406 Asmt #3 - Education
Students will research a topic of interest. This final inquiry paper should be grounded in, and draw on, one or more of the topics explored in the modules from this course.
Explain the significance or importance of the topic you chose, include relevant literature (a minimum of five references researched by student and three references from class - books or journal articles), and suggest implications for practice in an early childhood preschool environment.
This assignment should be approximately 8-10 pages (Times New Roman font, 12, double spacing, American Psychological Association [APA] format). An annotated PowerPoint presentation, or a detailed presentation of a workshop for families or educators, will also be accepted.
Students must check in with instructor to ensure their selected topic is adequate for this assignment.
Rubric
Some Rubric
Some Rubric
Criteria
Ratings
Pts
This criterion is linked to a Learning OutcomeCoherence and Clarity
The assignment content clearly addresses the assignment purpose and/or guiding questions. The importance of this topic to the student is discussed. The assignment’s components are linked together into a coherent, well-articulated thesis. Paper is well organized and arguments are clearly connected to thesis.
10 pts
Full Marks
0 pts
No Marks
10 pts
This criterion is linked to a Learning OutcomeAnalysis and Discussion
The discussion goes beyond description and shows ability to use, analyze, and synthesize relevant concepts, theories, and ideas from this course in relation to topic of inquiry.
10 pts
Full Marks
0 pts
No Marks
10 pts
This criterion is linked to a Learning OutcomeVoice
When relevant, the student takes a stance towards an issue, question, or a dilemma by employing scholarly resources to support his/her argument(s). Student offers a short summary of all the articles explored and draws clear connections to thesis. Creativity of thought supported with good arguments is welcomed.
10 pts
Full Marks
0 pts
No Marks
10 pts
This criterion is linked to a Learning OutcomeWriting and Referencing
The writing style is adequate for an academic/university level. Grammar, punctuation, and referencing style (APA 7th edition) are of high standard.
10 pts
Full Marks
0 pts
No Marks
10 pts
Total Points: 40https://doi.org/10.1177/1463949117714075
Contemporary Issues in Early Childhood
2017, Vol. 18(2) 114 –126
© The Author(s) 2017
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DOI: 10.1177/1463949117714075
ciec.sagepub.com
Transforming early childhood
educators’ conceptions of “dark
play” and popular culture
Carolyn Bjartveit
University of Calgary, Canada
E Lisa Panayotidis
University of Calgary, Canada
Abstract
In an online graduate-level early childhood education course, the authors sought to playfully disrupt
and transform educators’ conceptions of children’s “dark play,” as provoked by contemporary
popular culture. Embracing the imaginative potential of darkness and liminality, the course
participants problematized and expanded their thinking concerning what constitutes children’s
play scripts focused on themes of fear, power, and violence. Cognizant that some educators are
reluctant and even refuse to allow children opportunities to engage in play centered on troubling
social issues, the educators co-authored a fantastical tale, inspired by the Disney animation film
Frozen, and included course topics, classroom observations, and their own childhood memories
of “dark play.” Vivian Paley’s ideas about the connections between storytelling and play provided
a creative impetus to the fictional narrative-imagining exercise, as did Hans-Georg Gadamer’s
notion of Spiel. Eliciting the literature of children’s play experiences through fictional story-writing,
and “play” as a contemporary aspect of creative thinking, the educators entered imaginary worlds
of their own making. Unlike a traditional online graduate course format that often incorporates
textual readings, posts, and responses, the authors strived to foster a virtual space in which
the educators buttressed theories about play and imagination in a deeply felt, experiential, and
playful manner. In creating an imaginary story based on the film, the participants gained a different
understanding of the nature of play, and came to recognize how popular-culture play themes can
provoke and strengthen children’s imaginative and abstract thinking, problem-solving skills, and
emotional development. Likewise, this narrative experience showed the potential and role of
“dark play” in initiating new ways of thinking and talking with children about the complex issues
of the modern world.
Corresponding author:
Carolyn Bjartveit, Werklund School of Education, University of Calgary, 2500 University Drive NW, Calgary, Alberta
T2N 1N4, Canada.
