Browsing Institutt for pedagogikk og livslang læring by Author "Aarsand, Pål André"
Now showing items 1-6 of 6
-
Children as novice travellers. Family practices and children’s unaccompanied journeys by public transport
Farstad, Ida Engan (Doctoral theses at NTNU;2023:305, Doctoral thesis, 2023)English summary Every year, an unknown number of children in Norway travel both short and long distances by bus, train, airplane and boat, without the company of an adult. Some travel to and from school and leisure ... -
‘I’m just imitating the idiot’Exclusionary acts of status degradation through embodied stance-taking and category work in boys’ game performances
Evaldsson, Ann-Carita; Aarsand, Pål André (Peer reviewed; Journal article, 2023)This study examines how exclusionary acts of status degradation are performed through embodied stances and pejorative category ascriptions in the midst of a situated game activity where two boys align in mockful stances ... -
Mobile phones and moral order: Children’s appropriation of and accounting for digital media rules in schools
Aarsand, Pål André; Bowden, Helen Melander (Peer reviewed; Journal article, 2024) -
Norsk virkelighet i en globalisert verden : en kvalitativ analyse av NRK Supers konstruksjon av den norske barndommen
Sletta, Louise Gabrielsen (Master thesis, 2013) -
Reading in the digital age: Differences and commonalities across research approaches
Erstad, Ola Andres; Kucirkova, Natalia; Mangen, Anne; Aarsand, Pål André; Blikstad-Balas, Marte (Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2023)Reading, a cornerstone of children’s education, is deeply influenced by cultural and traditional factors. Despite a consensus on its critical role, divergent definitions of reading persist across disciplines and theoretical ... -
Young people's digital drawing practices as cultural heritage
Ågren, Ylva; Aarsand, Pål André (Journal article; Peer reviewed, 2024)This article focuses on young people as producers of cultural heritage and, in particular, on their drawing practices. Based on ten in-depth interviews with youth (aged 11–20) living in Sweden, we explore young people's ...