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Cambridge Journal of Education Vol. 37, No. 4, December 2007, pp. 579–595 Boredom and schooling: a crossdisciplinary exploration Teresa Belton and Esther Priyadharshini * University of East Anglia, UK This paper undertakes a wide-ranging exploration of the concept of boredom from contrasting perspectives across different disciplines with a view to informing the pedagogy of schooling. It notes the rise of the concept in recent times, and juxtaposes diverse views on the perceived forms, causes, effects and responses to boredom, along the way referring to implications for schooling. Based on this examination, the paper puts forward the idea that boredom needs to be recognized as a legitimate human emotion that can be central to learning and creativity. At the same time, it also points out that there is room to reimagine a pedagogy that can engage in a more informed manner with the complexity of the experience and concludes with an exploration of some concepts— autonomy and control, struggle and flow—which can help in this endeavour. Introduction Boredom is generally believed to be experienced as an indefinable feeling that evokes discomfort, resentment, guilt and bafflement, but also, sometimes, pleasure. Bertrand Russell accentuated the anxiety that boredom usually engenders when he claimed that half the sins of mankind are caused by a fear of boredom (Rule, 1998). A less familiar belief is that it is an inevitable human experience that can provide a positive stimulus to thought and creativity. Bruner expressed this notion thus: ‘boredom is a powerful phenomenon—a poison to the intellectual in large doses. And like many poisons, it is rather a benign stimulant in small doses’ (1980, p. viii). Our readings of the academic treatment of this subject across the disciplines strongly suggest that boredom is an entirely constructed notion, shaped by disciplinary inclinations, theoretical impulses and methodological affiliations, not to mention personal preferences. In this paper we examine this enigmatic concept by setting out diverse perspectives from the fields of education, psychology, psychotherapy, philosophy, sociology, literature and cultural theory. Through these often unsettling juxtapositions, we hope to draw attention to the differences in the disciplinary *Corresponding author: Centre for Applied Research in Education (CARE), School of Education and Lifelong Learning, University of East Anglia, Norwich NR4 7TJ, UK. Email: e.priya@uea. ac.uk ISSN 0305-764X (print)/ISSN 1469-3577 (online)/07/040579-17 # 2007 University of Cambridge, Faculty of Education DOI: 10.1080/03057640701706227 580 T. Belton and E. Priyadharshini discourses that have constructed the concept, as well as explore understandings of boredom that may have implications for how educators may develop an informed response to boredom in schooling. The rise of the concept According to the Oxford English dictionary, the word ‘boredom’ first appears in English in 1750. In earlier times, the concepts closest to the contemporary notion of boredom were acedia—spiritual laziness or sloth—and ennui1 with its richer psychological connotations (Conrad, 1997). To early Christians, acedia was one of the seven deadly sins, as it signified a lack of faith, as God was supposed to be the object of interest. Displaying slothfulness was about killing curiosity, which was akin to killing God. According to Spacks (1994), a combination of developments contributed to the rapid rise of boredom as a concept. These were the decline of ‘God’, at least among secular populations; the rise of ‘work’ and ‘leisure’ as central organizing concepts of life; a growing sensitivity to individual ‘rights’, like the right to happiness (invariably satiated through some form of consumption); and a rising consciousness of the psychological, for instance, the focus on ‘inner experience’, on the sense that people have complex inner worlds (of desire, prejudice, wishes, etc), making people more prone to examining these sensitivities, leading to an awareness of emptiness and lack. Healy (1984) adds that the unraveling of certainties caused by an intellectual understanding of things better left unquestioned has left a metaphysical void in western civilization, a normlessness, or at least a scepticism of universal norms, that has also created the conditions in which boredom as a concept becomes possible and visible. Taken together, these reasons partly explain the predominantly negative connotations that ‘boredom’ carries today, and the compulsion to act to alleviate it. We will return to discuss in greater detail the responses that the concept evokes, after a tour through the differences in some definitions, perceived forms, causes and effects. Some definitions and descriptions of ‘boredom’ While boredom is commonly associated with monotonous or repetitive activities (see Vodanovich, 2003), or having nothing to do, psychologists attempting to define boredom have emphasized individual experience and perception of a situation, describing it as: ‘a state of understimulation, underarousal, lack of momentum, or a lack of psychological involvement associated with dissatisfaction in the task situation’ (Shaw, 1996, p. 275); and, an unpleasant, transient affective state in which the individual feels a pervasive lack of interest in and difficulty concentrating on the current activity (Fisherl, 1993, cited in Vodanovich, 2003, p. 369). Geiwitz underlined this perspective when he stated that, ‘individual differences suggest that monotony objectively defined as an attribute of the situation is less important than the subjective feeling of repetitiveness’ (1966, p. 593). Boredom and schooling 581 The psychoanalyst Greenson emphasizes an affective dimension of boredom which depends heavily on the experience of time: The uniqueness of the feeling of being bored seems to depend upon the coexistence of the following components: a state of longing and an inability to designate what is longed for; a sense of emptiness; a passive, expectant attitude with the hope that the external world will supply the satisfaction; a distorted sense of time in which time seems to stand still. (Greenson, 1953, p. 7) As we will see later, this is not an unusual understanding of boredom. In fact, the German word for boredom—Langeweile—means ‘long time’. Sociologists like Barbalet (1999) have extended the affective aspect, defining boredom as the emotional apprehension of meaninglessness. Since meanings provide context, reference and purpose to actions and life, life is not bearable without the quality of meaningfulness. Thus, when meaning is absent, boredom arises and leads the individual towards the construction of meaning. Our cross-disciplinary trawl through the literature suggests that writers are often less interested in defining boredom than in distinguishing between its forms and causes. In the section below, we highlight some contrasting perspectives to illustrate the different discourses that give shape to this multifaceted yet elusive concept. Forms and causes of boredom A philosophical understanding For the philosopher Heidegger, the phenomenon of boredom appears in three forms. Firstly, one can be bored by something. For example, when waiting for four hours for the arrival of a train in a ‘tasteless station of some lonely minor railway’ (Heidegger, 1995, p. 93), we are held in limbo and left empty, ‘unable to immerse ourselves in anything: the environment loses the distinct organization that characterizes active engagement with things’ (Hammer, 2004, p. 283). Secondly, one can be bored with something. For example, an evening with friends, tasty food, lively discussion, nothing at all boring. Yet, at the end of the day, when one is home, there is a realization that one was bored after all with the occasion. In contrast to the impatient counting of seconds and minutes in the first form of boredom, time here reaches ‘a standstill, a stasis, from which both past and future are evacuated’ (Hammer, 2004, p. 284). Thirdly, one can be profoundly bored when a state of complete indifference is reached. Here, the self, ‘who one is’, loses its distinctiveness. ‘It is an emptiness by which we do not expect anything from our surroundings, by which the world has fallen dead’ (Hammer, 2004, p. 285). Heidegger sees this profound boredom not as nihilistic, but as a ‘positive refusal’ of the possibilities of doing and acting, as a rejection of responsibility for one’s own being. Paradoxically, this condition reveals one as answerable for everything and everyone, i.e., profound boredom produces the possibility for what he calls ‘the moment of vision’, ‘in which the full situation of an action opens itself and keeps itself open’ (1995, p. 149). 582 T. Belton and E. Priyadharshini Perspectives from the social sciences It appears that to Heidegger, all forms of boredom are open to experience by all people, i.e., his treatment of the phenomenon is meant to say something about the human condition. In contrast to this philosophical stance, the social sciences give less emphasis to the universality of human experience than to the differences between the types of situation or types of individual, as we have seen above. For instance, several writers have distinguished between ‘situational’ and ‘dispositional’ boredom (Vodanovich, 2003), otherwise denoted as ‘state’ or ‘trait’ boredom. This difference reveals a dichotomy between possible causes of the particular affective state in question: it could be either a lack of external stimulus or a lack of internal stimulus. Further, Bernstein (1975) distinguishes between ‘responsive’ and ‘chronic’ boredom, one a transient affective response to a specific external situation, the other an ongoing malaise experienced by those who feel bored much of the time; this ‘malaise’ resembles Heidegger’s (1995) third form of boredom. Greenson also identified a difference between ‘agitated’ and ‘apathetic’ boredom, suggesting, ‘It seems imperative to distinguish between the boredom experienced by employees in monotonous jobs, those with an excess of leisure time, and individuals with a lack of meaning in their lives’ (1951, p. 11). In addition to dispositional and situational considerations, and in keeping with the disciplinary differences in approaches to the analysis of the phenomenon, the causes of boredom have also been attributed, singly or in combination, to two other types of factor: sociocultural–historical and social– interactional influences. We look more closely at these varied causes in the following section. (a) Dispositional and situational causes of boredom The field of psychology contains by far the largest body of research on boredom. Most of it, though, is almost entirely limited in scope to two areas—the measuring