Email: [email protected]
714075CIE0010.1177/1463949117714075Contemporary Issues in Early ChildhoodBjartveit and Panayotidis
research-article2017
Article
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Bjartveit and Panayotidis 115
Keywords
Creative writing, 2
PRESCHOOL-AGED CHILDREN’S
GENDER IDENTITY DEVELOPMENT
Exploring Gender Through Multicultural
Literature
Rebekah Piper
Over the past ten years, identity development and equal rights based on gender
have been topics of much discussion within social and political movements. For
example, topics of bathroom availability for those who identify as a gender differ-
ent than their biological sex, transgender individuals in the military, and same-sex
marriage continue to receive attention in the news. Discussions about these topics
are vital. Unfortunately, there is resistance to conversations about gay and lesbian
families (Jozwiak, Cahill, & Theilheimer, 2016) and gender identity within early
childhood settings. The most critical voices, children’s voices, have been silenced
in the construction of early childhood education and topics around early learn-
ing (Cannella, 1997). Discussions around early education policy do not include
topics of gender identity. This is concerning because as children get older, they
confront topics of gender issues and they are forced to make sense of social issues.
Individuals are required to consider how these ideas about gender roles and repre-
sentations are powerful as they relate to children’s social development. Therefore,
it would be wise to follow the guidance of Delpit (2006) who suggests that there
must be an unwillingness to remain silent so that the voices of younger beings can
be heard by everybody’s children.
There are multiple characteristics or subjectivities that influence identity devel-
opment, including race, ethnicity, social class, language, sexual orientation, religion,
ability, and gender (Nieto & Bode, 2012). It is important to consider that every
child maneuvers through different stages of development and learning in his or her
own time. This is, in part, because of the complex way that personal subjectivities
intersect with and shape a child’s growth. As the United States continues to grow
more and more diverse, parents, caregivers, educators, and others who interact
with young children must recognize the authenticity that each child has by recog-
nizing that there is a combination of social and cultural conditions that influence
a child’s ability to learn and develop and ultimately influence his or her identity.
16 Rebekah Piper
Individual Learning Processes and Development
There are various elements that influence a child’s learning and social devel-
opment. From a young age, children’s home life and experiences shape and
inform their identities within their own cultural context. Once a child enters the
educational setting, however, this cultural development that has taken place at
home undergoes modification as the “imagination” becomes familiar with dif-
ferent personalities, behaviors, and intellects. Ladson-Billings (1995) argues that
the culture of a classroom has the potential to challenge, oppose, or align with the
child’s home culture. The outcome th3
‘CAN YOU SHOUT A LITTLE
LOUDER?’
Listening and Hearing Children’s Voices
Through Play
Natalie Canning
Listening and hearing children as co-constructors and equal partici-
pants is a way of thinking about and seeing children’s interactions. This
chapter explores the complexities of listening to children and really
‘hearing’ what they are saying through the different ways they express
themselves in play and creative experiences. Using case studies from a
rural nursery in central England, examples of children’s talk and
actions are used to reveal how early childhood educators position
themselves to listen and hear how children communicate with each
other and the adults around them. Key elements of acknowledging
children’s voices, facilitating autonomy, and providing choice through
play are highlighted in an examination of the benefits and challenges of
listening to and hearing children.
The significance of listening and hearing children’s voices
An important aspect of supporting children’s play is recognizing
their choices and reflecting on why those choices have been made.
Listening to children’s views is vital in helping to establish a child-
centred environment. Educators should be aware not just how they
listen to children, but also be clear about their rationale in advocat-
ing for children’s autonomy and voice. Child-led play allows chil-
dren a degree of freedom and the ability to personally direct what
they are doing. They are given opportunities to control what they
do, how they do it, and when to stop or change their play. Creating
an ethos based on placing children at the centre of the process of
33
listening, hearing, and responding means following children’s ideas
and motivations. This requires educators to trust children and value
their play.
Play can be unpredictable; and giving children a say in what they
do means someone has to listen, take on board what children say,
and be prepared to respond sensitively and appropriately (Canning,
2012). Educators need to be flexible in their approach and facilitate
spaces that allow play to develop in a way that the child intends.
