1st Edition

Novelty, Innovation and Transformation in Educational Ethnographic Research European Perspectives

230 Pages 23 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

230 Pages 23 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

This edited volume tackles the theoretical, empirical and methodological questions of how novelty can be determined in and through educational ethnographic research.

Responding to the increasing need for new and innovative methodological and theoretical foundations for the field, chapters draw on a variety of empirical, critically examined data sets such as observation protocols of pedagogical practice, digital communication and visual representations to bridge the gap between empirical and theoretical approaches, ultimately combining different traditions and discourses within educational ethnography. Collating perspectives and accounts from over 30 authors based in European centers of excellence such as Germany, the Czech Republic, Switzerland, Italy, Austria and Denmark, the book provides an epistemological reflection on what we can understand as ‘new’ in theoretical and methodological research.

This volume will be of use to researchers, academics and postgraduate students involved with research methods in education, ethnography and the theory of education more broadly. Those involved with research design, innovation and European research methods will also find the volume of use.

The Open Access version of this book, available at www.taylorfrancis.com, has been made available under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non Commercial-No Derivatives (CC-BY-NC-ND) 4.0 license. Any third party material in this book is not included in the OA Creative Commons license, unless indicated otherwise in a credit line to the material. Please direct any permissions enquiries to the original rightsholder. We would like to thank the Europa-Universität Flensburg, the Fördergesellschaft der Uni Flensburg e.v. and the Research Centre for Education, Teaching, School and Socialization for financial support.

Introduction: Novelty, Innovation and Transformation in Educational Ethnographic Research: European Perspectives

Jürgen Budde, Anke Wischnmann , Georg Rißler, Michael Meier-Sternberg

Part I: Theoretical Perspectives

1 Introductory reflections on new educational theory through ethnography

Jürgen Budde

2 Educational Ethnography in an Age of Technoculture: Exploring Noise and Glitch Instead of Fetishizing the New

Felicitas Macilchrist

3 Rich, Intimate and Immersive: Using Netnography for Educational Research in an Age of Technoculture

Rosella C. Gambetti, Robert V. Kozinets

4 Old and New Varieties of Materialism in Ethnographic Research: Ethnography Matters

Tobias Röhl

5 Multispecies Ethnography in Educational Research: Changing Perspective in Animal-Assisted Education

Katharina Ameli

6 Overcoming “intellectual aristocracy” through Bildung: A New Look at the Work of Wilhelm von Humboldt by Bringing Together the History of Education and the History of Ethnography

Ruprecht Mattig

7 Is Necessity the Mother of Invention? Improvisational Action, Creativity and Art in Times of Crisis (or Crisis of Time)

Margit Schild

 

Part II: Methodological Perspectives

8 Introductory Reflections on New Challenges for Ethnographical Research in Educational Practices

Georg Rißler

9 Outline of a New Practice-Theoretical Conception for Ethnographic Research of Larger Nexuses: Constellations Ethnography

Jürgen Budde, Johanna Geßner-Ott, Georg Rißler

10 Addressing the Unseen, Challenging Visual Difference: New Perspectives in Ethnographic Research

Valerie Riepe, Anke Wischmann

11 Elaborating New Insights in Transnational Ethnographic Collaborations: Opportunities and Challenges

Magnus Frank, Anja Sieber Egger, Gisela Unterweger, Florian Weitkämper, Clemens Wieser, Susan Wright

12 On the Vulnerability of Epistemological Processes: How Does ‘the New’ Enter Ethnography?

Juliane Engel, Anke Wischmann, Serafina Morrin, Mirja Silkenbeumer, Saskia Terstegen

13 Process Ontologies and the Many Potential Ethnographies: New Materialisms and Shifting Boundaries between Humans, Animals and Things

Grit Höppner, Cornelia Schadler, Anna Wanka

Part III: Empirical Perspectives

14 Introductory Reflections on the New in Empirical Analyses

Anke Wischmann

15 Autoethnographic Explorations of (Post-) Socialist Childhood Memories through Storytelling: Migrating as and with Children

Irena Kašparová, Susanne Ress

16 Children, Belonging and the New: Methodological Perspectives on the Relationship between Construction and Reconstruction

Anja Tervooren, Nicolle Pfaff

 

Conclusion: The ‘New’ in Ethnography in Times of Crises

Jürgen Budde, Michael Meier-Sternberg, Georg Rißler, Anke Wischnmann

Biography

Jürgen Budde is Professor of Educational Science, Institute of Educational Science, Europa-Universität Flensburg, Germany.

Anke Wischmann is Professor of Educational Science, Institute of Educational Science, Europa-Universität Flensburg, Germany.

Georg Rißler is a scientific assistant, Centre for Childhood in Education and Society, University of Teacher Education, Zurich, Switzerland.

Michael Meier-Sternberg is Lecturer in Education, Institute of Educational Science, Europa-Universität Flensburg, Germany.