of the ‘boredom proneness’ of individuals, and the investigating of correlates of boredom in specific contexts, such as cognitive failures among military undergraduates (Wallace, 2003); workplace boredom (Fisherl, 1993); boredom and stress among fire fighters (Watt, 2002); the relationship of boredom to absenteeism, tenure and job satisfaction (Kass et al., 2001); boredom proneness among truck drivers (Adebayo, 2002); and spirituality and boredom proneness (MacDonald, 2002). Many such studies, according to reviewers Vodanovich (2003) and Harris (2000), have also been carried out in the US on college students. The Boredom Proneness Scale (BPS), constructed by Farmer and Sundberg (1986) is the most popular fullscale measure used. It consists of 28 true–false statements, e.g., ‘I often find myself with time on my hands and nothing to do’ and ‘I am good at waiting patiently’. Vodanovich and Kass (1990), carrying out a factor analysis on the BPS, found evidence of five factors that have an impact on the experience of boredom: degree of external stimulation, degree to which an individual can generate internal stimulus, degree of attention, perception of the passage of time, and constraint. Together, these factors roughly encompass both the external sources of boredom assumed by Boredom and schooling 583 much educational literature and the individual perceptions highlighted in psychological discourse. Some researchers investigating individuals’ boredom proneness and its correlates claim that this ‘trait’ is often found together with certain other characteristics, namely aggression, depression, anxiety, loneliness, dissatisfaction, and poor educational performance (Rupp, 1997); inflexible thinking, unsociability, difficulty in completing projects (Leong, 1993); and sensation-seeking, low attentiveness, deviant behaviour, criminal cognition, lack of motivation, lack of autonomy and lower sense of purpose (Vodanovich, 2003). Such an approach often suggests that people with certain ‘personality types’ are more likely to find school or any other situation boring. It is worth noting that these researchers do not appear to question whether ‘boredom proneness’ might be learnt. By contrast, in literature from the field of education the predominant emphasis is on ‘flaws’ in educational practices. For example, Reid (1986) has suggested that boredom is induced by meaningless or repetitive tasks, and Condry (1978) that abstract or decontextualized activities will have the same effect. Cullingford (2002) suggests that non-directed moments between activities, or restrictive circumstances, will result in mental shutdown while waiting, and Woods (1990) that lack of good quality resources can cause boredom. Cullingford (2002) suggests that abandoning schoolwork can be precipitated by tasks that are beyond students’ capabilities, while Moneta and Csikszentmihalyi (1996) point out that work that is not challenging enough, will have the same effect. Smelser (1989) makes the same point about moments that threaten an individual’s self-esteem. However, Hamilton pursued the line that individual differences in ability to focus attention are important in regulating the continuum of experiences ranging from absorbing interest to boredom, but that, ‘both the content of what we find personally relevant or interesting and the attention regulation capacity to pay absorbed, interested attention are largely developed throughout childhood and adolescence’ (1981, p. 288). Bernstein argued that, ‘the inability to experience one’s own feelings directly and intensely is the root of chronic boredom’ (1975, p. 518), and blamed the trend on the widespread development of ‘a particular form of training for success’ for young children (p. 527). He believed that it was ‘the early and rigorous expectation of behavioural compliance when that can be accomplished only by the imposition of massive repression of feelings’ (p. 528) that contributes to boredom. In educational discourse, therefore, in contrast to that of psychology, boredom tends to be attributed to characteristics of schooling, i.e., factors external to the student. According to some cognitive psychologists, it is the life stage of adolescence itself—the time when the development of autonomy from adults begins—and the associated experience of constraint, that is an instigator of boredom (Caldwell, 1999). Schubert (1977) suggests that adolescents are particularly likely to complain of boredom due to uncertainty about identity and goals. Larson and Richards’ (1991) study of the schooling experience also showed that boredom was not always related to personality dispositions or to resistance, i.e., boredom was not confined 584 T. Belton and E. Priyadharshini only to oppositional youth. This notion that life stages can engender boredom finds support in other quarters too. The writer Walter Benjamin maintains that childhood is naturally a ‘period of boredom and estrangement, of waiting for an unknown future and accumulating experiences which cannot be understood until adulthood’ (Moran, 2003, p. 176). To him, a child’s boredom holds out the possibility of fruitful inactivity, stimulated by disengagement from the adult world into greater awareness of and interaction with his/her own surroundings, through a ‘privileged form of seeing’ (Moran, 2003, p. 177). Perhaps this is why Phillips, a practising psychoanalyst, proposes that boredom ‘protects the individual, makes tolerable for him the impossible experience of waiting for something without knowing what it could be’ (1993, p. 82). So to Benjamin and Phillips, boredom is an important and necessary experience that holds a critical edge. (b) Sociocultural conditions as causes of boredom While one body of research can be interpreted to indicate that there is an individual ‘personality type’ that is boredom-prone, there also exists a diagnosis of boredom as a societal-scale experience. As outlined in the introduction, a historical perspective taken by some literary writers, philosophers and cultural theorists supports this view. From this perspective, boredom is understood to relate to the subjective experience of time and thus to the very foundation of modern society and consciousness (Darden & Marks, 1999). Such boredom can be caused both by under-and over-stimulation. The repetitive, mechanical rhythms of factory work, with the regimented, monotonous routine of timetables introduced by industrialization, as well as the conspicuous idleness exhibited by flaˆneurs or dandies taking their turtles for walks in the 1840s Parisian arcades, led to a visible rise in boredom (Benjamin, 1973, 1999). The accelerated pace of change in modern city life and the inability to experience it except as a series of fluid and fleeting impressions, also induced boredom. According to Benjamin, such boredom could be a defence mechanism against activity and anonymity, a screen against stimuli (Moran, 2003, p. 169). Healy (1984) writes of a certain ‘hyperboredom’ as a defining feature of modern life, one that is born of the ego’s awareness of its helplessness in regard to its aspirations. This is paralleled by one of writer Saul Bellow’s characters in Humboldt’s gift, who talks of boredom as ‘the pain of unused powers, wasted possibilities’, along with ‘expectations of the optimum utilization of capacities’ (1996, p. 199). He too claims that life lived at the speed of thought intensifies the problem of boredom. The awareness of the quality of ‘sameness’ to human life, the idea that everyone is working to a common directive, he says, offends the self-conscious ego, giving rise to boredom. The themes of homogeneity and speed (linked to the rise of capitalism) causing boredom are popular ones. There is a link too, with the view that boredom arises from meaning that is fully and totally shared, where there is no room for difference (Darden & Marks, 1999). Sociologists Brissett and Snow (1993) examine the Boredom and schooling 585 cultural context of boredom and conclude that it is caused by (a) cultural arrhythmia when sameness and obsession with speed destroy the rhythms of culture; (b) the affluence and emancipation of modern life where individuals are unable or unwilling to create/originate by themselves, leading to a passive spectatorship; and (c) the decline in the opportunities for uncertainty. It is not unusual therefore for several authors with this perspective, like Zeiger (2004), to suggest that boredom is a product of doing too much rather than too little: One might suppose that all of the technology and all of the information and all of the busyness and all of the opportunities of our age would preclude boredom. In fact it promotes boredom. Our society tells us that we need stuff to do, but sometimes we do so much stuff and have so much stuff that we don’t have any time to think about all the important stuff. It is quite possible that the busiest man alive is the most bored man. All of these interpretations diagnose boredom as a product of modern life. Bernstein, writing in the 1970s, also believed that the numbers of people who suffered from chronic boredom, particularly amongst the young, had risen significantly, alongside increased affluence, personal freedom and technological advance. Moreover, he suggested that: … those who suffer chronic boredom usually confuse it with the responsive form, seeking the explanation for their boredom in the external circumstances of their lives. … They are often forced to the unhappy and mistaken conclusion that theirs is a boring world. (Bernstein, 1975, pp. 514–515) Bartlett, 30 years later, identified a malaise among the American college students he taught, which he characterized as a ‘fundamentally new and especially virulent strain of boredom’ (2003, p. 102). Bartlett’s explanation for this chronic boredom was the decline of politics, community and religion as vital elements of the students’ lives, as well as a sense among them that progress has gone so far that any adventurous or innovatory spirit they might have enjoyed had been blunted. Jonsson (2001) also talks of increasing boredom amongst upper class youth in the US. With more leisure activities and more time, they appear even more alienated from society and the increase in suburban affluent crime is matched only by the spectacular nature of such crimes. What emerges is a popular belief across much of this literature that boredom is a result of a lack of meaningful challenge/struggle that can be observed at a societal level. We will return to the notion of meaningful struggle in the context of boredom and schooling in the final section of the paper. (c) Boredom as an interactional phenomenon To sociologists Brissett and Snow (1993), boredom is an interactional phenomenon which can only be understood in an experiential and communicative context. It