The wealth of insights into a child’s individual qualities and experi-
ences that play can generate should not be underestimated. These
considerations form the basis for recognizing that children have
capacity for developing ways of seeing the world, problem solving,
learning, and making meaning in their play. Rinaldi argues that
‘listening is not only a technique, but a way of thinking and seeing
ourselves in a relationship with others and the world . . . it is the
essence of being human’ (cited in Moss, Clark, & Kjorholt, 2005,
p. 6). Listening to children cannot simply be ‘lip service’ or exploit-
ing what is learnt from children to meet an agenda set by adults
(Greene & Hill, 2005). Listening to children has to be integral to
how children and childhood are viewed.
Reflection point
How do you listen to children and how much do you value
children’s ex214
15
Young children’s digital play in
early childhood settings
Curriculum, pedagogy and teachers’
knowledge
Elizabeth Wood, Joce Nuttall, Susan Edwards and
Susan Grieshaber
Introduction
Research indicates that children’s digital play practices seem to be in advance of teachers’ adap-
tation of curriculum and pedagogical approaches to incorporate digital technologies, digital
media and popular culture, and the potential for learning that these materials generate (Howard,
Miles and Rees-Davies 2012; Aubrey and Dahl 2014; Edwards 2016). This gap has been identi-
fied as an international concern (European Commission 2012): children’s digital activities are
not always well understood by teachers, and might not be valued in ways that will advance
children’s competences, or connect with curriculum content. This chapter explores some of
the reasons for this gap, and proposes new play pedagogies as a way forward. The first section
presents the research literature that identifies the gap between children’s converged play and
curriculum and pedagogy in early childhood education (ECE) settings. The second section sets
out the conceptual framework, combining contemporary iterations of socio-cultural theories,
with theories of children’s interests, funds of knowledge, and converged play. The third section
illustrates how teachers in the “New Play Pedagogies” project shifted their understanding of
digital technologies, digital media and popular culture, and how children’s interests and practices
could be integrated into the early childhood curriculum. The conclusion considers three key
questions that are of international significance in ECE regarding new play pedagogies, curricu-
lum and teachers’ knowledge.
Children’s digital play: contemporary perspectives
The role of digital literacy within the broader literacies field incorporates children’s multi-modal
home and school practices, including the ways in which popular culture texts and artefacts are
embedded in the literacy and play lives of children and their families. Marsh (2017) describes the
connections that flow between children’s literacy and play practices with digital technologies,
media and popular culture, ranging from clothing, household goods and food to mobile phones
Young children’s digital play
215
and accessories, internet sites and virtual worlds. This “transmedia ecology” (Black, Alexander
and Korobkova 2017) provides contexts for children’s multi-modal literacy practices before
“formal” teaching of school-based literacy. Children’s interests are embedded in new technolo-
gies, as reflected in their uptake, potential for learning, social engagement and the development
of imaginative play.
Contemporary play repertoires dissolve barriers of space, place and time because of their
potential for multi-modal forms of communication and interaction. Abrams, Rowsell and
Merchant (2017) present the concept of “playscapes” to explain the global and local flow297
Mental health and well-being are characterized by quality relationships, a satisfied sense of self, the ability to engage meaningfully in society,
and the ability to cope with setbacks and daily challenges (Alegría, Green,
McLaughlin, & Loder, 2015). Children develop these characteristics and skills
through family relationships and social traditions. Later on, educators become
primary partners with parents supporting children’s social–emotional develop-
ment with the purpose of developing resilient and academically able learners.
For children living in stressful environments, development can be delayed or
disrupted. Unmitigated distress can result in longstanding health and mental
health problems. As such, it is important that skilled adults identify and respond
to young children’s needs during these early years. This chapter describes the
impact of distress on child development as well as provides recommendations
for parents, preschool educators, and early intervention providers.
MENTAL HEALTH
Children develop positive mental health and well-being as a response to their
life experiences in combination with their ability to manage and benefit from
these experiences. Variations in personal attributes, including temperament and
emotional, social, and cognitive development, also influence mental health
and well-being. Several factors are reported to promote positive mental health
development regardless of cultural background (e.g., positive and nurturing
Working With Young
Children Living in Stressful
Environments
Tammy L. Hughes and Cydney V. Quinn
14
http://dx.doi.org/10.1037/0000197-015
Healthy Development in Young Children: Evidence-Based Interventions for Early Education,
V. C. Alfonso and G. J. DuPaul (Editors)
Copyright © 2020 by the American Psychological Association. All rights reserved.
