Media ecologies and the politics of representation
Methodological opportunities and challenges for socio-educational research with communities at risk of invisibility
PROGRAM DURATION |
5 days |
---|---|
DATES |
January 26-30, 2026 |
TUITION FEE |
No fee |
APPLICATION DEADLINE |
November 20, 2025 |
NOTIFICATION OF ACCEPTANCE |
November 30, 2025 |
REGISTRATION |
December 10, 2025 |
CONTACT |
capted.winterschool@unimib.it |
This Winter School critically examines digital methods for researching communities and issues at risk of invisibility, with examples including (but not limited to) migrant experiences, LGBTQIA+ identities, underrepresented forms of knowledge, disability rights, gender-based violence, and political activism. It frames media ecologies as dynamic spaces of informal learning where identities are negotiated, knowledge is produced, and cultural practices may reinforce or challenge dominant narratives.
The school emphasizes the need to problematize how digital methods are used, looking beyond their technical application to their epistemological, methodological, ethical, and political dimensions. By drawing on perspectives from media ecology, critical pedagogy, and feminist epistemologies, participants will explore how digital environments both constrain and enable visibility, voice, and agency.
Through a combination of seminars, workshops, and collaborative discussions, the program fosters reflection on the role of digital media in processes of inclusion and exclusion, and offers hands-on engagement with qualitative approaches—from exploratory observation to dataset construction and analysis.
Designed for Master’s degree holder, PhD students as well as early-career researchers, the Winter School provides conceptual grounding and practical tools to carry out socio-educational research attentive to issues of marginalization, visibility, and epistemic justice.
- (In)visibility, marginalization, and media ecologies
- Pedagogical practices of resistance and identity formation
- Digital spheres, fragmentation, and polarization
- Platforms, imaginaries, and everyday uncertainties
- Ethics, vulnerability, and agency in digital research
- Constructing and managing qualitative datasets
- Analyzing ethnographic material in digital contexts
- Coding, interpretation, and meaning-making in qualitative research
- Epistemic justice and socio-educational research in digital ecologies
Group work
Daily seminars and workshops will guide participants through collaborative activities aimed at refining research questions, exploring digital environments, and working with qualitative data. The overall objective is to develop a research proposal on the topics of the Winter School, with the final output presented and discussed on the closing day.
Invited speakers
- Ranjana Das, School of Social Sciences, University of Surrey
- Katrin Tiidenberg, Baltic Film, Media and Arts School, Tallinn University
- Elisabetta Costa, Department of Communication Studies, University of Antwerp
We welcome applicants who already hold a Master’s degree, PhD students, and early-career researchers in the human and social sciences who are interested in media ecologies and in exploring digital methods—alone or in combination with other approaches—within projects that address less visible topics and communities at risk of marginalization, from pedagogical, anthropological, social, psychological, or interdisciplinary perspectives.
The application form should include:
- a cover letter (500-600 words) describing your motivation to participate in the Winter School and any related research projects you are currently pursuing or plan to develop,
- an Academic CV
Following the selection process, a minimum of 10 and a maximum of 15 participants will be admitted to the Winter School.
The Winter School is a five-day intensive program combining theoretical reflection and practical application.
Morning seminars, led by international scholars and faculty members, introduce key theoretical and methodological perspectives related to media ecologies, marginalized communities, and underexplored topics.
Afternoon workshops provide interactive spaces where participants work closely with tutors and peers to develop their research proposals.
The program begins with a welcome session and conceptual framing, followed by an initial workshop on identifying research topics. In the following days, morning lectures will present case studies and methodological reflections. At the same time, afternoon workshops will guide participants through refining research questions, exploring digital contexts, and experimenting with qualitative methods.
On the final day, participants will present their research proposals in a public session, receiving feedback and engaging in collective reflection, before concluding with an informal gathering.