is an experience of the absence of momentum or flow, a loss of impetus. It indicates a lack of entrainment (synchronization with others/social life) and occurs when the future does not seem viable (is bleak). Sometimes boredom can be experienced in spite of entrainment when the future is not amenable to control or direction, when the future is seen as ‘inevitable’, with no sense of authorship. A claim of boredom is an 586 T. Belton and E. Priyadharshini emphatic complaint of being rendered non-social. A study of habitual boredom by Bardgill (2000) shows how boredom tends to increase when subjects feel they have compromised their goals and dreams on the advice of others, leading to a state of stagnation and paralysis. Therefore boredom is a powerful definition of the situation as well as an indictment of the people concerned. But boredom can also be used as protection/defence against unacceptability. It is a display, a form of presentation of self, used to distance or disqualify oneself (because of inadequacy, lack of confidence, or simply not wanting to belong, or to convey superiority). Some psychoanalysts claim that boredom may also be affected to cover embarrassment in social situations (Greenson, 1953; Fenichel, 1953), i.e., it can be expressed as proof of others’ shortcomings, allowing for self-discrediting activities while saving face. Boredom thus also expresses a vocabulary of motives. From this perspective, boredom is worthy of being analysed in linguistic terms. It is common for boredom to connote unpleasantness, a term of disapproval, especially for adolescents with the drawn out: ‘BORE-R-RING’ (Conrad, 1997). Indeed, blanket claims of boredom by teenagers, could be accounted for by understanding ‘boring’ as a shorthand to label alienating aspects of school. As Fallis and Opotow discovered, ‘boring’ often stood for a ‘one-way, top-down, unengaged relationship with a teacher whose pedagogy feels disrespectful because it is not designed to tempt, engage or include students’ (2003, p. 108). When it thus conveys a deep disappointment with schooling, boredom can be analysed as related to moral exclusion. Viewing boredom as an interactional phenomenon, there is also Goffman’s (1972) dramaturgical analogy of scripts, roles and performances as meaning-making and as presentation of self which can be useful in constructing an understanding of the affect. From this perspective, boredom can be said to occur when drama fails (Darden & Marks, 1999). When the setting lacks excitement, or when one is constrained, there is no possibility for production, play and behaviour. Here, even a ritualized and well-rehearsed script need not be boring if it is meaningful in its context. Repetition can lead to expectation and anticipation (for example, in watching the same film twice). Students, though, complain of boring classes and teachers when their mannerisms, script, props and setting offer no drama. Where there is no feeling of intention or purpose, there are no clues about when the final curtain falls. Our review thus far shows that, though boredom is a common experience, it takes a number of forms and can arise out of a wide range of factors, causing its conceptualization to be a complex matter. Effects of boredom Moving from the causes of boredom to its effects, a difference in views can be found again, between those who consider boredom to lead to potentially harmful consequences and a closing down of fruitful activity, and those whose views lead them to regard it as necessary and potentially constructive as a prompt to new possibilities. Boredom and schooling 587 Boredom has certainly been found to be associated with negative affect (Harris, 2000), its signs and symptoms being human ailments (physical, mental, sexual) (Brissett & Snow, 1993); listlessness, fatigue, depression, anxiety, loneliness, hostility, vanity and self-absorption, lowered work performance, increased accident rates, property damage or job dissatisfaction (Vodanovich, 1999). Although the prevailing construction of boredom in the context of school is that it constitutes some sort of failure, and despite its apparent salience to attainment, and the fact that it is a common experience, boredom at school is not an issue that has been subject to investigation. Doherty (2002) claims, for instance, that most researchers have failed to address the structures and patterns of interaction that cause tedium in and dislike of school. We would add that the links between schooling, societal changes and boredom have also been largely unexplored. Research that has found boredom-proneness to be associated with the inclination to hostility and aggression, sensation-seeking, impulsivity and destructive behaviours such as substance abuse and pathological gambling (Rupp, 1997; Vodanovich, 2003) would support Scitovsky’s bleak view that those with ‘no work and lacking the skills for harmless activities to relieve their boredom will relieve it with violence and vandalism’ (1996, p. 601). On the basis of this belief, Scitovsky further declares that the most important function of education is, ‘to instruct in the harmless activities of life so as to divert people from harmful, violent ones’ (p. 601). Recognizing that this solution too can engender boredom, he adds that the skill of the very act of learning needs to be learnt. When children enter school: … without having discovered that learning is