Co
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298 Hughes and Quinn
relationships, structure and expectations that are consistent and reliable, expe-
riences that are developmentally appropriate, experiences tailored to the child’s
abilities, access to medical care and education) when delivered in a safe envi-
ronment with access to adequate nourishment (Murray, 2003; Society for
Research in Child Development, 2009).
Also, there are universal experiences that are known to have negative impact
on children’s health and mental health called adverse childhood experiences (ACEs).
ACEs include abuse and neglect in addition to exposure to household dys-
functions (e.g., substance abuse, mental illness in household, parental separation
or divorce, incarcerated family member, domestic violence; Felitti et al., 1998).
Some experiences, such as maltreatment, family violence, and toxic stress
(early prolonged exposure to trauma with the accompanying biological stress
response of fight-or-flight), not only have immediate negative effectshttps://doi.org/10.1177/1476718X15616833
Journal of Early Childhood Research
2017, Vol. 15(3) 305 –322
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DOI: 10.1177/1476718X15616833
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Play as third space between home
and school: Bridging cultural
discourses
Raudhah Yahya and Elizabeth Ann Wood
University of Sheffield, UK
Abstract
This article examines play as a conceptual third space that serves as a bridge between home and school
discourses. Using sociocultural theories and an interpretivist framework, 19 immigrant mothers and their
children in Canada were interviewed about their play experiences at home and in preschools. The findings
reveal that children and teachers utilise play as third space in various ways. Although there is some cultural
dissonance experienced by children, this study illustrates ways that children use play as a bridge between
home and school and explores strategies that teachers use in supporting children’s use of play as third space.
As children navigate these two cultural sites, they accumulate funds of knowledge and life experiences, which
then meet, interact and perhaps fuse together in the conceptual third space. The conclusion proposes that
‘play as third space’ can be used as a conceptual framework for educators and practitioners to support
children’s transition from home to school and assist children who experience discontinuities.
Keywords
cultural discourses, cultural dissonance, home and school, play, sociocultural theories, third space
Introduction
Although play is considered to have universal benefits for children’s learning and development,
recent studies support the notion that play in humans is socially and culturally constructed (Brooker,
2011a). There are cultural variations in play that are evident in children’s home and preschool/
school cultures (Rogers, 2011), and recent research contests dominant Euro-American assump-
tions about universal developmental benefits which emphasise sameness rather than difference
(Adair and Doucet, 2014). Some children experience a virtual gap between home and school cul-
tures, often resulting in difficulty with negotiating institutional rules and structures, including those
that regulate play (Levinson, 2005). Cultural dissonance may be created from misalignment of
home and school cultures and is a significant concern in play (Wood, 2014a). The aim of this article
is to extend the concept of play as a social and cultural construct and to examine play as third space
Corresponding author:
Raudhah Yahya, University of Sheffield, Sheffield, South Yorkshire S10 2TN, UK.
Email: [email protected]
616833ECR0010.1177/1476718X15616833Journal of Early Childhood ResearchYahya and Wood
research-article2016
Article
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http://crossmark.crossref.org/dialog/?doi=10.1177\%2F7 Rhythm and repetition
Introduction
In this chapter, the security and coherence offered by rhythm and the learning
opportunities given by repetition are discussed in the context of the Steiner
early-childhood setting. The idea of the breathing rhythm is introduced,
and we explain how the young child learns through repetition in a spiral
of development. Examples are given of the rhythmical and repeated rou-
tines for the day, the week and the year, through which young children
can build trust in their environment and the adults caring for them there,
including the value of the repeated story and of working with the seasons of
the year, in songs, stories and activities. The celebration of festivals brings
special highlights to the year, and we consider how this benefits the child
and involves parents too.
Rhythm and repetition as key concepts
Rhythm and repetition stand alongside imitation and example as key
concepts of Steiner Waldorf early-childhood education, and they will be
reflected in the practice of any setting. Rhythm always brings order but not
rigidity, form but not stultification. Repetition brings the opportunity for a
deepening of appreciation and understanding, whether it is of a well-loved
story or a regular weekly walk.
