, remarks, puns, encounters, temperatures, and colours. These and other elements comprised my experiences in each site, and I wanted to represent their gist and connotations through multiple forms of expression. This approach aligns with arts-informed research methodology that celebrates complexity and shared meaning-making with engaged scholarship. I used these notes to produce for each site a written vignette, to introduce and reacquaint others with that place; two of these vignettes appear in the following report. In translating what I came to call my “feel’d,” not “field,” notes into these written pieces, I gleaned new understandings about scribbling and scrawling expressive, affective feel’d notes. I found that engagement enriched my research process, and also fostered a greater awareness of place meanings. I recognize that transformed notetaking has a bearing on understanding, research process, people/communities, and places, and offers methodological insights that carry out and further engaged scholarship knowledge. 
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在公共场所捡到的钞票:
在我的博士研究中,我在新斯科舍省哈利法克斯的四个公共场所通过实物研究成人的非正式学习,我使用速写本作为田野笔记日志。与客观观察相反,我在实地考察期间记录了大量无意中听到的对话、图画、评论、双关语、遭遇、温度和颜色。这些和其他元素构成了我在每个场地的经历,我想通过多种形式的表达来表达它们的主旨和内涵。这种方法与以艺术为基础的研究方法相一致,该方法通过参与学术来庆祝复杂性和共享意义。我用这些笔记为每个地点制作了一个书面的小插图,以介绍和重新认识那个地方;下面的报告中出现了其中两个小插曲。在把我称之为“感觉”而不是“场”的笔记翻译成这些书面笔记的过程中,我对涂鸦和潦草地写下富有表现力的、情感的感觉笔记有了新的理解。我发现这种参与丰富了我的研究过程,也培养了我对地点意义的更强意识。我认识到,转化后的笔记记录对理解、研究过程、人/社区和地点都有影响,并提供了执行和进一步参与学术知识的方法论见解。
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