Household curricula during the COVID‐19 pandemic: A collective biography

Author:

Zhang Zheng1ORCID,Heydon Rachel1,Chen Le2,Floyd Lisa Anne1,Ghannoum Hanaa3,Ibdah Susan4,Massouti Ayman5ORCID,Shen Jeff6,Swesi Hisham1

Affiliation:

1. Faculty of Education Western University N6G 1G7 Ontario London 1137 Western Road Canada

2. OISE, University of Toronto M5S 1V6 Ontario Toronto 252 Bloor St W Canada

3. Peace Within Home Dubai United Arab Emirates

4. Schulich School of Medicine and Dentistry Western University Ontario London Canada

5. Department of Education, College of Arts and Sciences Abu Dhabi University Dubai Campus United Arab Emirates

6. Cobomax Academy N6G 0J3 Ontario London 999 Collip Circle Canada

Abstract

AbstractHouseholds with school‐aged children worldwide were affected by school closures caused by COVID‐19. Using a sociomaterial orientation and collective biography methodology, this study examined the household curricula of diverse families in Ontario, Canada with children in pre‐school through Grade 12. It found two distinct curricular phases to the pandemic, each with its own networked constituents, movements, and effects. Phase I involved learning at home during the lockdown in Spring and Summer 2020; Phase II involved online and face‐to‐face learning in the Fall of 2020. The constituents involved in curriculum making in Phase I were expansive and unexpected. Multiple timescales, modes, languages, and knowledge disciplines assembled to (re)configure households as learning spaces that produced novel opportunities for children's knowing, doing, and being. The makeup and movements of the Phase II assemblages were more of a return to the normalized boundaries of implemented school curricula that demarcated subject areas, languages, learning/play, learning/assessment, and body/mind. Concerned with questions of equity in/through curriculum, this study suggests a curriculum paradigm that foregrounds learners' and teachers' engagement with sociomaterial lifeworlds and their ethical relationship building with the more‐than‐human and the world.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Education

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