All living things, from the simplest life form upwards, work with rhythm
and repetition, and it is this that makes complicated lives possible. The
Steiner practitioner considers this is doubly so for young children who have
the mission in their early years of trying to find coherence and meaning
82 Rhythm and repetition
in their lives. In Steiner settings, this task is supported by working with
rhythm from tiny routines, such as a sequence for careful washing of the
hands, through the rhythms of the day, the week and the year. Repeating
these rhythms, large and small, brings a feeling of security to the children.
They can experience how things go and know that their experience will be
reinforced. Life is not random but held by the adults in a safe way.
The overarching rhythm of the year brings something more through its
connection first with the seasons and second with an appropriate cycle
of festivals. These provide the high points, prepared for, celebrated and
tidied away, which will be repeated and developed each year. Festivals lift
everyone out of day-to-day life and build connections with a much wider
community. Careful choice of festivals and seasonal celebrations gives the
young child a sense of being a small part in a global community.
The importance of rhythm
Steiner practitioners advocate that rhythm is a fundamental source of secu-
rity for children. The fact that their coats hang in the same place today as
they did yesterday, that the paints and brushes are arranged in the same
way this week as they were last week on painting day, and that the lantern
festival comes at the time of year when the daylight is decreasing, all help
them to feel that their worldF a i r D e a l i n g ( S h o r t E x c e r p t )
Reading: Ch. 2. Being formative (Learning Stories in Practice)
Author: Carr, Margaret; Lee, Wendy
Editor: N/A
Publisher: SAGE Publication Date: 2019 Pages: 13-33
Course: ECED 406 93Q 2022S1-2 Early Learning Curriculum in the Pre-School Years
Course Code: 93Q Term: 2022S1-2
Department: ECED
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2
Being Formative
Feedback which focuses on what needs to be done can encourage all
to believe th at they can improve. Such feedback can enhance learning,
both directly through the effort th at can ensue and indirectly by sup
porting the motivation to invest such effort. A culture of success
should be promoted where every student can make achievements by
building on their previous performance, rather than by being com
pared w ith others. (Assessment Reform Group, 2002: 46)
L e a r n in g S to r ie s in P r a c tic e
-— ------------ “ ------------- -~ — \
• Assessment for learning, formative assessment, is any assessment for which
the first priority in design and purpose is to promote childrens learning
• Learning Stories are formative assessments
• A Learning Story assessment portfolio will include five dimensions
(ABCDE)
• Learning is learnable
< J
Teacher q u e s tio n : A re L e a rn in g S tories re a iiy assessments?
The quote that opens this chapter insists, from research findings, that ‘feedback
which focuses on what needs to be done can encourage all to believe that they
can improve and contributes to a ‘culture of success’ in the early childhood cen
tre or provision. Learning Stories are narrative assessments that provide feedback
to learners and their families - and to the teachers who teach them - aboqt chil
dren’s learning journeys and the strengthening, or progress, of their learning along
the way. They always include the equivalent of a ‘What next?’ section or a sugges
tion within the story about what the next learning step might be, and they often
refer back to earlier Learning Stories in the child’s portfolio to provide evidence
that the learning is progressing. In other words, the aim is to push the learning
forward, and expand it, not ju st to describe an event (albeit the event might make
charming reading). They Vol.:(0123456789)
Studies in Philosophy and Education (2019) 38:411–426
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11217-018-9643-2
1 3
Readiness for School, Time and Ethics in Educational Practice
Agnieszka Bates1
Published online: 26 November 2018
© The Author(s) 2018
Abstract
‘Taking time seriously’ is an enduring human concern and questions about the nature of
time bear heavily on the meaning of childhood. In the context of the continuing debates on
readiness for school, ‘taking time seriously’ has contributed to policies on ‘early interven-
tions’ which claim to support children in reaching their full potential but limit this potential
when enacted in practice. Much of current policymaking takes the meaning of time for
granted within a ‘quantitative’ view of time as a neutral, standardised parameter. In eve-
ryday educational practice, this view of time may lead to an excessive preoccupation with
assessing standardised characteristics of ‘school ready’ children, who are expected to fol-
low a uniform path of development predetermined by their biological clock. However, the
quantitative view of time has been challenged both in philosophical and scientific thought
by an understanding of time as complex, irreversible and emergent in the present. George
Herbert Mead’s ‘philosophy of the present’ and Ilya Prigogine’s ‘arrow of time’ point to
important implications of a ‘complex’ view of time for readiness for school as an event
rather than a fixed set of characteristics that children should possess upon entry to primary
school. Engaging in educational practice as it unfolds in the present also calls for ethics
that are not focused on adhering to fixed moral universals but on our actions ‘here and
now’ and attending to the ethical meaning that arises in children’s responses to our actions.
