Visibilizing Everyday Intergenerational Engagements: Philippines in 2020 Lockdown

Author:

Oropilla Czarecah Tuppil1,Ødegaard Elin Eriksen1,White E. Jayne12

Affiliation:

1. KINDknow—Kindergarten Knowledge Centre for Systemic Research on Diversity and Sustainable Futures, Department of Pedagogy, Religion and Social Studies, Western Norway University of Applied Sciences, Bergen, Norway

2. Faculty of Education, Health and Human Development, University of Canterbury, Christchurch, New Zealand

Abstract

Abstract Contemporary depictions of learning in early years research and practice are mostly located within formal educational institutions. Educational experiences that take place for young children in the family home, and across generations, are much less visible, despite persistent claims concerning the importance of the wider family in early experience. During covid-19 pandemic lockdown, however, learning at home with family members became much more visible as private and public settings coalesced. In the present study 2-4-year-old Filipino children’s intergenerational experiences at home during lockdown were shared through visual data, as a source of valued learning—highlighting the pedagogical role of family. The authors’ interest in this article is to explore what kinds of learning were made visible—by whom, for whom. Special emphasis is given to intergenerational engagements between young children and older adults, as represented by the families themselves. Heywood and Sandywell’s concept of ‘visibilization’ is operationalized as a visual route to these sites of production—the images themselves, their intended audience, and their circulation. Videos produced by families portray intergenerational arenas for learning. The mediating role of the sandwich generations in these intergenerational encounters are made visible in the private and public sphere of social media.

Publisher

Brill

Subject

Education

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