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Research Article

Creating a school that matters: networking for school-community development

Pages 297-314 | Published online: 08 Jun 2017
 

Abstract

This study of the creation of a new upper secondary school in Iceland focuses on the way in which networking and collaboration across school boundaries contributed to a new form for school practice. The aim is to understand the value of school–community interaction and how the collaboration has expanded both the activities of the school and the local community. A cultural-historical approach is used to analyse how contradictions in practice act as catalysts for development. Data were generated over a three-year period mainly through ethnographic methods. The expansive learning theory provided methods for identifying contradictions and the way in which they were being addressed in developing the school. The interplay of conceptual and material tools was fundamental in dealing with the contradictions. The principal’s clear conceptual vision on the role of education for individuals and society supported by the ideology of the national curriculum facilitated the process. Digital applications and the Internet served as material tools for implementing and coordinating the new school. Networking across traditional boundaries widened the object of school learning and made school practice responsive to societal changes. To conclude: Transcending traditional boundaries through school-community collaboration have promoted a qualitative transformation in school learning.

Disclosure statement

No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.

Notes on contributor

Thurídur Jóhannsdóttir is a senior lecturer of socio-cultural theories of education in the School of Education, The University of Iceland, Stakkahlíð, 105 Reykjavík, Iceland. Her interest center on school development and the interaction of educational policy and curriculum development in relation to societal development and the role of education in society.

Notes

1. Fleer (Citation2016) has recently drawn attention to that researchers use different names when they refer to this theoretical position such as Activity Theory, cultural-historical activity theory (CHAT) and Sociocultural theory. I use the term cultural-historical approach or tradition in this article.

2. A fab lab, an abbreviation for fabrication laboratory, is a small-scale workshop offering digital fabrication generally equipped with an array of flexible computer-controlled tools see e.g. Wikipedia. ArtFabLab focuses on artistic work.

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