Parada-Ulloa, MarcosMarcosParada-UlloaGutierrez, Oscar VegaOscar VegaGutierrezSoloaga, Pedro SotomayorPedro SotomayorSoloaga2026-07-072026-07-072026-05INTERCIENCIA, 51(5), 220-227 (2026)0378-1844https://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12740/24744This article analyzes how everyday life and the institutional culture of the Rural Normal School of Copiap รณ (1936-1950) contributed to the territorialization of the teaching State in northern Chile. The objective is to reconstruct these practices and examine their role in the formation of a regional teaching identity. A qualitative historical-sociological approach was used, through hermeneutic and content analysis of institutional sources. The results show that boarding school, discipline, cultural activities, and networks of sociability configured a territorialized professional hab-itus. It is concluded that normal-school training was a cultural process that integrated territory, teaching identity, and state project, contributing to Latin American educational historiography.EcologySTUDENT LIFE AND INSTITUTIONAL CULTURE IN THE TERRITORIALIZATION OF THE TEACHING STATE: THE RURAL NORMAL SCHOOL OF COPIAPO (1936-1950)Articulo