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Homework through the Eyes of Children: What Does Visual Ethnography Invite Us to See?
Author(s) -
Kirsten Hutchison
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
european educational research journal
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.715
H-Index - 34
ISSN - 1474-9041
DOI - 10.2304/eerj.2011.10.4.545
Subject(s) - habitus , entitlement (fair division) , sociology , affordance , ethnography , cultural capital , disadvantaged , resistance (ecology) , pedagogy , embodied cognition , photovoice , citizen journalism , gender studies , psychology , social science , political science , epistemology , ecology , philosophy , mathematics , mathematical economics , anthropology , law , economics , cognitive psychology , biology , economic growth
Whilst the notion of children’s rights and an entitlement to express their views and participate as global citizens is threaded throughout the international policy field, children’s perspectives on the near ubiquitous practice of homework, and its effects on their daily lives and learner subjectivities, remain under-researched. Drawing on the Bourdieuian concepts of practice, habitus, capital and field, this article develops a cross-cultural analysis of homework practices in Australia, Denmark and Britain to make visible the embodied habitus and agentic possibilities shaping the reproduction of educational advantage and disadvantage for variously located students. Using video data generated by children in primary schools, the article explores children’s visual representations of their compliance and resistance to homework’s regulatory functions. It demonstrates the affordances of visual ethnographic methods as a form of participatory research with children which foregrounds students’ experiences and opinions and makes visible the inclusionary and exclusionary effects of homework on children in diverse socio-cultural settings

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