Keywords Readiness for school · Time · Ethics · Complexity · G.H. Mead · Prigogine
Children only get one chance at education and every child deserves the
opportunity to reach their full potential… childhood is short, and when it comes
to a child’s education, there’s no time to waste.
(Nicky Morgan, Department for Education 2016a, p. 4)
Introduction
The concern about time articulated by the former English Education Secretary Nicky
Morgan is shared by policymakers in many countries. The idea that ‘there’s no time to
waste’ often surfaces as an ‘urgent’ need to reform education and ‘swiftly’ tackle ‘under-
performance’ (DfE 2016a). In the international policy space, every 3 years the ‘ticking
* Agnieszka Bates
[email protected]
1 School of Education and Lifelong Learning, University of East Anglia (UEA), Norwich, UK
http://orcid.org/0000-0001-5138-5623
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412 A. Bates
1 3
clock’ of PISA confers prestige on education systems whose 15-year-olds have ‘outper-
formed’ others in the Programme for International Student Assessment (OECD 2015).
In the UK, a poor PISA Full Terms & Conditions of access and use can be found at
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Policy and the image of the child: a critical
analysis of drivers and levers in English early years
curriculum policy
Zoe Lewis
To cite this article: Zoe Lewis (2021) Policy and the image of the child: a critical analysis of
drivers and levers in English early years curriculum policy, Early Years, 41:4, 321-335, DOI:
10.1080/09575146.2018.1501552
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Policy and the image of the child: a critical analysis of drivers
and levers in English early years curriculum policy
Zoe Lewis School of Education and Social Work, Birmingham City University,
Birmingham, UK
ABSTRACT
Using a post-structuralist framework, this article seeks to analyse the
ways in which English early years curriculum policy has led to
different constructions of young children. Although policy is often
presented as being logical and factual, policy making can also be
seen as a value-laden process in which meanings are socially con-
structed and can, therefore be deconstructed and reconstructed.
In this article, I analyse the different interests that are served by
curriculum policy, the intentions of policy makers and how policy
levers and drivers might combine to produce potentially conflict-
ing images of the child. I conclude that these conflicting images
create tensions between policy makers’ pursuit of cost efficiency
and the rights of young children in early years settings. However,
post-structural analysis suggests that these are political decisions
and things do not have to be this way. Those working in early
years can challenge policy makers’ conF a i r D e a l i n g ( S h o r t E x c e r p t )
Reading: Ch. 10. Thinking and Doing Otherwise: Reconceptualist Contributions to Early Childhood Education and
Care (Early Years Education and Care in Canada: A Historical and Philosophical Overview)
Author: Berman, Rachel; Abawi, Zuhra
Editor: Jagger, Susan
Publisher: Canadian Scholars Publication Date: 2019 Pages: 165-190
Course: ECED 406 93Q 2022S1-2 Early Learning Curriculum in the Pre-School Years
Course Code: 93Q Term: 2022S1-2
Department: ECED
Copyright Statement of Responsibility
This copy was made pursuant to the Fair Dealing Requirements for UBC Faculty and Staff, which may be found at
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CHAPTER 10
Thinking and Doing Otherwise:
Reconceptualist Contributions to Early
Childhood Education and Care
Rachel Berman a n d Zuhra A b a w i
GUIDING QUESTIONS:
1. What are some of the reconceptualist approaches to rethinking
early childhood education and care (ECEC) in terms of theory and
practice?
2. How might dominant developmentalist discourses of childhood
be challenged by reconceptualist contributions and lead us to re
imagine children and childhood?
INTRODUCTION
The reconceptualist movement in early childhood education and care (ECEC)
began in the late 1980s,spurred on by scholars and practitioners who sought
to shift away from dom inant discourses of developmentalist-based theories
o f early childhood by implementing a multidisciplinary and multi-theoretical
approach to how we th in k about and practise E C E C (Bloch, 2014; Curry &
Cannella, 2013). Simply put, reconceptualists look to disciplines beyond de
velopmental psychology, such as anthropology,sociology, and gender stud
ies, and to theoretical frameworks outside constructivism and bio-ecological
166 Early Years Education and Care in Canada
systems theory, such the frameworks discussed in this chapter^ in order
to challenge dominant assumptions and offer other ways o f conceptualizing
and practising E C EC .
