Conceptualising itinerancy: lessons from an educational program designed for the Children of the Showmen's Guild of Australasia
Paper
Paper/Presentation Title | Conceptualising itinerancy: lessons from an educational program designed for the Children of the Showmen's Guild of Australasia |
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Presentation Type | Paper |
Authors | |
Author | Danaher, P. A. |
Number of Pages | 16 |
Year | 1993 |
Web Address (URL) of Paper | https://eric.ed.gov/?q=TITLEConceptualising+Itinerancy%3a+Lessons+froman+Educational+Program+Designed+for+theChildren+of+theShowmen%27s+Guild+of+Australasia&id=ED374932 |
Conference/Event | 1993 Annual Symposium of the Postgraduate Student Association |
Event Details | 1993 Annual Symposium of the Postgraduate Student Association Event Date 21 Aug 1993 Event Location Rockhampton, Australia |
Abstract | This paper examines itinerancy, particularly educational itinerancy, and the appropriateness of various labels applied to the life style of members of the Showmen's Guild of Australasia. Guild members and their families travel from town to town providing agricultural and equestrian shows. An ongoing study is examining the effectiveness of a distance education program established in 1989 for show children. Researchers interviewed children, parents, and home tutors about curriculum, participant roles, social networks, and work and play. It was found that most respondents referred to Guild members' caravans (i.e. house trailers) as their 'homes', and children talked about coming 'home' from school to their caravans. On the other hand, most responses to the question, 'Where is home for you?', referred to a particular town, rather than to 'my caravan'. Some blurring of the home/school distinction was also revealed, in that school work (rather than homework) was described as being completed both at the local schools and in the caravans. These varying responses indicate the wide range of experience and understandings that make up the particular form of itinerancy in which show people engage. Additionally, the lifestyle of show members cannot be stereotyped as nomadic, as their lives have definite frontiers and boundaries and some show people are very successful in material terms. This paper concludes that an attempt to characterize educational itinerancy as conforming rigidly to a single and simplistic conceptualization fails to gain credence. Instead, itinerancy emerges as a multilayered, contextualized, and negotiated phenomenon. (LP) |
Keywords | childhood attitudes, distance education, educational experience, educational opportunities, elementary education, foreign countries, life style, migrant children, migrant education, migrants, place of residence, semantics, stereotypes |
ANZSRC Field of Research 2020 | 390399. Education systems not elsewhere classified |
399999. Other education not elsewhere classified | |
390304. Primary education | |
Public Notes | No evidence of copyright restrictions preventing deposit of accepted paper. |
Byline Affiliations | Central Queensland University |
Institution of Origin | University of Southern Queensland |
https://research.usq.edu.au/item/q57z5/conceptualising-itinerancy-lessons-from-an-educational-program-designed-for-the-children-of-the-showmen-s-guild-of-australasia
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