Neuroqueer Learning Spaces: An Exploration

MoreRealms
13 min readMar 23, 2024

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Pink neon heart against blue galaxy background. Text reads: Neuroqueer Learning Spaces. Follow our journey as we explore ways we can create radically inclusive, embodied neuroqueer learning spaces. Enabling cognitive and somatic liberty. Facilitating responsive learning opportunities and endless possibilities for children to be and become.

“Intentionally liberating oneself from the culturally ingrained and enforced performance of neuronormativity can be thought of as neuroqueering” (Walker, 2021).

This blog is published on Stimpunks website in its entirety, with links to full references and resources on their page: Neuroqueering Learning Spaces, An Exploration.

More Realms has always been a space for me to push the boundaries of Autistic Realms and explore other ideas, theories, and possibilities of learning in different contexts by drawing on more diverse materials, including art, literature, and philosophy. Inspired by Stimpunks’ idea for Cavendish Learning Spaces, I invited Ryan Boren (Co-Founder and Creative Director of Stimpunks) to join me on a path to explore Neuroqueer Learning Spaces as a way of transforming education away from the enforced ideas of normality. This is forming part of my neuroqueering journey and to potentially form part of a chapter submission for Nick Walker’s upcoming Neuroqueer Theory and Practice Anthology.

This feels like a natural evolution and a bridging of Autistic Realms, More Realms and finding possibilities in the gap, the ‘ma’ that I began this blog series with. Often, within the gaps, the caverns, pleats and folds of spaces, we can shapeshift and find other meanings; connections can be formed. A collective flow can bring new possibilities, open up potential and allow us to find the ‘magic’ (Walker, ITAKOM Presentation, 2023).

This blog series will introduce and expand on the concept of our Neuroqueer Learning Spaces project. This will also form part of Neurodiversity Celebration Week 2024 and demonstrate our support of Autistic Collaboration (AutCollab)’s work by ‘Celebrating the Infinitely Diverse Ways of Being Human’.

Once again, I have started the beginning of this project in the middle of everything else! We dived in deep and realised our project had been underway for many years, but neither of us had the vocabulary of ‘neuroqueer’ and ‘neuroqueering’ (Nick Walker, 2021) to describe our thoughts and help us understand our journey. Now we have that vocabulary; it has opened up another world within a world. It enables us to connect and learn from others who are also interested in the neurodiversity paradigm and postnormal possibilities. It is carving out a pathway for us to expand our community networks and help facilitate a shift in the way education is currently structured. It is helping us move towards what Kay and Dan Aldred (2023) describe as an Embodied Education, which could be seen to be the golden thread that runs through Neuroqueer Learning Spaces.

We know the vocabulary surrounding new concepts like this can be tricky to wrap your head around. It has taken us some time to unlearn and relearn, and we are still learning! We have created a brief summary (below) of some of our main concepts that may not be familiar to everyone. A more in-depth version of this is available on Stimpunks’ website, with further references and ideas to open up discussion.

Glossary. For full ALT text see: https://stimpunks.org/projects/neuroqueer-learning-spaces/ Text has definitions of neuronormativity, neuroqueer, neuroqueering, radical inclusivity and embodied education inspired by Nick Walker’s Neuroqueer Heresies (2021)

Alt text: Neuroqueer Learning Spaces — Stimpunks Foundation

Glossary. For full ALT text see: https://stimpunks.org/projects/neuroqueer-learning-spaces/ Text has definitions of cave, campfire, watering hole, niche construction, flow state, embodiment, cognitive liberty, somatic liberty, sensory safety, psychological safety, learner safety, regulation. These are working definitions community input appreciated!Full references on website

Neuroqueer Transformation = Unlearning, Collaborating, Creating

Embodied education is a concept we will return to and weave through our work alongside other emergent ideas about being a ‘space holder’ to allow the freedom of creative learning to take place. We believe, ‘There is no learning without the body.’ Aldred (2023). To deepen our understanding of this, we will collaborate with different communities to discover what an embodied, neuroqueer education and learning space may mean for those facilitating education and how it could support young people and what it means for the young people and families.

Drawing on the work of Octavia Butler and Adrienne Maree Brown, “The idea of interdependence is that we can meet each other’s needs in a variety of ways, that we can truly lean on others, and they can lean on us. It means we have to decentralise our idea of where solutions and decisions happen and where ideas come from. We have to embrace our complexity. We are complex.” (Adrienne Marie Brown, 2017.

