Resumo:
It is impossible to deny the obsolescence of classrooms that still portray layouts and structures
from the last century, trapped in conceptions that continue to be associated with large container
boxes with students sitting in a row listening to someone in front of them. In business schools
we do not find a different reality and their classrooms do not reflect an adequate environment
for the demands of contemporary management. In order to rethink this context, this thesis aims
to explain how sociomateriality sustains and illuminates the renewal of education in
administration. However, we evidenced in the research field a limited view of the role of
materiality as a "means" for learning and almost inexistence of understanding of its social
issues. We also identified a limited and fragmented literature on educational innovation in
management education that is restricted to addressing only content and method issues.
Therefore, this study sought to be anchored mainly in sociomaterial theories and educational
innovation, and added to this theoretical framework research on educational atmospheres,
material intra-actions and educational environments with their temperaments and climates. The
methodological path involved a multiple case study with 20 educational institutions that
adopted strong material changes as an educational innovation strategy. The sources involved
images, documents, videos, observations and interviews. Through thematic analysis we identify
how educational innovations with strong material changes transform environments, typifying
spaces, changing their atmospheres, from drivers that produce sociomaterial effects and renew
learning. The entire path and results of this research are organized in the academic production
of five papers. The first paper aimed to systematize and discuss the academic production on the
materiality of the Teaching-Learning in Administration (EAA), highlighting sociomateriality as
a perspective for the advancement of future research. The second paper aimed to systematize
the academic production on educational innovations in administration, integrating
multidisciplinary contributions that provoke advances in future research. The third paper aimed
to explain the effects of educational innovation in EAA, from a sociomaterial approach. In the
fourth paper, the focus was to explain what drives educational atmospheres to produce their
effects, in the socio-material light in EAA. The fifth paper aimed to explain the relevance of
educational innovations of strong material change for the development of skills and
competencies in administration. The results of this research reinforce the importance of the
sociomaterial perspective for the renewal of management education, as well as explain the
innovations with strong material change as strategies compatible with the demands of
contemporary management education. This research contributes to the consolidation, renewal
and expansion of the sociomaterial perspective in management education; for the consolidation,
renewal and expansion of research in educational innovation in management education; and for
the practice of educational managers, teachers, students, architecture, civil construction and
design professionals and the entire academic community.