About this Event
Please note that this event was previously postponed and we have now rescheduled it to a new date. The event will now take place on Wednesday 22nd April. Thank you for your patience and we hope that you can still make it to the event!
This event is part of the School of Education's . These seminars are free and open to the public.
Host: Language, Literacies and Education Network (LLEN)
Speaker: Shahrzad Nouri (University of Inland Norway)
Negotiating practices of inclusion in adult basic education in Norway
In my PhD project «Critical perspectives on inclusion in basic adult education in Norway”, I seek to explore how teachers in adult basic education in Norway negotiate their understandings and practices of inclusion within intersecting assemblages of Norwegianness, integration and teaching and learning. The empirical material was produced during seven months of fieldwork at two adult education centers in eastern Norway.
In this talk, I will present two papers from the study. The first addressing the role of emotion and affect in processes of racialization in adult basic education, and how emotions could be a site for both reproductions, silencing and rupture of/ in racializing assemblages. In the second paper I explore how colonial figurations of the child are activated with(in) assemblages of Norwegianness, teaching/learning, and integration. I argue that the repetition and activation of the child, as a pre-existing figuration, occur in various ways. This figuration can contribute to othering and infantilization of adult immigrant students, while blurring lines between teaching and rearing in the adult classroom.
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Bio:
Shahrzad Nouri is a Visiting 3rd year Ph.D. student from the University of Inland Norway.
Her research is in the multilingual and multicultural context of basic adult education in Norway. The preliminary title of her study is “Critical perspectives on inclusion in basic adult education in Norway – mapping the field”. In her study she utilises a Deleuze – Guattarian methodological and analytical approach to explore terms of inclusion in basic adult education. She is further interested in in exploring how processes of racialisation and coloniality “works” in basic adult education today.
Event Venue & Nearby Stays
Please find details on how to attend at the end of your order confirmation email. | School of Education, University of Bristol, School of Education, Bristol, United Kingdom
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