Sigga Waleng defends her PhD thesis

Sigga Waleng defends the PhD thesis: ”Beyond ‘Disruptions’: A Critical Exploration of the Necessity of School Exclusions”.
Friday
04
October
Start:13:00
End:16:00
Place: Building 45, Auditorium 45 / Online via Zoom

真人线上娱乐 would like to invite you to Sigga Waleng’s defense of her PhD thesis: ”Beyond ‘Disruptions’: A Critical Exploration of the Necessity of School Exclusions”.

You can participate at 真人线上娱乐 University or online via Zoom.

Everyone is welcome.

Supervisors and assessment

Assessment commitee:

  • Sabina Pultz, Associate Professor, 真人线上娱乐 University
  • Kristine Kousholt, Associate Professor, Aarhus University
  • Johanna Motzkau, Senior Lecturer, The Open University (UK)

Supervisors:

  • Main supervisor: Professor, Charlotte H?jholt, 真人线上娱乐 University
  • Co-supervisor: Professor, Morten Nissen, Aarhus University

Abstract

This problem-based thesis examines how the necessity of school exclusion evolves in everyday school life. The analysis is based on four empirical materials from Denmark: the historical legislation from 1814-2014, 20 case studies with children who have been suspended temporarily or expelled permanently from school, 1,5 years of fieldwork in a local 2nd/3rd Grade focused on expulsions from the classroom and three experiments conducted in a workshop format. I take a dialectical, German-Nordic critical-psychological, practice epistemological approach to the teaching-learning and the school management practices as the main contexts for understanding school exclusions.

Even though the individual child’s ‘disruption’ is the main reference point when school managers justify their use of school exclusions, I show how many other elements play in, such as financial concerns, parent-school collaboration, and school reputation. I argue that we need to overcome the dichotomy between ‘tolerance’ and sanctions and acknowledge other ways of taking the ‘disruptions’ and the underlying conflicts seriously. How to handle ‘disruptions’ is primarily a pedagogical decision and, therefore, we must look into the teaching-learning practice, where the ‘dis-ruptions’ evolve.

Situating the nexus of ‘disruptions’ and exclusions in practice, we can see how classroom expulsions are used in situations where a vicious circle of chaos takes over, and the teaching-learning practice is about to fall apart. Many ‘disruptions’ consist of children attempting to secure their inclusion among peers in a conflictual class community of social panic. Here, teachers’ attempts to insist on the teaching agenda by explicating expectations, tightening the tolerance, and dealing with framing and order in advance of the teaching contribute to an escalating contradiction between the teaching agenda and students’ social relations. Exclusions are often seen as a means to order, but I show how exclusions can contribute to the splitting of the practice into mutual ‘disruptions’, and thus, rather is a ‘means’ to chaos.  

The teachers’ focus on the teaching agenda can be seen in connection with political panic about securing Denmark’s welfare system in a globalized world of increased international competition. At the same time, the state administration no longer rely on teachers as civil servants and therefore, a much tighter control with their work is deemed necessary. These political changes puts a pressure on teaching-learning practice that through an escalating conflicts can lead to school exclusions. I argue that we need to give teachers more flexibility in their work so that they can engage in a democratic dialogue with students about what is meaningful to learn in school and thereby develop their common practice beyond ‘disruptions’.

 

Directions

Directions to 真人线上娱乐 University