Within an educational context, this means decentralising education, or at least making attempts within our own lives to change the way learning spaces are set up and used, moving away from the hierarchical model of ‘Master’ and ‘Student’. As (Audre Lorde, 1979) says, “The master’s tools will never dismantle the master’s house.”

We need safe spaces to be with each other in embodied, meaningful, collaborative, and responsive ways. Our children deserve to feel cared for, understood and safe to explore. We believe we need radical inclusivity to prevent the continuation of the severe mental health crisis our young people are experiencing today.

Over the past few years, I have discussed the current education and mental health crisis in the UK that has led to so many children experiencing burnout and living with the impact that the barriers of our UK education have created. This education crisis is also echoed in other countries, including America, where Stimpunks is based. Many of the issues are highlighted in Gray-Hammond’s (2024) CAMHS in Crisis, which I recommend for further insight into these problems.

It feels like we have reached a point where no one is happy or benefiting from our current education system. Fisher’s (2023) ‘Changing our Minds’ work highlights this from the perspective of teachers, students, and parents/carers. It has made me question our educational aims and what our schools are trying to achieve; it feels like we have lost our way. We no longer need workers for factory production lines; children are becoming more ‘disembodied’ as time passes, and teachers and students have even less autonomy than ever.

We are teaching children to be proud of what they know yet also ashamed of not knowing, teaching children that there is somehow a ‘right’ way to learn through reward charts and positive behaviour support programmes and revising for prescriptive exam criteria. However, it is by having a sense of wonder, curiosity, and unknowing that real learning takes place. This is why we chose the white rabbit symbol for our project. Our white rabbit (also known as Space Bunny) symbolises playfulness, curiosity, wonder, hope and the possibility of expanding learning potential. We use this as a symbol for people to follow us on our Neuroqueering Learning Spaces adventures. We are starting off down the rabbit hole, learning about the three Primordial Learning Spaces as theorised by Thornburg (2013).

White rabbit leaping through space. Text reads: Follow our white rabbit, a symbol of curiosity, wonder, hope and possibility, to expand learning potential. Exploring #neuroqueerlearningspaces with stimpunks and autisticrealms

Cavendish Learning Spaces are Neuroqueer Learning Spaces

We are asking: How can we transform and liberate the expectations of neuronormative education and create neuroqueer learning spaces?

We are suggesting: A neuroqueer transformation = unlearning, collaborating, creating

Lorde (1979) declared, “Revolution is not a one-time event. It is becoming always vigilant for the smallest opportunity to make a genuine change in established, outgrown responses…” Our triskelion motif reflects this, with the golden thread of embodiment (being with yourself and being with others) weaving between the three primordial learning spaces. We will be exploring this in more detail as the project evolves. This allows children the opportunity to flow between their cave, watering hole and campfire spaces as needed and be in a perpetually evolving spiral of new learning possibilities by revisiting and expanding on thoughts, ideas and play processes to keep building on connections.

Treskelion motif with images of cave, campfire and watering hole in the centre of each leg of the spiral. Text reads: follow our learning journey as we explore #neuroqueerlearningspaces www.stimpunks.org and autisticrealms Inspired by David Thornburg’s primordial learning spaces 2014

Without information and training, many teachers are likely unaware of the different paths and the need to DE-SCHOOL their learning spaces, UN-LEARN their training and embrace radical inclusivity. A quote often credited to Maya Angelou reads, “Do the best you can until you know better. Then when you know better, do better.” We hope this project will allow people to learn from others so we can all ‘do better together’. Teachers can not take that ‘small opportunity’ if they don’t know where to look for it or even understand why it is needed.

When I was working in class as a teacher, I was often far too busy with the day-to-day planning to think too far outside of my next lesson. Only now, with the privilege of time and hindsight, I have discovered new possibilities by connecting with other communities. Likewise, families also need time to explore and space to connect, validate experiences and learn together. Time is often something many families do not have; family life is generally busy! However, everyone deserves the opportunity to access practical information about different educational pathways and support for their children and to be able to advocate for their needs. Education does not and should not only happen inside a school building between 9 am-3 pm sat behind a desk. We are passionate about expanding learning opportunities and neuroqueer spaces for learning to take place and giving families and educators some ideas and resources to be able to do this.

