2016
DOI: 10.47408/jldhe.v0i10.338
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Towards an inclusive classroom psycho-geography: why it matters where students choose to sit

Abstract: This paper is based on my own experiences of classroom psychogeography, as experienced through working with a group of around 50 Masters students at Central Saint Martins over a period of more than ten years. Much has been written and published about the design of learning spaces, as well as the dynamics of group work, but relatively littlehas been published about the psychogeography of learning, especially at the higher education level. Space is never neutral. It separates or it includes. It can be used to re… Show more

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