DATE |
SESSION |
NAMES |
26.01.26 |
Day 1 – Theoretical and epistemological foundations |
|
Early |
Presentation of the Winter School: introduction to themes and objectives; brief introduction of |
|
|
(In-)visibility and marginalization from a pedagogical and anthropological perspective |
Prof. Chiara Bove, Dr.Paolo Grassi |
|
(De-)constructing knowledge, shaping identities: media ecologies and pedagogical practices of resistance |
Dr. Davide Cino |
|
Digital spheres of (in-)visibility: fragmentation, |
Dr. Paolo Monti |
Late |
Workshop: Identification of research objects and conceptual mapping; brainstorming on research themes and collective discussion |
Dr. Maddalena |
27.01.26 |
Day 2 – Digital contexts and methodological issues: |
|
Morning |
Lecture: Platforms and people: case histories in researching uncertainties, fluidities and imaginaries in datafied societies |
Prof. Ranjana Das, |
|
Discussion on ethical and methodological implications |
Faculty & participants |
Afternoon |
Workshop: Refining the research focus and defining research questions, and exploratory observation of digital environments |
Dr. Alessandra Mussi, |
28.01.26 |
Day 3 – Data collection and ethics in media ecologies |
|
Morning |
Lecture: Doing “good” research “well” online: ethics and methods in digital research |
Prof. Katrin Tiidenberg, |
|
Discussion on situated methods and ethical tensions in constructing digital datasets |
Faculty & participants |
Afternoon |
Workshop: Dataset generation, organization, and cleaning |
Dr.Anna Chinazzi, Petar Lefterov |
29.01.26 |
Day 4 – Qualitative analysis of digital data |
|
Morning |
Lecture: After fieldwork: analyzing ethnographic material in digital contexts |
Prof. Elisabetta Costa, University of Antwerp |
|
Discussion on choosing the right approaches to qualitative analysis |
Faculty & participants |
Afternoon |
Workshop: Group data analysis, coding, and |
Dr. Valentina Pagani, Marco Sassaro, Daniele |
30.01.26 |
Day 5 – Presentations and final reflections |
|
Morning |
Session: Looking back, thinking forward: collective reflections and research proposals |
Winter School |
|
5-minute presentations of research proposals and feedback |
Faculty & participants |
|
Closing reflections and shared takeaways |
Faculty & participants |
|
Light buffet |
- November 20, 2025 - Application
- November 30, 2025 - Notification of acceptance
- December 10, 2025 - Registration
Chiara Bove, Davide Cino, Paolo Grassi, Cristina Palmieri, Mario Vergani, Paolo Monti, Alessandra Mussi, Valentina Pagani, Maddalena Sottocorno, Anna Chinazzi, Monica Facciocchi, Petar Vasilev Lefterov, Marco Sassaro, Daniele Ciocca, Leonardo Lapomarda, Erica Neri, Tazio Morandini. The Winter School is also organized in collaboration with the PhD Programs in Education in the Contemporary Society (Prof. Chiara Bove), Cultural and Social Anthropology (Prof. Alice Bellagamba), and Intangible Heritage in Socio-Cultural Innovation (Prof. Franca Zuccoli).
- Cover letter
- Academic CV
- ID card or Passport
Application and registration are two different steps.
First, candidates are invited to submit their application through the dedicated form by 20 November 2025. A selection of between 10 and 15 participants will be made, and the outcome will be communicated via email no later than 30 November 2025.
Those admitted will then move on to the second step, completing a separate registration form by 10 December 2025. Registration fees are generously covered by CAPTED – Center for Educational Changes and Potentials in the Digital Transition, Department of Human Sciences for Education “Riccardo Massa”, University of Milano-Bicocca.
The Winter School will take place at the University of Milano-Bicocca, Department of Human Sciences for Education “Riccardo Massa”, Piazza dell’Ateneo Nuovo, 1 – 20126 Milan, Italy, U6 Building, 4th floor.
Participants will be notified of the specific seminar and workshop rooms closer to the start of the program.
For further information, contact:
CAPTED

This Winter School is promoted, organized, and funded by CAPTED—Center for Educational Changes and Potentials in the Digital Transition, as part of the project “Cambiamenti e Potenzialità Educative e Socioculturali connessi alla Transizione Digitale” (CAPTED), carried out within the Dipartimenti di Eccellenza 2023–2027 program at the “Riccardo Massa” Department of Human Sciences for Education, University of Milano-Bicocca (ID IRIS 2023-NAZ-0209).