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Re/imagining school climate: Towards processual accounts of affective ecologies of schooling

journal contribution
posted on 2021-01-14, 05:59 authored by Eve Mayes, Melissa Joy Wolfe, Leanne HighamLeanne Higham
© 2020 Elsevier Ltd
This article reviews and reconceptualises – remembers and imagines – previous and possible methodological approaches to the study of the concept of school climate. Mapping three methodological approaches to school climate, we consider how each approach brings the concept of school climate into being, and the in/exclusions at work in each approach. Questions are raised about the politics of forming and naming a climate, the effects of such measurement and inscription of a school's climate, and the affects that escape and exceed the measurement of a climate. We consider the value of the concept of climate – particularly its ecological connotations, and the possibility of this concept for moving beyond individualised, responsibilitised notions of reform in schools. Working with the conceptual resources of affect and feminist new materialist theories, school climate is re/imagined as indeterminate, exceeding the spatial boundaries of a school, and inescapably political. Such an approach to school climate affirms and creates possibility and alternative modes of being in schooling relations – beyond critique of present approaches to measure and intervene into a school's ‘climate’ alone. We reconceptualise school climate as processual, continually made and remade in and through the everyday practices of schooling, including the research event.

History

Publication Date

2020-01-01

Journal

Emotion Space and Society

Volume

36

Article Number

100703

Pagination

8p. (p. 1-8)

Publisher

Elsevier

ISSN

1755-4586

Rights Statement

The Author reserves all moral rights over the deposited text and must be credited if any re-use occurs. Documents deposited in OPAL are the Open Access versions of outputs published elsewhere. Changes resulting from the publishing process may therefore not be reflected in this document. The final published version may be obtained via the publisher’s DOI. Please note that additional copyright and access restrictions may apply to the published version.

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