fun … they are usually afraid of school, are bored by it, find it hard to concentrate, and get poor grades they are ashamed of, leading them to be truants and ultimately dropouts; and all too many of them end up on the street, engage in gratuitous violence, and join juvenile gangs. (Scitovsky, 1996, p. 602) Scitovsky’s prognosis here is in stark contrast to Benjamin’s (1973) and Bellow’s (1975/1996) investment of boredom with revolutionary potential. Moran (2003), reading Benjamin, proposes that the experience of boredom is an indication that something is not perfect or satisfactory, thereby containing the potential to alert people to possibilities for rethinking their activities and lifestyles. This understanding of the potential power and use of boredom is evident in a notable and rare instance of its recognition by an English educational institution— Summerhill School.2 Summerhill’s current policy statement says it aims to allow children the full range of feelings, ‘apparently negative consequences such as boredom, stress, anger, disappointment and failure are a necessary part of individual development’ (Summerhill School webpage3). Research carried out here by Goodsman (1992) hints at a complex relationship between boredom and motivation; students acknowledged their experience of boredom but also understood it as a ‘signal to change’ (1992, p. 177). Engagement, on the contrary, was seen as curtailing the potential for change or development. Schubert (1978), a psychiatrist, demonstrated experimentally that boredom had the power to exert pressure on individuals to stretch their inventive capacity when he 588 T. Belton and E. Priyadharshini gave study participants generous amounts of time to complete word association and problem-solving exercises; once all the more obvious answers had been given, participants became increasingly creative and original in their responses in order to ward off boredom. Along similar lines, Rude (2001) has also suggested that if children are encouraged to persevere with a task or subject that they initially find boring, they may eventually find that their interest becomes kindled. But Mikulas (1993) points out that while boredom can be caused by low complexity levels, continued exposure to a stimulus of higher and higher complexity can slowly reduce the complexity, also leading to boredom. The law of diminishing satisfaction is crucial in the return of boredom for Darden and Marks (1999) as well. But most of these authors agree that a certain amount of boredom, by allowing for contemplation, daydreaming and imagining alternatives, allows a refreshed return to activity (Darden & Marks, 1999; Dawley, 2006). Harris’s (2000) study of the subjective experience of boredom of 170 US college students aged 19-to 56-yearsold revealed that 73% of the participants believed that boredom could sometimes be positive, especially as an opportunity for thought and reflection or relaxation. This accords with Kracauer’s (1995) endorsement of the value of boredom to enable an individual to find some stillness and their ‘self’. The other benefit of boredom to which claim has been made is as a stimulus for creativity. This is the view of boredom as a ‘lost art form’ and hence as precious and productive. Here boredom, with its unfocused, unintentional, unconscious scanning is believed to lead to creativity and problem solving. This is felt intuitively by some to be the case, as expressed by Quindlen in positively advocating boredom for children during free time, rather than constant, scheduled activity, in order to encourage their creative development (2002). A similar claim is that a lack of boredom, through constant access to television or electronic entertainment to fill time or a void in activity, may reduce children’s opportunities for developing imaginative capacity. The assault on their minds and senses of sight and hearing by a barrage of rapidly changing scenarios robs children of the space or impulse to engage in the inward activities of observation, reflection and assimilation of experience, or to invent and pursue their own pastimes, activities which form much of the raw material of creative imagination (Belton, 2001). We may say, then, that boredom has been interpreted as contributing to antisocial behaviour and school failure on the one hand, and as a stimulus to new thinking and action on the other. Responses to boredom From the above, it is clear that considerable divergence exists in understandings of boredom and its significance. Hence it is inevitable that responses to the phenomenon are similarly varied. For some writers, there is no possibility of the eradication of boredom as it is a symptom of life itself. Nobel laureate Josef Brodsky (1996) writes that money is no solution either, as the rich can be very bored—money buys time and time is, by its Boredom and schooling 589 very nature, repetitive. But, he observes, poverty’s boredom can also be brutal. Leapfrogging jobs, interests, lives, and spouses, he claims, cannot relieve the tedium of life. The only response then, is to embrace it and understand one’s ‘utter insignificance’. Yet others, such as Mikulas (1993), call for an active interest in one’s mental processes. There is though, the constraint that such an approach can engender a feeling of being compelled. At the dispositional level, Mikulas suggests that engaging with challenging situations or seeking