Publication date
2022Peer-Reviewed
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closedAccess
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Wellbeing is a growing concern for educators and students alike and is especially significant in the light of the Covid-19 pandemic, which has brought the importance of wellbeing into sharp focus. Elsewhere, the authors (Cobb and Croucher) have written about a new pedagogic approach they have developed, specifically related to archaeology, although applicable across higher education. In this approach, they draw on relational theories and archaeology's “material turn” to focus on “Inclusive Learning Assemblages”. They explore the material and social assemblages that students encounter, both in different learning contexts and outwith learning, arguing that if we foreground learning assemblages, then student diversity and the student learning experience will be enhanced. In this paper, the authors take a step further by exploring the value of this approach for student wellbeing. They argue that taking an assemblage approach to teaching and learning in archaeology, and foregrounding diversity, actively improves student wellbeing too. This paper brings into dialogue mental health issues, with the diversity of student experiences, and the broad material engagements of an archaeology degree, in order to suggest a series of concrete steps that practitioners can implement to enhance student wellbeing.Version
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Cobb H and Croucher K (2022) Assembling Wellbeing in Archaeological Teaching and Learning. In: Everill P and Burnell K (Eds) Archaeology, Heritage, and Wellbeing Authentic, Powerful, and Therapeutic Engagement with the Past. London : Routledge.Link to Version of Record
https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003182184-19Type
Book chapterae974a485f413a2113503eed53cd6c53
https://doi.org/10.4324/9781003182184-19