Session Information
27 SES 08 B, Cultural Forms of Schooling and Consequences on Learning
Paper Session
Contribution
This study focuses on the social learning in small schools in Austria and Finland. A small school is understood here as a primary school (grades 1–6 in Finland; grades 1–4 in Austrian Volksschule) with fewer than fifty pupils and located in a rural area. Typically there are two or three teachers teaching different grades in the same class; this is called multi-grade or multi-age teaching. So-called place-based education has been a specific feature of small rural school pedagogy; the place and its particular characteristics have been incorporated into the curriculum of the school (Cameron, 2008).The concept of place is understood in this research as a concrete and experienced environment intertwining with our identity (Relph, 1976). A school is not just a building, a mere physical space, but is intertwined with our experiences of growing. A school is also a social place built in terms of social relationships (Massey, 1995) and learning is a social process: children learn in collaboration with their teachers, peers, and with the support their families (Zins et al. 2007). Student-centred learning and teaching processes, flexible teaching, a family-like and secure atmosphere, and ease of innovative change have been mentioned as advantages of multi-grade teaching (Kalaoja & Pietarinen, 2009; Raggl, 2012). On the other hand, bigger schools have been justified by social and didactic aspects. Children may have more social contacts and friendships in a bigger school and they may develop their social skills better in bigger groups. Teaching and learning possibilities may be more diversified than in a small rural school (see Kalaoja & Pietarinen, 2009). However, more study about multi-grade teaching is needed.
This study asks how pedagogy in small schools and in its multi-grade classes promotes children’s social learning. By answering this, the study aims to add our understanding, which advantages and challenges does pedagogy in small schools have for education from the point of view of social learning.
Method
Expected Outcomes
References
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