therapy, and, at the situational level, involvement in decision-making, can help. Quite a few writers suggest that learning to lower one’s sense of self importance, can lead to an increase in curiosity, lowering defensiveness, lowering judgmentalism and prejudices, opening the mind to new ways of doing and being. This also echoes Brodsky’s (1996) suggestion to learn humility and attain a finite sense of self. In educational settings, a claim of boredom can often be interpreted as caused by failings of the system or a teacher’s pedagogical style. The questions that Phillips, a psychotherapist, raises about the predominant adult response to children’s boredom highlight both the sense of culpability associated with it as well as the unhelpful reactions it can arouse: Is it not indeed revealing what the child’s boredom evokes in the adults? Heard as a demand, sometimes as an accusation of failure or disappointment, it is rarely agreed to, simply acknowledged. How often, in fact, the child’s boredom is met by that most perplexing form of disapproval, the adult’s wish to distract him—as though the adults have decided that the child’s life must be, or be seen to be, endlessly interesting. It is one of the most oppressive demands of adults that the child should be interested, rather than take time to find what interests him. Boredom is integral to the process of taking one’s time. While the child’s boredom is often recognized as an incapacity, it is usually denied as an opportunity. (Phillips, 1993, pp. 72–73) Mostly though, educational writers have assumed that boredom at school detracts from the quality of experience. However, from some of the literature covered thus far, one could postulate that while boredom can be associated with negative affect, it can also contain critical reflective potential and can be a powerful stimulus to creativity. In terms of schooling and education, it seems that there is a case for boredom to be regarded as a legitimate and necessary experience. At the same time, there is also room to reimagine a pedagogy that will engage in a more informed manner with the complexity of the experience. In the final section, therefore, we highlight some literature from the field of education that may hold pointers of relevance to addressing the question of boredom and schooling. Boredom and schooling In the literature reviewed in this section writers have not taken boredom as their main focus or looked for simple solutions to alleviate it, but instead consider a mix of situational and relational approaches. We focus here on the concepts of autonomy and control, and flow and struggle, as crucial concepts in reimagining pedagogy itself. 590 T. Belton and E. Priyadharshini (a) Autonomy and control Numerous studies conducted with adolescents (Larson & Richards, 1991; Kanevsky & Keighley, 2003; Fallis & Opotow, 2003; Strong et al., 2003; Girod et al., 2005) have suggested the need for a greater involvement of students with the curriculum, the need for room for contemplation, engaging relationships with teachers, meeting students’ needs for consistency, respect, and personal control. Writers on early years education have more obviously concerned themselves with the qualities of autonomy, control, flow and struggle. Patrick et al’s research (1993) highlighted autonomy as central to developing a kind of immunity to (learned) boredom. Although perceived competence and control are clearly an important influence on motivation, there are nevertheless children who, though competent, approach learning activities with boredom or anxiety. The study probed more deeply into reasons for this, looking at another characteristic—control. Control is defined by Patrick et al. as ‘the extent to which a person feels capable of producing desired and preventing undesired results’, as contrasted with autonomy which is, ‘the extent to which a person feels free to show the behaviours of his choice’ (p. 782). In this study, their particular concern was children who were high in control but low in autonomy, children for whom ‘behaviour and emotion become uncoupled, specifically, those children who continue to show behavioural involvement even when they are emotionally disaffected’ (p. 784), and for whom interventions are not usually regarded as needed as they exhibit no outward sign of disaffection. To nurture children’s full cognitive and affective engagement with learning tasks (the antithesis of a certain view of boredom), Patrick et al. (1993) recommend provision of choice, lack of coercion, respect for children’s own agendas, and learning activities relevant to children’s own goals. Such an approach would be supported by the creation of an ‘informational’ classroom environment in which the child is encouraged to plan his or her own learning, using the available resources, and participating in his or her own assessment, rather than the more usual ‘controlling’ environment in which the child is dependent on the teacher (Dowling, 1995). In the same vein, Dweck and Leggett (1988) recommend that children are helped to develop ‘learning goals’ which have internal meaning rather than ‘achievement goals’ which are dependent on the judgement of others. Exercising choice is believed to foster self-awareness and intellectual self-control, allowing children to pause, consider and reflect. As Dowling and Dauncey (1984) suggest, ‘if children are to become both responsible and