ABSTRACT
This paper offers a reflexive ethnographic account to problematize conventional approaches to academic teaching that focus purely on rational, disembodied, and linear production and consumption of knowledge, in neoliberal, metric-driven academic environments. Interweaving diary notes and reflexive dialogical exchanges with images of arts-based teaching, we discuss how we might engage both students and teachers in embodied and relational forms of learning and knowing grounded in experiences of unknowing and unlearning. We discuss the potentials of exposing in the classroom the messy, ‘dirty’, dreamy, sensuous, embodied, affective and artistic work that informs teaching differently to disrupt conventional Business School pedagogies. Engaging with such creative possibilities might, we suggest, meaningfully transform management education and enable educators to cultivate an epistemic humility that transcends the ego. Therefore, this meshwork of teaching against the grain might also help resist and hopefully reframe contextual constraints and hierarchical dynamics impeding meaningful and relational Business School pedagogies.
Acknowledgements/Funding
We would like to wholeheartedly thank the students of Noortje’s mentioned class, especially Jante Janssen, Eline Lenders, Hanne Houwing, Gawan Nap & Gülsum Yalçin, who so generously shared their experiences with us. The authors confirm that they received no financial support for the research, authorship, and/or publication of this article.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the authors.
Notes
1 Educere is derived from ex (out) and ducere (to lead).