My ph.d.-thesis examines social life as it unfolds at micro
level between children under three years of age in Norwegian kindergartens. It
describes and discusses the significance of children`s nonverbal social
repertoire, but also sees this in relation to the framework institutions
provide for the development of such repertoire. It is thus a description of how
children explore and try out different ways of being social in an institutional
context before verbal language is fully established. The term social refers not only to children in
their relationships with other children or adults, but also in their
relationships with objects, rooms and places.
The project leans on
previous research on toddlers using a phenomenological life-world approach, but
also more recent post-human perspectives. The social repertoire should not be
perceived as child-child or child-thing relations in isolation. Instead, it is
connected to cultural normative expectations as they are expressed in the
institutional framework and adult educational intentions. The project has thus
drawn inspiration from two research-traditions: the pedagogical and formative-oriented
tradition, and the sociological- culture-theoretical tradition, and it further
develops a dialectical understanding of subjectification in an eclectic
theoretical landscape. The way the social, physical and cultural environment forms
the subject is influenced by the same subject`s way of performing its social
agency.
The project is an
ethnographic work based on observations of two kindergarten groups for children
between one and three years of age. A phenomenological analytical approach was
used. The fieldwork took place during different periods between Spring 2014 and
Spring 2015, and it developed composite data material consisting of field notes
and videos focusing on child-child interplay in free situations. It was
distinctly micro-ethnographic since it was primarily the small details in
face-to-face relationships that were analysed. The phenomenological approach
emphasises how children's life worlds can be seen as the places that exist
between their selves and other children, adults, things and spaces where
meaning, self-awareness and social events are continually created.
The thesis is built around four different
articles in which different theoretical perspectives are used. The four
articles are:
· De yngste barna og tingene deres – en
ANT-analyse av lek i småbarnsavdelinger
·
Social
life among toddlers in kindergarten as communicative musicality
·
The
flow of play among toddlers in kindergarten
·
Relasjoner mellom små barn i spenningen mellom
private og offentlige rom
In the summary article, three of the
theoretical perspectives are more thoroughly discussed in order to look for a
common ontological basis – with particular attention paid to Merleau-Ponty's
phenomenology. These are: the theory of communicative
musicality, Actor-Network-Theory
(ANT) and Hannah Arendt`s concept of human action.
It is concluded that
the young child's nonverbal social repertoire manifests itself firstly as
different ways of being connected to objects.
This way, the child can become an extension of the properties of objects, but
also make objects an extension of their own intentional body in the room. In each
case, children are connected to each other by objects. Second, they use the sound and rhythm of things, voice or
body to create shared experiences of meaning through various unanimous
expressions, but also to take new initiatives within the room. What characterises
both these repertoires is firstly that verbal language and, for that matter,
reflection, play a subordinate role in opposition to their immediate physical
presence in the room. Second, it shows how important children's abilities to
respond to each other's initiatives and invitations are, but also how
inevitable interruptions and disturbances seem to be apparent in the children's
particular manner of being together. This is indicative of the particular
institutional context in which this repertoire is developed and used.
Towards the end, I pay critical attention to
the kindergarten`s educational ambitions and culture of strict discipline. The
question is whether enough room has been provided to unfold children's
nonverbal social repertoire, or whether it is suppressed too frequently in
order to ensure peace, order and educational progress.