autonomous they need training and support from the earliest age and the priority the school places on this aspect of development will be reflected in its hidden curriculum’ (1984, p. 15). For the autonomous, intrinsically motivated child, adolescent or adult, educational and other opportunities are likely to be actively engaged with and enjoyed, and times when there is ‘nothing to do’ are likely to be interpreted as a period leading to creativity. Further extending the idea of student autonomy and control, are the concepts of ‘flow’ and ‘struggle’. Boredom and schooling 591 (b) Flow and struggle Bruce (1991) advocates ‘free-flow’ play as the most powerful means of developing certain capacities and a will to learn in young children. Features of free-flow play are that it is intrinsically motivated, presents no external goals or rules, uses existing knowledge and skills, encourages struggle to master new competences, integrates what a child knows, feels and understands, and is a process of manipulating, exploring, discovering and practising without an end product. A detailed discussion of the notion of ‘flow’ can be found in the writings of Csikszentmihalyi (2000). He used this concept to denote the state experienced by an individual when s/he is completely absorbed in an activity that s/he find intrinsically enjoyable. Based on a series of studies with rock-climbers, chessplayers, composers, surgeons and others, Csikszentmihalyi was able to identify the elements of flow as: a sense of discovery, exploration, problem-solving, and a loosening of ego-boundaries—‘losing oneself’ in solitary activities, or a warm feeling of closeness to others and a loss of self-centredness in more sociable ones. The outcome of activities engendering flow is open-ended and uncertain but potentially determinable by the actor, who is in control of his or her actions and environment. Csikszentmihalyi (2000) suggests that flow occurs when an individual’s skills match or can extend sufficiently to meet the challenges or opportunities they encounter. It is when a person’s skills are greater than the challenges presented that boredom is experienced, and if demands outweigh skills, the result is anxiety. The experience of flow is not dependent on the objective degree of competence or challenge present, but on the actor’s perception of these. The creation of flow experiences, though highly valuable to the individuals enjoying them, is not however, an end in itself in the present discussion; it is the implications of the capacity of human beings to experience flow as well as boredom, and how such experiences might be facilitated through educational processes, that is significant. Play, Csikszentmihalyi (2000) proposes (in the sense of Bruce’s ‘free-flow’ play), is the epitome of the state of flow, an uninterrupted process in which children’s bodies, hands and brains produce immediate feedback that allows them to control their environment in an imaginative and experimental way, unfettered by the requirement that concrete results are produced. Yet for children at school as young as Year 1, play is allowed at school only when ‘work’ is finished. To Csikszentmihalyi the dichotomy between work and play is a false one. He concludes that the educational lesson to be drawn from his studies is that: … one of the most basic things to be taught to children is to recognize opportunities for action in their environment. This is the skill on which all other skills are based. … A child trained to develop all the skills of his body and his mind need never feel bored or helpless and therefore alienated from his surroundings. (Csikszentmihalyi, 2000, pp. 204–205) According to this frame of reference, it is not only what is taught, but how it is taught that is important. Learning must be made enjoyable. Enjoyment, though, 592 T. Belton and E. Priyadharshini should not be mistaken for ‘fun’, just as it should not be confused with ‘pleasure’; rock climbing and composing, which generate flow for their participants, present difficulties, but are entered into, in a spirit of playfulness, enquiry and adventure. Here we see a parallel with Bruce’s (1991) notion of the importance of ‘struggle’ for young children learning. Thus the notions of challenge/complexity/struggle need to be integral to education if a dreary boredom is not to become a part of the learning that schools inadvertently impart. In conclusion, we suggest that boredom needs to be understood as a complex human emotion that deserves a sophisticated, informed response, especially in the context of schooling. As this cross-disciplinary exploration has shown, boredom is an ambiguous concept because it lends itself to be approached and judged through a variety of contrasting perspectives. A simplistic understanding of the term will not suffice if it is to be recognized and legitimized as an emotion that can play a significant part in the learning and creative process. Such an understanding poses substantial challenges to current educational orientations and practices but, we believe, would be likely to generate more effective learning, greater personal fulfilment and much less tedium. Schooling would be further enhanced still, if, in the re-conceptualizing of boredom, the notions of autonomy, control, struggle and flow were assigned a more central role in informing pedagogy. Notes 1. 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