posted on 2024-11-01, 07:08authored byBarbara Chancellor
In the following paper I share my personal journey into rhizomatic thinking. Here I illustrate how
a rhizome opened new possibilites to my previously confusing learning process. As a vehicle I ask
the question, when considering the pedagogical nature of place, how does the new facilitate
currere? I am also taking the opportunity to write in a way that is new and unfamiliar to me
because the conventional and acceptable have been unable to help me understand the meanings I
am seeking. I felt uninspired among traditional styles of academic writing until I encountered the
doctoral thesis of Warren Sellers where another way of seeing and writing is explored. This
generative experience gave me the momentum to link past learnings in new rhizomatic ways and
begin a discussion within this journal about how place and pedagogy connect. My visit to
Cheonggyecheon Stream in Seoul provided me the place and my reading of the texts of Warren
Sellers, Noel Gough, Chaim Soutine, Margaret Sommerville and Lloyd Rees gave me examples of
others who have searched. As I remember my physical experience of this new place, the stream
becomes the search, the bridges spanning it, the new understandings and scattered along the
banks, the rhizomes grow. A new place facilitates currere. This journal provides a forum where
possibilities are viewed as exciting (Doll, 2009, p. 71). Tentative steps into new spaces are
welcomed. Above all, conversation oils the machine, here I can share my thoughts with others who
are exploring learning in diverse ways and from non linear perspectives.
History
Journal
Complicity: An International Journal of Complexity and Education
Volume
7
Issue
2
Start page
16
End page
31
Total pages
16
Publisher
Complexity Science and Educational Research (C S E R)