Reconceptualists argue that dominant narratives about early childhood
and educating young children have been conceptualized through Western
norms o f childhood development that are standardized,colourblind, ahistor-
ical, apolitical, and, supposedly, neutral (Iannacci & W hitty, 2009; Lubeck,
1994; MacNaughton & Davis, 2009; Pacini-Ketchabaw & Nxumalo, 2013;
Silin, 1995; Taylor, 2007). These norms of devF a i r D e a l i n g ( S h o r t E x c e r p t )
Reading: Ch. 1. Theories and Perspectives (Theories Into Practice: Understanding and Rethinking Our Work with
Young Children and the EYLF)
Author: Nolan, Andrea; Raban-Bisby, Bridie
Editor: n/a
Publisher: Teaching Solutions Publication Date: 2015 Pages: 5-14
Course: ECED 406 93Q 2022S1-2 Early Learning Curriculum in the Pre-School Years
Course Code: 93Q Term: 2022S1-2
Department: ECED
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Chapter 1
Theories and perspectives
^Different theories about early childhood inform
approaches to children’s learning and development. Early
childhood educators draw upon a range o f perspectives in
their work … (E Y L F p.ll)
Early childhood educators see the words theories* and perspectives’ used
interchangeably in the Early Years Learning Framework. However, on the
very same page where theories and perspectives are mentioned, the
document also notes that educators are .drawing on a range of perspectives
and theories* - suggesting that these are somewhat different. In searching
out definitions, it is possible to pinpoint how these two views impact on
understandings of children’s learning and development and how these
understandings influence practice when working with young children.
In the field of early childhood education and care, a iheor is a group of
ideas that explain a certain topic within the domain of children’s learning
and development. Typically, a theory is developed through the use of
thoughtful and rational forms of abstract and generalised thinking. In
addition, a theory is often based on general principles that are independent
of what is being explained. So, someone who considers given facts and
comes up with a possible explanation for those facts is called a theorist.
Some say that theorists come up with abstract ideas and beliefs and then
spend their lives trying to prove them, because ideas can always be disputed
until proven absolutely. W hat theories provide are ways of knowing* that
influence thinking and impact on practice in particular ways.
A < specf : •. , however, is the way something is .seen. The meaning of
perspective in this context will have something to do with looking or
viewing - taking up a particular stanceFull Terms & Conditions of access and use can be found at
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Education 3-13
International Journal of Primary, Elementary and Early Years Education
ISSN: 0300-4279 (Print) 1475-7575 (Online) Journal homepage: https://www.tandfonline.com/loi/rett20
Redefining the importance of childrens voices
in personal social emotional development
curriculum using the Mosaic Approach
Aimilia Rouvali & Vassiliki Riga
To cite this article: Aimilia Rouvali & Vassiliki Riga (2019) Redefining the importance of childrens
voices in personal social emotional development curriculum using the Mosaic Approach, Education
3-13, 47:8, 998-1013, DOI: 10.1080/03004279.2018.1553990
To link to this article: https://doi.org/10.1080/03004279.2018.1553990
Published online: 05 Dec 2018.
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Redefining the importance of children’s voices in personal social
emotional development curriculum using the Mosaic Approach
Aimilia Rouvali and Vassiliki Riga
Department of Educational Sciences & Early Childhood Education, University of Patras, Patra, Greece
ABSTRACT
The research explores the implementation of the Mosaic Approach into a
Greek early years’ setting. For the data collection, 21 children were
observed using cameras, tours, mapping, and researcher’s interviews
with teachers and parents. Special consideration was given to the newly
added tool of peer-to-peer interviews. Results depicted children’s need
for quality relationships with peers and adults and their favourite and
least favourite places in their school. The authors suggest the adaptation
of the Mosaic Approach into the Personal, Social and Emotional
Development curriculum as an educational tool of children’s rights
which empowers their voices, as well as reinforcing their self-esteem
and ability to form quality relationships.
