Encounters in and with Summer Camps—Happy Childhood, Alternative Bildung, or What?
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https://hdl.handle.net/10037/23170Date
2021-09-23Type
Journal articleTidsskriftartikkel
Peer reviewed
Author
Afonkina, Iuliia; Bigell, Werner; Chernik, Valerii; Granstrøm Ekeland, Torun; Kuzmicheva, Tatiana; Stien, Kirsten Elisabeth; Zoglowek, HerbertAbstract
Although they commonly are associated with recreation, summer camps for children can
be seen as educational arenas that both supplement and challenge school education. Summer camps
provide education in a broad sense of bildung. The article aims at describing what is experienced in
summer camps and proposes various theoretical frames for these bildung processes. The main focus
is on summer camps in Russia, and we interviewed Russian informants who participated in summer
camps. The findings were that learning in the camps tends to be non-instrumental, allowing room
for play and experimentation for both pupils and teachers. Social learning is marked by collective
elements such as camp rituals and spontaneous solidarity, both forming an individual personality.
Outdoor activities are important because they connect children to nature and develop a sense of
place marked by biophilia. Furthermore, nature’s materiality creates a sense of being in the world,
which means developing a sense of multiple relational settings, spanning from the materialities of
geography, place, and objects to experiencing new social settings in the form of solidarity, ritual, and
friendship
Publisher
MDPICitation
Afonkina, Bigell W, Chernik V, Granstrøm Ekeland, Kuzmicheva T, Stien KE, Zoglowek H. Encounters in and with Summer Camps—Happy Childhood, Alternative Bildung, or What? En. Education Sciences. 2021;11(10)Metadata
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