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Transdisciplinary STEAM education – opportunities for thinking, doing and being beyond the already known?
University of Gävle, Faculty of Education and Business Studies, Department of Educational sciences, Educational science. (ECE)ORCID iD: 0000-0003-3412-8486
2024 (English)Conference paper, Oral presentation with published abstract (Refereed)
Abstract [en]

In this workshop, we welcome researchers interested in transdisciplinary learning and questions of traversing norms within education - from preschool to higher education. Together we will explore the potentialities of merging STEM (Science, Technology, Engineering, Mathematics) and Arts (dance, drama, music, visual arts) into STEAM. The concept of STEAM education has become increasingly influential in many parts of the world during the last years. STEAM education is promoted as an arena for developing transdisciplinary knowledge and fostering innovative thinkers who can meet the demands of the future in sustainable ways (Ingold, 2019). One additional argument behind STEAM education is to motivate underrepresented groups, particularly girls, to engage with STEM (European Committee of the Regions, 2019; Ng & Ferguson, 2020). According to research, gender norms connected to STEM and to the arts, imply that some students, thinkings and doings are recognised by teachers and peers, whereas others are not. For example, girls and women have a more narrow space for participating and being recognised as learners in STEM (e.g. Heeg & Avraamidou, 2021; Stephenson, Fleer & Fragkiadaki, 2022), while boys and men have a more narrow space for participating and being recognised as learners in Arts (e.g. Hentschel, 2018; Oliver & Risner, 2017). This implies that children and students face different kinds of normative constraints when they are expected to engage with the world through separate disciplines, that is scientifically, technologically, artistically, engineeringly or mathematically. As we see it, transdisciplinary STEAM education harbours the potential to form new and norm-challenging ways of teaching and learning (Areljung & Günther-Hanssen, 2022). The transdisciplinary explorations during the workshop will focus on verbs connected to STEM and Arts. You do not need any specific background in STEM or Arts to participate. Expected outcomes are that the workshop will open up to new ways of being and learning, beyond current gender norms connected to different disciplines in education.  

Place, publisher, year, edition, pages
2024.
National Category
Educational Sciences
Identifiers
URN: urn:nbn:se:hig:diva-43881OAI: oai:DiVA.org:hig-43881DiVA, id: diva2:1843041
Conference
NERA 2024, Malmö 6-8 mars 2024
Available from: 2024-03-07 Created: 2024-03-07 Last updated: 2024-03-08Bibliographically approved

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Magnusson, Lena O

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CiteExportLink to record
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Citation style
  • apa
  • harvard-cite-them-right
  • ieee
  • modern-language-association-8th-edition
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  • Other style
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Language
  • sv-SE
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  • nn-NB
  • de-DE
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Output format
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