We want to create a campfire experience by bringing community networks together; we want to share stories, knowledge and create connections to be with each other. We want to provide a space that brings agency and autonomy back to families and school staff. Educational settings and families need freedom for niche construction so children can move seamlessly and weave between different learning spaces. For families opting for alternative learning routes, these pathways need to be made more accessible, and the journey and support need to be much smoother and more empowering for families.

Image of a golden thread of shooting stars in space leading to a rainbow heart. Text is divided into education info and family info. How can we transform and liberate the expectations of neuronormative education and create neuroqueer learning spaces? Teachers need to UNLEARN, trust from settings and freedom to create. Families need access to education, resources and community. Outcome: child happy, curious, full of wonder and free to learn in an embodied way that suits their body minds.

We aim to provide practical resources for professionals and families to support them. For families this may include resources to support them in being able to advocate for their child (such as template letters and signposting to research). For educational settings this will include practical ideas to launch their neuroqueer learning spaces in their own setting.

Caves, campfires, and watering holes are:-

The three primordial learning spaces comprise of:

Caves: Space for quiet reflection, introspection and self-directed learning.
A private space to transform learning from external knowledge to internal belief. Home of reflective construction.

Campfires: Space for learning with a storyteller. Education facilitators need to actively subvert neuronormativity. They need to embark on their transformative neuroqueer journey so their re-storying can inspire neuro-cosmopolitanism.

Watering holes: Space for being with peers and social learning.
Community enables thoughts and ideas to expand rhizomatically. Embracing unique strengths expands creativity into new horizons and a collective flow full of potential.

A radical change to learning spaces is needed to enable children to be embodied, feel safe and feel liberated enough to explore and be curious about the world around them. We can work and learn in infinitely creative ways, but we need to be embodied in order to do that and connected within ourselves and with the world and people around us. To feel embodied, you need feelings of safety; people need to value strengths, validate difficulties, and provide support where needed. The neurodiversity-affirming work by McGreevey et al.(2023) based on the Life World Model by Todres et al. (2009) applies equally to health care and education. It offers a humanising framework for everyone, not just autistic people. Everyone deserves to feel a sense of togetherness and have their journeys make sense so they have agency and autonomy over their learning journeys.

We have created a lilypad to launch our project by inviting discussion around the following ideas:

The contemporary classroom is a temple of neuronormativity. Every act in the fight for the right to learn differently can be a neuroqueering act (based on Nick Walker’s Neuroqueer Theory, 2021). We suggest fundamentally neuroqueer learning spaces that enable “freedom of embodiment” and “cognitive liberty” are needed for radical inclusivity. We need learning facilitators to be ‘space holders’ so children’s bodyminds are allowed to live and learn authentically. Our Cavendish Space is an incubator and catalyst for neuroqueer becoming.”

Cavendish Spaces” are based on flexibility, interaction, movement, and the role of embodied responsive experiences. They reject the boundaries of traditional classroom settings and examine how they restrict embodied experiences and lead to disembodied experiences and harm. Our project is multidimensional, non-linear and de-hierarchical. We need to deconstruct, dismantle and un-learn as part of the neuroqueering process to lift the burden of neuronormativity that is weighing our children down. We are exploring the idea of an embodied education. We are exploring how learning spaces may impact neuroqueer learning potential and radical cognitive and somatic liberty. Inspired by Ira Socol who suggests Zero-Based Design as part of this process which means children will be no longer be trapped in your past. It will enable us to:

Reimagine the Learner Experience.
Reimagine the Learning Spaces.
Reimagine How Professionals Learn
”. (Ira Socol)

Image of white rabbit jumping through space. Image of cave, watering hole and campfire in circles with text underneath which reads:
 
 How can we transform and liberate the expectations of neuronormative education and create neuroqueer learning spaces?
 A neuroqueer transformation = unlearning, collaborating creating
 Teachers need information and knowledge to UN-LEARN their training, discover new possibilities and become neuroqueer facilitators of education

(For full alt text to images, click here — Medium blog has a word limit)

Neuroqueer Community

We are looking at neuroqueering from all angles across the community. We are looking at ways to give agency and autonomy back to families and support those working in educational settings that facilitate and guide learning experiences. Importantly, we want to offer children timeless learning and neuroqueer space to be with others, be themselves and ‘become’ and ‘become what they are’ (Watts, 1955).

