Kindergartens in Northern Norway as semiotic landscapes

Educational institutions have a responsibility to ensure that all children receive care and equal possibilities for development, independent of their linguistic and cultural background. However, there is little knowledge about how kindergartens ensure a welcoming and inspiring place for both transna...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:Linguistic Landscape. An international journal
Main Authors: Pesch, Anja Maria, Dardanou, Maria, Sollid, Hilde
Format: Article in Journal/Newspaper
Language:English
Published: John Benjamins Publishing 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://hdl.handle.net/10037/22756
https://doi.org/10.1075/ll.20025.pes
Description
Summary:Educational institutions have a responsibility to ensure that all children receive care and equal possibilities for development, independent of their linguistic and cultural background. However, there is little knowledge about how kindergartens ensure a welcoming and inspiring place for both transnational migrants, Indigenous children, and children from the majority population. Through a semiotic landscape analysis from two kindergartens in Northern Norway, this article contributes to this knowledge gap. Our starting point is that educational spaces are social, cultural, and political places. Applying a Bakhtinian perspective on semiotic landscapes as dialogues, the analysis focuses on two discourses. The first concerns diversity as an individual or shared value, and the second concerns balancing the ordinary and the exotic. We find that diversity related to transnational migration seems to be more integrated into the semiotic landscape, while the minoritised Indigenous Sámi people is stereotypically represented in kindergartens.