“…These views have also enabled less anthropocentric and more relationally attuned perspectives, for example, in environmental education (Sonu and Snaza 2015;Verlie 2020), art education (Hood and Kraehe 2017), social studies education (Nelson, Segall, and Scott Durham 2021), teachers' local curriculum development (Tronsmo and Nerland 2018), and modern learning spaces (Charteris, Smardon, and Nelson 2017;Tietjen et al 2021). There have been calls for more new materialist research on teaching to (re) conceptualise teaching as a complex phenomenon, which is jointly produced in a constellation of human, nonhuman, discursive, and material elements (Strom and Viesca 2020). In the pandemic situation, where teachers have transitioned through a particularly uncertain time in terms of their professional lives and work (Allen, Rowan, and Singh 2020), new materialism provides necessary new perspectives to discover how teachers respond and adapt to the changed assemblages in the post-pandemic era.…”