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[ecrea] CFP Edited Volume: “Visual Pedagogies: Concepts, Cases & Models”
Sat Dec 08 22:22:41 GMT 2018
Call for Abstracts Edited Volume: “Visual Pedagogies: Concepts, Cases &
Models”
Overview
We invite abstracts for an edited collection investigating the
theoretical, empirical and instructional aspects of what can be
envisioned as visual pedagogies, offering classic, creative, and
contemporary re-workings of these paradigms. The book will be divided
into three complementary sections with an editor in charge of each.
Submission guidelines:
The book will be designed for an academic audience, however, we also
invite creative and novel approaches that challenge and take risks
including troubling traditionally accepted concepts such as literacy,
learning, teaching, skills and so on. Contributors are asked to write in
a manner accessible to readers outside of their respective fields. We
encourage the use of images, mixed media, and externally linked or
referenced material. Thus, we encourage provocations and novel ways of
integrating image, diagram, illustration and other modalities, within
and through the book’s pages. To build this book collaboratively and
speak across chapters, we will share material, peer edit and discuss
contributions within respective sections. In addition, each chapter will
undergo rigorous double blind peer-review.
Key dates:
- Abstracts of 500 words(theoretical framework, methods and focus)plus a
100 word biographical statement: February 25, 2019
*- *Invitations for full chapterssent to authors:March 26, 2019
*- *Full chapters (6000-7000 words including references)submission:
September 10, 2019
Please email submissions and queries to the relevant section editor (see
emails in the beginning of each section description).
Section 1:Conceptualizing Visual Pedagogies
Section editor: Carolina Cambre, Concordia University, Canada.
E-mail: (carolina.cambre /at/ concordia.ca) <mailto:(carolina.cambre /at/ concordia.ca)>
This section explores visual pedagogies theoretically through a
collection of papers that reach into and beyond traditional
understandings of both terms “visual” and “pedagogy.” In his 1648
landmark book on didactics, John Amos Comenius set out some enduring
fundamental principles for teaching and learning, including what might
seem an almost too obvious observation that “all learning happens
through the senses” and thus this book refuses to relegate its
consideration of the visual in pedagogy to the purely eye-dependent. In
other words, we avoid visual essentialism by understanding that the
visual is already irretrievably embedded in other sensory awareness.
Similarly, we consider pedagogy by pluralizing it and positioning it
beyond what might be seen as institutional pedagogical understandings
and approaches by looking to de-link it from strict notions of being
situated in schooling and within certain age-ranges. Instead, these
conceptually oriented papers consider pedagogies in the sense that these
approaches can take multiple, non-linear, and situated approaches
whether collective or individual that can encompass diverse spaces. Thus
the official space of the classroom is one amongst many pedagogical
spaces that can include ceremonial, artistic, public, mediated,
athletic, informal, community-based and work-related arenas.
Chapters in this section will re-think what visual pedagogies involve:
including foregrounding the social nature of pedagogy and asking: What
does it mean to look together, and deliberately attend to something in a
process of desire and possibility? Visual pedagogies are by nature
nomadic and do not separate the how of educating from the what. What
does this mean? First it means recognizing that “Pedagogy is never
innocent,” and that it “carries its own message” (Bruner 1996: 63).
Visual pedagogies respond and are actualized within the cultural
contexts in which they are working, yet they are not “wed to a context
but are taken up in unpredictable ways across various contexts” (Masny &
Waterhouse 2011: 291 emphasis in original). As visual pedagogies gain
momentum across fields, the need to navigate visual environments both
digital and offline in ways that enhance sensibility and awareness of
how/what to observe, analyze, criticize and reflect on in any given
moment continues to grow.
Section 2: Case Studies of Visual Pedagogies in Education
Section editor: Edna Barromi-Perlman, University of Haifa, Kibbutz
College of Education, Israel. E-mail: (edna.barromi /at/ smkb.ac.il)
<mailto:(edna.barromi /at/ smkb.ac.il)>
Reading and interpreting the visual worlds in which we live, work, teach
and educate has emerged as an important feature in educational
environments. Educational practice is influenced and maneuvered by
continual flows of visual imagery, which manifest across multitudes of
platforms and modalities. This section of the book will collect case
studies based on empirical fieldwork, that reflect on forms of
developing knowledge in visual pedagogy and how this knowledge might
affect academic or other educational practices, societies, communities
and educational systems. This section thus invites case studies of
research/action research conducted in this field. The case studies will
explore different paradigms and discuss the empirical manifestation of
visual pedagogies in the field.
The case studies will build on current theories and address diverse
audiences as well as diverse learning institutions on a global level.
The selection will aim for an international and cross-cultural scope, so
that each case study will present challenges specific to its country of
origin. The research will encompass fieldwork in formal and informal
educational settings as well as digital practices, educational media,
online material and printed material and will be open to work that
explores various, alternative visual platforms in educational
institutions and beyond.
Section 3: Visual Pedagogies in Practice
Section editor: Joanna Kedra, University of Jyvaskyla, Finland.
E-mail: (joanna.kedra /at/ jyu.fi) <mailto:(joanna.kedra /at/ jyu.fi)>
This section explores visual pedagogies in classroom related contexts by
immersing readers straight into the concrete examples of educational
practices. In a world saturated by images and digitally and visually
mediated communication, visual competency has come to the forefront in
the 21st century. Subsequently, the need for skills in visual
interpretation, image creation, evaluation and usage has demanded
increased attention in education. Today’s students are assumed to be
fluent in digital and visual technologies, mainly, due to their
perpetual immersion into visually and technologically mediated
communication. However, recent studies that examine visual literacy of
young adults, mainly visual interpretation, but also abilities in visual
production and image use, indicate that the assumption of today’s
learners being technologically and visually savvy is mistaken. Thus,
there is a pressing need for relevant visual pedagogies. However,
practical teaching tools that may assist in developing students’ visual
competency are still lacking, along with in-depth reflection on visual
teaching practices.
At the core of this section lies a desire to introduce and critically
evaluate models for teaching-learning interactions with various types of
visuals. Visual pedagogies are understood as educating ‘with’ or ‘about’
visuals as well as a group of practices toward development of learners’
visual literacy. Contributors of this section examine visually oriented
practices, modes and models and reflect upon them. This section will
provide fresh scholarly perspectives within an area of pedagogy that
calls for more substantive reflection and practice-based approaches.
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