ARTICLE HISTORY
Received 4 July 2018
Accepted 26 Full Terms & Conditions of access and use can be found at
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Curriculum Inquiry
ISSN: 0362-6784 (Print) 1467-873X (Online) Journal homepage: https://www.tandfonline.com/loi/rcui20
Pedagogical gatherings in early childhood
education: Mapping interferences in emergent
curriculum
Fikile Nxumalo, Cristina D. Vintimilla & Narda Nelson
To cite this article: Fikile Nxumalo, Cristina D. Vintimilla & Narda Nelson (2018) Pedagogical
gatherings in early childhood education: Mapping interferences in emergent curriculum, Curriculum
Inquiry, 48:4, 433-453, DOI: 10.1080/03626784.2018.1522930
To link to this article: https://doi.org/10.1080/03626784.2018.1522930
Published online: 16 Nov 2018.
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Pedagogical gatherings in early childhood education:
Mapping interferences in emergent curriculum
Fikile Nxumaloa, Cristina D. Vintimillab and Narda Nelsonc
aUniversity of Texas at Austin, TX, USA; bYork University, Toronto, ON, Canada; cUniversity of Victoria
Child Care Services, BC, Canada
ABSTRACT
In this article, the authors critically and generatively encounter
emergent curriculum, drawing from their experiences working as
pedagogistas in three different early childhood education centres
in Western Canada. The intent is to engage with the concept of
emergence as that which can bring ethical and political engage-
ments with curriculum and pedagogy; complicating understand-
ings of emergent curriculum as simply following the lead of
children. The particular interruptive orientations that the authors
bring forward include: possibilities for responding to and cultivat-
ing the conditions for emergence in ways that disrupt the man-
agerial concerns of everyday practice; troubling the co-optation of
emergence by human-centred consumptive practice; and unset-
tling emergence in conversation with settler colonialism and aSpringer International Handbooks of Education
Marilyn Fleer
Bert van Oers Editors
International
Handbook of
Early Childhood
Education
Springer International Handbooks of Education
More information about this series at http://www.springer.com/series/6189
http://www.springer.com/series/6189
Marilyn Fleer • Bert van Oers
Editors
International Handbook
of Early Childhood
Education
Volume I
ISSN 2197-1951 ISSN 2197-196X (electronic)
Springer International Handbooks of Education
ISBN 978-94-024-0925-3 ISBN 978-94-024-0927-7 (eBook)
DOI 10.1007/978-94-024-0927-7
Library of Congress Control Number: 2017954294
© Springer Science+Business Media B.V. 2018
This work is subject to copyright. All rights are reserved by the Publisher, whether the whole or part of
the material is concerned, specifically the rights of translation, reprinting, reuse of illustrations, recitation,
broadcasting, reproduction on microfilms or in any other physical way, and transmission or information
storage and retrieval, electronic adaptation, computer software, or by similar or dissimilar methodology
now known or hereafter developed.
The use of general descriptive names, registered names, trademarks, service marks, etc. in this publication
does not imply, even in the absence of a specific statement, that such names are exempt from the relevant
protective laws and regulations and therefore free for general use.
The publisher, the authors and the editors are safe to assume that the advice and information in this book
are believed to be true and accurate at the date of publication. Neither the publisher nor the authors or the
editors give a warranty, express or implied, with respect to the material contained herein or for any errors
or omissions that may have been made. The publisher remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims
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Printed on acid-free paper
This Springer imprint is published by Springer Nature
The registered company is Springer Science+Business Media B.V.
The registered company address is: Van Godewijckstraat 30, 3311 GX Dordrecht, The Netherlands
Editors
Marilyn Fleer
Faculty of Education
Monash University
Melbourne, VIC, Australia
Bert van Oers
Department of Theory & Research in
Education
VU Amsterdam
Amsterdam, The Netherlands
v
Contents of Volume I
1 International Trends in Research: Redressing
the North-South Balance in What Matters for Early
Childhood Education Research ............................................................. 1
Marilyn Fleer and Bert van Oers
Part I Theoretical Perspectives
Marilyn Fleer and Bert van Oers
2 Governing Childhood ............................................................................. 33
Iris Duhn
3 Cultural-Historical and Activity Theories Informing
Early Childhood Education ................................................................... 47
Marilyn Fleer and Nikolai Veresov
4 ‘Humpty
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