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Children’s education and schooling: ethnographic contributions to the discussion on family and community initiatives and the configuration of hegemonic orientations. Laura Cerletti y Laura Santillán1 In Argentina, during the development and expansion of compulsory schooling, promoted early on as a state policy (Puiggros, 1990), complex processes of inclusion and exclusion of certain groups -including the majorities conformed by low-income classes- have taken place. Integration into school has involved notions about boys and girls, as well as about family life. In the last four decades, along with the complexities of processes of social inequality, a generalization of a set of new demands concerning children’s groups of belonging (regarding “participation” and involvement in school) has taken place. These demands and expectations create complex scenarios for action, and social groups creatively respond to and appropriate them. This paper takes into account the hegemonic discourses about parental and community participation as well as the fields of action of subjects. Our analysis is based on field material from our research in low-income neighborhoods in the city of Buenos Aires and the greater Buenos Aires 2. This material is analyzed with an ethnographic theoretical and methodological approach and through the historization of processes (Rockwell, 2009). In relation to hegemonic discourses: is the family’s presence in school a natural condition? In Argentina, the notion about the role families should play in school and in children’s schooling has grown considerably. According to our work, supervision of tasks in the domestic sphere, “support” for learning and participation in school celebrations, appointments and meetings are added to the traditional demands regarding the compliance with compulsory schooling (Santillán y Cerletti, 2011). Currently, the frequency and conflictivity with which the relationship between school and family is mentioned in day to day school life, the increase of specialized publications (produced mainly by international organizations) as well as academic publications, the treatment of the issue in mass media and the growing presence of projects and programs directed at improving the relationship between both institutions, point to the presentation of this process as a “social problem”3 (Cerletti, 2010). Hence, we deem it crucial to understand these discourses as part of the social construction of a long-term problem that includes processes of various levels of generality, in diverse dimensions. In line with our interest in historizing (Sanjek, 1991; Rockwell, 2009), our interviews with teachers enabled us to understand that these generational changes –interpreted in the light of periods defined by the teachers themselves- took place between the end of the 50’s and the mid 70’s. During the same period (1956-1976) a broad dissemination of the so-called “psy” theories 1 Researchers at the Anthropology and Education Program. Instituto de Ciencias Antropológicas, Facultad de Filosofía y Letras, Unibersidad de Buenos Aires y CONICET. 2 Our research has been conducted in different stages and scenarios: in a low-income neighborhood/slum (villa) in the City of Buenos Aires (between 2004 and 2006), in popular settlements in the northwest of the Greater Buenos Aires (between 2001 and 2006; and from 2008 till present) and conducting and analyzing autobiographical accounts of teachers, specialists and parents (from 2010 till present). 3 In the way it is described by Bourdieu and Wacquant, 1998 y otros. 1 also took place. These theories ascertain a new notion about the relationship between children’s early experiences within their families (especially in relation to their parents) and the subjective constitution of the child, with strong implications in the educational sphere. The dissemination of these theories in our country coincides with the establishment of the degrees in Psychology, Education Sciences and Psychopedagogy in the city of Buenos Aires (Carli, 2005). At the same time, the “possibility conditions that enable a link between psychoanalysis and education take place”. New experiences sustained on these new notions are also created, such as the “schools for parents”. In the field of education, there was a shift toward a “psychologistic attitude”, and with it the school positioned itself in a new way in relation to the child. We argue that his has left deep traces in the training and experiences of teachers, contributing to a “vulgarized” notion of origin theories, expressed in discourses that determine that a certain form of family life is necessary for child schooling (Cerletti, 2013). Of course this permeability is neither linear nor direct, but mediated by complex processes of appropriation and resistance. Family and community practices in relation to schooling and the education of boys and girls: courses of action and appropriations. The flow of hegemonic discourses –constituted as a full discursive front- (Candarello and Fonseca, 2006), conceals a broad and diverse spectrum of practices that take place in day-to-day contexts. As we will show in our presentation, ethnographic research reveals other types of practices, more interstitial, less visible from the standpoint of other logics, or from formal institutions, that point to the presence of parents and/or children’s tutors in schooling (Neufeld, 2000, Achilli, 2010, Santilllán y Cerletti, 2011). At the same time, the dissemination of hegemonic discourses contributes to obscure collective practices that fully involve subaltern sectors. Upon entering the neighborhoods where boys and girls live, there are tangible traces of endless interventions –both formal and informal- linked to education and schooling. Centers for after school support4, merenderos5, are just some of the local initiatives aimed at children’s education. Some practices are in tune with the current governmental policies, tending toward participation and community promotion, but many of them remain relatively autonomous. The spaces of after school support are a typical example of these collective forms of –outside schoolschooling (Santillán, 2012). These experiences, carried out by social or political activists or religious volunteers, become major spaces in relation to the schooling of children among the popular classes, although not necessarily changing their educational fates. At the same time, we must look at other local expressions in low-income neighborhoods. Specifically, the centers for after school support and merenderos promoted by the inhabitants of the neighborhoods themselves. During our research we encountered contestations and direct actions toward schools by community leaders. At the same time, we were surprised by the influence that these community leaders have on parental behavior. In the daily interactions between these leaders and the rest of the inhabitants, corrective intervention (Donzelot, 1990) is a common denominator. There is a tendency toward the modification of behaviors and habits of mothers and fathers that is 4 This concept refers to the work carried out by community organizations and neighborhood associations assisting boys and girls that live in the neighborhood with their school homework, gathering them in private homes and/or the organization’s buildings. 5 “Merenderos” are community spaces created by territorial organizations or groups of neighbors, where children are offered a glass of milk after school. 2 put into effect through good practices and a pedagogical mode (Rose et al , 2006). The didactic relations between neighbors include the dissemination (by the residents who are in charge of the Centers) of precepts and visions regarding preferences that flow on a social level. These daily relations encompass, simultaneously, the juxtaposition of different logics, including strong class solidarities. As we will show in our presentation, the programs and projects created by international organizations, states and non-governmental organizations regarding the relationship between family, school and community configure a general material and cultural framework, a construction of hegemony, that has tangible material effects and reconfigures relations and subjectivities. Simultaneously, in local expressions, it is possible to see the emergence of contesting or controversial languages (Rosberry, 2007) that are in turn inscribed in continuously changing power scenarios. Bibliografía Achilli, E. (2010): Escuela, Familia y Desigualdad social. Una antropología en tiempos neoliberales. Laborde Editor, Rosario, Argentina. Bourdieu P. y Wacquant, L. (1998). “Una duda radical”. En Respuestas. Por una Antropología Reflexiva. Grijalbo. Carli, S. (2005). Niñez, pedagogía y política. Transformaciones de los discursos acerca de la infancia en la historia de la educación argentina entre 1880 y 1955. 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