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Guiomar Martín Domínguez – Interchange: A Quarterly Review of Education, 2024
For many years, the Reggio Emilia approach has been in the spotlight of the international debate on early childhood education, attracting countless devoted followers in preschool centres all over the world and inspiring an ever-increasing amount of pedagogical research. At the heart of this educational philosophy, space is considered a 'third…
Descriptors: Reggio Emilia Approach, Preschool Education, Early Childhood Education, Classroom Environment
Sun-Young Park – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2024
This article examines the changing architectural environments of deaf education in the nineteenth century, taking the national institutes in Paris and Bordeaux as its main focus. Founded in the late eighteenth century and initially housed in government-expropriated properties, both schools underwent comprehensive renovation and reconstruction…
Descriptors: Deafness, Educational History, Special Schools, Educational Environment
Wood, Adam – Journal of Education Policy, 2020
School architecture is often taken for granted both in use (where it is naturalized) and in writing on education policy (tending to feature simply as policy setting.) Built policy instead points up the active and ongoing role of the material environment in shaping education. From financing and procurement to the design of individual classrooms,…
Descriptors: School Buildings, Educational Facilities Design, Educational Policy, Architecture
Syeed, Esa – Educational Policy, 2022
School facilities are increasingly seen as essential to achieving educational equity. By foregrounding often taken-for-granted school spaces, this conceptual article seeks to situate school design within broader antiracist efforts in education. To that end, I make a few critical contributions: (a) I shift attention to the social construction and…
Descriptors: Educational Facilities Design, Equal Education, Racial Bias, Urban Schools
Claudia Torres Gilles; Alexandra Alegre – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2023
This paper discusses the duality between global perspectives and local realities that have influenced the design of the school architecture by examining and comparing state school projects in two geographically distant countries: Chile and Portugal. The proposals and experiences of the "Society for the Construction of Educational…
Descriptors: Cross Cultural Studies, Foreign Countries, Educational Facilities Design, Architecture
Ashton, Emily Johanna; Mah, Kai Wood; Rivers, Patrick Lynn – Journal of Curriculum Studies, 2020
From Froebel and the constructivists's early educational theories to more recent posthumanist thinking, early childhood development (ECD) has been understood to be optimal when it occurs at the level of senses and bodies. 'Integration' discourses prevalent in ECD educational policy and curriculum debates have pointed towards sensing bodies in…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Early Childhood Education, Child Development, Educational Environment
van Merriënboer, Jeroen J. G.; McKenney, Susan; Cullinan, Dominic; Heuer, Jos – European Journal of Education, 2017
The quality of education suffers when pedagogies are not aligned with physical learning spaces. For example, the architecture of the triple-decker Victorian schools across England fits the information transmission model that was dominant in the industrial age, but makes it more difficult to implement student-centred pedagogies that better fit a…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Physical Environment, Educational Quality, School Buildings
Grosvenor, Ian; Van Gorp, Angelo – History of Education, 2018
'New people create new buildings, but new buildings also create New people', so wrote the German art critic Fritz Wichhert in "The New Building: Art as Educator" in 1928. The social and psychological legacy of the First World War was deeply profound and affected how people thought about the future. Children were seen to symbolise a new…
Descriptors: Educational History, Educational Facilities Design, Architecture, Foreign Countries
A Visual Information Tool for User Participation during the Lifecycle of School Building Design: BIM
Koutamanis, Alexander; Heuer, Jos; Könings, Karen D. – European Journal of Education, 2017
User participation is a key element in decision processes concerning the accommodation of dynamic organisations such as schools. This article addresses the discrepancy between the perspectives of the architects and engineers, as the makers of school buildings, and school management, teachers and students, as the users of the buildings, and…
Descriptors: School Buildings, Foreign Countries, Visual Perception, Educational Facilities Design
Rook, Michael M.; Choi, Koun; McDonald, Scott P. – Journal of Learning Spaces, 2015
This study highlights the impact of including stakeholders with expertise in learning theory in a learning space design process. We present the decision-making process during the design of the Krause Innovation Studio on the campus of the Pennsylvania State University to draw a distinction between the architect and faculty member's decision-making…
Descriptors: Learning Theories, Expertise, School Space, Decision Making
McCluskey, Frank; Winter, Melanie – Higher Learning Research Communications, 2013
The bricks and mortar classroom has a long and storied history. The digital classroom is so new and different it may be wrong to even call it a "classroom". The authors argue that architecture influences behavior. So in constructing our new digital classrooms we must pay attention to the architecture and what job we want that…
Descriptors: Campuses, Virtual Classrooms, Instructional Design, Architecture
Burke, Catherine – Paedagogica Historica: International Journal of the History of Education, 2013
This article reports on the opening up of a new, rich seam of interdisciplinary research that brings together historians of education with historians of art and architecture to examine the meaning and incidence of "The Decorated School". It examines the origins of the idea of art as educator in the nineteenth century and discusses how…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational History, Art History, Educational Facilities Design
Tanner, Charles Kenneth – Educational Planning, 2013
When new learning environments are built, numerous variables are taken into consideration. For example, school systems consider the instructional needs of the students they serve, enrollment, and whether to replace or remodel an old building. The concept of "going green" encourages school system planners to consider the natural…
Descriptors: Educational Facilities Design, Classroom Design, Classroom Environment, Aesthetics
Lippman, Peter C. – T.H.E. Journal, 2013
When architects discuss the educational facilities of the next century and beyond, the conversation turns to collaborative spaces. They envision flexible and fluid spaces that will encourage creative and critical thinking, and free students to communicate clearly about the task at hand. While these are admirable ideals, there are some fundamental…
Descriptors: Educational Facilities, Educational Facilities Design, Elementary Secondary Education, School Space
Coakley, John – Educational Facility Planner, 2010
Professional cost estimators are widely used by architects during the design phases of a project to provide preliminary cost estimates. These estimates may begin at the conceptual design phase and are prepared at regular intervals through the construction document phase. Estimating professionals are frequently tasked with "selling" the importance…
Descriptors: Costs, Educational Facilities Design, Architecture