Understanding Students' Perceptions of Space and Place-Making on UMBC's Campus Landscape

Author/Creator ORCID

Date

2020-01-01

Department

Language, Literacy & Culture

Program

Language Literacy and Culture

Citation of Original Publication

Rights

Access limited to the UMBC community. Item may possibly be obtained via Interlibrary Loan through a local library, pending author/copyright holder's permission.
This item may be protected under Title 17 of the U.S. Copyright Law. It is made available by UMBC for non-commercial research and education. For permission to publish or reproduce, please see http://aok.lib.umbc.edu/specoll/repro.php or contact Special Collections at speccoll(at)umbc.edu

Abstract

In this dissertations, I used a mixed method approach to explore university students’ perspectives regarding their spatial awareness as it relates to their culture and identity. The campus of University of Maryland, Baltimore County served as a test case for both a pilot study and a main study during the 2018 spring and fall semesters, respectively. After securing Institutional Review Board (IRB) approval, I asked the student-participants to engage in a project in which they used Photovoice, and these students completed a survey about their experiences and perspectives regarding the topic of how their academic, social, and cultural identities shape the meaning of space and place on campus. I then asked these very same students who participated to take photographs regarding six prompts to represent the spaces on a spectra such as "exclusionary to inclusionary,” "proud to embarrassed,” and "taking away from to beneficial” (in terms of their academic success). In this study, I aimed to demonstrate how the participants learn to behave, as well as how they contest and/or negotiate their identities in academic spaces. In addition, I hoped to chart how specific places and UMBC’s socio-geographic landscapes shape the ways that students think and behave at a UMBC. The analysis of this study’s results involved identifying common themes in the students’ captioned images and their related comments. For further analysis of the survey, I used students’ demographic information and theme codes for a more in-depth explanation. A large body of evidence has shown that empowerment education such as photovoice can play an important role in students’ inquiries about their natural surroundings and can improve their critical sociocultural awareness (Goodman et al, 2018; Gutierrez &Wolff, 2017; Wang & Burris, 1997). This awareness is better known as Spatiality. Through the analysis of students’ spatial awareness in their photographs, I argue that photovoice is a student-centered approach to learning by which students can identify problems in their communities, as well as represent and enhance those communities through specific empowerment techniques. I applied the theoretical framework of spatiality, in which people’s spatial awareness is defined as a coded expressions in the environment in which they conquered spaces and created meaning from places; this framework explains the sociocultural, environmental, and ecological forces that impact people’s lives and communities (Massey, 1994 & 1998). I used this framework to critically explore Paulo Freire’s application of problem-solving strategies in educational spaces described in Pedagogy of The Oppressed, as well as Doreen Massey’s For Space starting with the central idea that people see and examine common issues so as to create meaningful experiences and dialogue. For example, I have learned that the photos from focus group members conveyed that accessibility of alternative spaces (outdoor classroom, the student Commons, nature around the pond, etc.) encouraged a process of knowing and developing personal meaning for their own identity. This project involved future important research of sharing the final work from the focus group sessions with stakeholders. Future research could also consist of even giving an opportunity for graduate and undergraduate students to work on a research project and presentation coming out of this dissertations.