Edinburgh Research Archive

Wandering with a shepherd's hut: fragments of a vagabond methodology

dc.contributor.advisor
Foley, Yvonne
dc.contributor.advisor
Nicol, Robbie
dc.contributor.advisor
Coyle, Do
dc.contributor.author
Hanser, Christian H.
dc.contributor.sponsor
Scottish Council of Deans of Education for a PhD stipend through the Scottish Attainment Challenge’s Research Project (2018 – 2021)
en
dc.date.accessioned
2023-10-13T10:02:52Z
dc.date.available
2023-10-13T10:02:52Z
dc.date.issued
2023-10-13
dc.description.abstract
This work makes use of a methodological vehicle to investigate how informal gestures of hospitality can be integrated into formal educational settings. The arts-based inquiry explores this with a cohort of student teachers in Scotland. Research participants are invited to enter a shepherd´s hut on a regular basis. All they are asked to do is to take time off in an unusual location. They sit down and welcome storytelling and wonder to make sense of their busy lives between university and school placements. As the wood fire crackles, relational stillness helps to explore paths towards self-care, identify the mountains of too many struggles, breathe, rant, laugh and dream. Nothing tangible appears to occur, but a lot is happening on the intrinsic roads of those who take seat. The use of subjective mapping encourages playful life story arts. Student teachers imaginatively spatialise their own trajectories. The shepherd’s hut as a host holds open a temporary ‘safe space’ for existential time and helps to draw the contours of formalised, introspective peer care. Structured as a festival of encounters and detours, the thesis proposes to wander away from the ‘gap trap’ which frames educational attainment debates in an exclusive focus on instrumental progression according to a measurable norm. The provocation is to provisionally suspend the linearity of outcomes to facilitate a decelerated alternative to restless societal optimisations. Journeys into meaningful teaching are investigated through a ‘vagabond’ lens. Vagabond vagueness challenges the idea that professional belongings require a standardised path. Fixed templates for resilient teachers tend to overlook intrinsic nuances in negotiations with ambivalent educational spheres. This work contributes to debates around teacher retention by focusing on individuals’ silent, unaudited struggles with meaning. The existential sphere often remains invisible in traditional initial teacher education programmes. The significance of inner worlds for long-term professional belonging is demonstrated in the research participants’ artistic mapping artefacts which open up to profound conversations. Findings suggest that the crafts for nurturing singular teacher becomings are not limited to reflexivity modules in compartmentalised curricula. Inner riches require broader existential care as spatio-temporal refuge within institutions. This implies taking further risks to reimagine university and school timetabling from outdoor positionalities. The unlearning of teaching-to-the-test formats is sustained by public disruption. Undomesticated ‘vehicles-in-residence’ then circulate between communities, conferences and degree programmes. A future orientation for arts-based research as societal transformation therefore lies in curating long-term, micro-scale frameworks for affective academic hospitalities.
en
dc.identifier.uri
https://hdl.handle.net/1842/41057
dc.identifier.uri
http://dx.doi.org/10.7488/era/3796
dc.language.iso
en
en
dc.publisher
The University of Edinburgh
en
dc.relation.hasversion
Hanser, C. H. (2023). Teaching temporal reflexivity through a vehicle: Experientialexistential time around the wood fire stove of a mobile shepherd’s hut. Time & Society, 32(3), 301–317. https://doi.org/10.1177/0961463X231187701
en
dc.relation.hasversion
Hanser, C. H. (2021). Touring academic events with a tiny house "conference fringe": Artistic welcome in a mobile storytelling shed as relational research into invisibility and (non-)belonging. In A.S. Jepson & T. Walters (Eds.) Events and Well-being. London: Routledge.]
en
dc.relation.hasversion
Hanser, C. H. (2020). A space between: Social work through the lens of a mobile tiny house encounter space. Qualitative Social Work, 19(3), 380–405.
en
dc.relation.hasversion
Hanser, C. H. (2021a). Collective Temporal Activism as a Game changer for the Academy: Reframing Conference Hospitalities Among Colleagues Under Pressure. International Review of Qualitative Research, 14(1), 137–154. https://doi.org/10.1177/1940844720968207
en
dc.subject
teacher retention
en
dc.subject
teacher education
en
dc.subject
professional belonging
en
dc.subject
long-term professional belonging
en
dc.subject
teaching-to-the-test
en
dc.title
Wandering with a shepherd's hut: fragments of a vagabond methodology
en
dc.type
Thesis or Dissertation
en
dc.type.qualificationlevel
Doctoral
en
dc.type.qualificationname
PhD Doctor of Philosophy
en

Files

Original bundle

Now showing 1 - 1 of 1
Name:
HanserCH_2023.pdf
Size:
25.28 MB
Format:
Adobe Portable Document Format
Description:

This item appears in the following Collection(s)