COVID - 19大流行期间的家庭课程:集体传记

Zheng Zhang, R. Heydon, L. Chen, L. Floyd, Hanaa Ghannoum, Susan Ibdah, Ayman Massouti, Jeff Shen, Hisham Swesi
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引用次数: 0

摘要

全球有学龄儿童的家庭受到了因COVID - 19导致的学校关闭的影响。采用社会材料取向和集体传记方法,本研究调查了加拿大安大略省不同家庭的家庭课程,这些家庭的孩子从学龄前到12年级。它发现了大流行的两个不同的课程阶段,每个阶段都有自己的网络组成部分、运动和影响。第一阶段是2020年春夏封锁期间的在家学习;第二阶段是2020年秋季的在线和面对面学习。第一阶段的课程制作涉及的内容是广泛的和意想不到的。多种时间尺度、模式、语言和知识学科组合在一起(重新)将家庭配置为学习空间,为儿童的认知、行为和存在创造了新的机会。第二阶段集合的组成和运动更多的是回归到标准化的学校课程边界,即划分学科领域、语言、学习/游戏、学习/评估和身体/心灵。关于课程中的公平问题,本研究提出了一种课程范式,强调学习者和教师与社会物质生活世界的接触,以及他们与非人类和世界的伦理关系的建立。课程期刊的版权是Wiley-Blackwell的财产,未经版权所有者的明确书面许可,其内容不得复制或通过电子邮件发送到多个网站或发布到listserv。但是,用户可以打印、下载或通过电子邮件发送文章供个人使用。这可以删节。对副本的准确性不作任何保证。用户应参阅原始出版版本的材料的完整。(版权适用于所有人。)
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Household curricula during the COVID ‐19 pandemic: A collective biography
Households with school‐aged children worldwide were affected by school closures caused by COVID‐19. Using a sociomaterial orientation and collective biography methodology, this study examined the household curricula of diverse families in Ontario, Canada with children in pre‐school through Grade 12. It found two distinct curricular phases to the pandemic, each with its own networked constituents, movements, and effects. Phase I involved learning at home during the lockdown in Spring and Summer 2020;Phase II involved online and face‐to‐face learning in the Fall of 2020. The constituents involved in curriculum making in Phase I were expansive and unexpected. Multiple timescales, modes, languages, and knowledge disciplines assembled to (re)configure households as learning spaces that produced novel opportunities for children's knowing, doing, and being. The makeup and movements of the Phase II assemblages were more of a return to the normalized boundaries of implemented school curricula that demarcated subject areas, languages, learning/play, learning/assessment, and body/mind. Concerned with questions of equity in/through curriculum, this study suggests a curriculum paradigm that foregrounds learners' and teachers' engagement with sociomaterial lifeworlds and their ethical relationship building with the more‐than‐human and the world. [ FROM AUTHOR] Copyright of Curriculum Journal is the property of Wiley-Blackwell and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full . (Copyright applies to all s.)
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