The path to escape the box of a sick society involves rediscovering timeless and minimalistic principles for coordinating creative collaboration.

Bettin, Jorn. The Beauty of Collaboration at Human Scale: Timeless patterns of human limitations (p. 292). S23M Limited.

Could it be that humans have always occupied these diverse learning spaces, moving between them as needed?

From the Campfire to the Holodeck by David Thornburg

NeurodiVentures are a concrete example of an emerging cultural species that provides safe and nurturing environments for divergent thinking, creativity, exploration, and collaborative niche construction. NeurodiVentures are built on timeless and minimalistic principles for coordinating trusted collaboration that predate the emergence of civilisation.

The Beauty of Collaboration at Human Scale: Timeless patterns of human limitations

Invitation to join us on our journey

The global mono-cult pretends that all aspects of life can be categorised and understood in terms of normality — by the hump of the bell curve. But the living planet does not conform to anthropocentric normality; it is chaotic, but it is beautifully and awesomely diverse.” Bettin (AutCollab, 2024)

We are documenting the neuroqueering process of our journey as a live- stream across Stimpunks website as the project unfolds. It is a reflection of the kaleidoscopic rhizome of Stimpunks, which is a beautifully awesome and diverse learning space in itself.

Our project shows an example of a neuroqueering workflow transformation, which we will expand on in future blogs. Stimpunks is a virtual space holder for my personal neuroqueering process and the community joining us. As a space holder they provide safety to explore, try out new ideas and work collaboratively towards a mutual goal without fear of judgment.

To neuroqueer, you have to un-learn. I visualise my neuroqueering as being like fractals in a kaleidoscope. It is a process of turning, changing and becoming by un-learning and re-learning and time-less learning from others in a campfire space, having time for self-reflection and self-directed learning in a cave space, joining in with and alongside others and celebrating diversity in a watering hole space. We are not perfect, and the project may be chaotic and messy in places. However, we feel passionate that we are heading in the right direction and want to celebrate the ‘beautifully and awesomely diverse’ potential of neuroqueer learning spaces with you.

Created Serendipity

Seemingly serendipitous events are also based on our willingness to create connections and be in the space, and to put in the effort in the first place. I often tell people that if you start connecting with others in online spaces, you won’t just find great ideas, but the great ideas will find you.” (George Couros)

Created Serendipity is a beautiful thing. We would love for you to join us and expand the potential of neuroqueer learning spaces!

Chance favors the connected mind. Opportunities for serendipity increase with bigger, more diverse networks. Build personal learning networks. Expose yourself to new perspectives. Listen in solidarity. Be in the space. When we seek perspectives different than our own, share hunches, and connect ideas, we participate in created serendipity.” (Ryan Boren, 2022)

We have opened our submissions page.

We’re requesting community writing and art about neuroqueering education, play, and learning spaces. “Cavendish Space” is the first piece in our “Neuroqueer Learning Spaces” project. It’s also our explainer for the project. The campfires in the “Cave, Campfires, and Watering Holes” concept introduced in “Cavendish Space” are places for storytelling. They are places for elders and experts to pass along knowledge. We want to weave campfire wisdom into community storytelling. Community storytelling is part of our neuroqueer journeying and becoming.

For each section of the “Cavendish Space” piece, we’d like to have a “Campfire Wisdom” (working title) callout box featuring submitted writing and art. We want to highlight the wisdom of experts and elders in our community and associate it with the campfire primordial learning space and the storytelling and cultural transmission it facilitates. We’ll integrate submitted writing and art into “Cavendish Space” and other pieces created by this project. The writing might be included in a chapter we’re working on for a neuroqueer anthology. We’ll also publish standalone pieces of your work. Anything of any length is welcome. A poem, a paragraph, a painting, a plea, a blog or any other inspiration you may have for Neuroqueering Learning Spaces.

…human nature is to nurture and be nurturedImmordino-Yang (2023)

All submissions will be attributed and linked to you whenever used. We plan on writing up this project and submitting a chapter for Nick Walker’s new Neuroqueer anthology.

Feedback and enquiries are welcome.

#NeuroqueerLearningSpaces Project
Helen Edgar (
Autistic Realms) & Ryan Boren (Stimpunks)

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