lørdag 16. januar 2010

What’s so funny about tearing?

After I’ve practically spent three months in a “kindergarten” (as we in Norway call any early childhood education setting) where I was observing young students and interacting with them in visual arts contexts, I am just about to start analyzing the video material. For the start I was watching the films to get a feeling of “distance” - since I was myself both a teacher and a researcher: an A/R/Tographer (form Rita Irwin’s A/R/Tography – where roles of Artist, Researcher and Teacher merge).

Another reason for jumping through the videos was to look for the parts I could show my colleagues. Professor Liora Bresler suggested once that my colleagues could help me to see the video material in new ways – each of them, with her unique personality and competence, would see other things that I would be able to see. I invited my dear colleagues, teachers of language, pedagogy, social science and drama, to help, and was happy to get 11 (out of 12) positive responses!

Professor Gunvor Løkken suggested that I should make a selection of videos I wanted to share, and here I am: seeing the video material in different way just by knowing that someone else will watch it. Struggling not to choose only the most interesting and less embarrassing parts to show my colleagues, I feel how important trust is for successful collaboration.

I have chosen to show them the part where two three-year-old girls were experimenting with different textiles, trying to find out which of them could be torn. And for some strange reason tearing was so funny! Was it the sound, or the strange tickling in the fingers that held the fabric? Or something completely else? I am not allowed to show you the video – but here is another young person who finds tearing at least as enjoyable. I’ve seen it on a friend’s blog sometimes in October (see it on YouTube)– little did I know by then that just a week later “my children” would laugh too! What’s so funny about tearing?

Irwin, R. L. (2004). A/r/tography: A Metonymic Métissage. In R. L. Irwin & A. de Cosson (Eds.), a/r/tography. Rendering Self Through Arts-Based Living Inquiry (pp. 27-38). Vancouver: Pacific Educational Press.

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