Introduction

Dr Becky Shaw (Sheffield Hallam University) and Dr Jo Ray worked together with volunteering children to construct a space and time that was part of school, but beyond the curriculum.

They invited the children to be in the school building but with a different purpose.

Background

The After School Club (the Curious Club) was inspired by hobbyist clubs that bring people together based on shared interest and enthusiasm, rather than focusing on an outcome or end point.

Building on work that was started as part of ‘Sensing the School’ by revisiting unusual tools and technologies, the intention of The After School Club was to allow interaction between people of different ages to develop through collaborative, meandering practices.

The research draws on writing which suggests an argument that experiences or events resist interpretation, but children’s and researchers’ actions ebb and flow like a malleable form.

These ways of being intimate dissolve edges and standard frames of performance and identification, potentially enabling encounters that can ripple from children and researchers to carers and school staff.

Conclusion

In December 2020, Becky and Jo presented their work at a seminar hosted by Sheffield Hallam University’s Space and Place research group. Becky and Jo reflected on schools being a ’haunted’ space, as well as the experience of time(s) in school.

  • Shaw and Ray (2020)

    “We have spent much time thinking about the ways that the material substance of school generates and interacts with children’s experiences, curriculum and school ‘time’, and we have noted how some materials literally move between home and school such as the food packaging donated for craft; or stages of the day evoke transitions, such as ‘carpet time’.

    “As such, the home comes to haunt the school, as also do the material remnants of both educational pasts and futures, and their related political aims and atmospheres. Additionally, children themselves bring ghosts to school: ‘jiin’ or ‘zombies’ under the ground in the playground, and ‘bloody Mary’ in the bathroom. By their culture, and their expressive play, children co-create the haunted school by what they bring from home, from the heartland of their identity.”

Their abstracts, Asynchrony in the After School Club (Shaw and Ray 2020) and School Has Never Been Modern (Shaw 2020), were accepted for Childhood and Time Conference, Tampere University (Finland), which was postponed due to COVID-19.

Asynchrony in the After School Club

Read the abstract by clicking on the link to the right.

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