Asmt 4 - Education
Option A: Personal Philosophy
Using the course readings as a guide, write a 8-10-page paper (including References) stating your theoretically grounded personal philosophical approach to early childhood education and care. Provide specific examples to illustrate how you as might apply your philosophy to practice as an early year’s educator, leader or advocate. The work must be grounded in the course content and include direct connections and reference to the course readings and related literature that you have independently researched. Please ensure that your thoughts are organized, concise and employ Times New Roman font, size 12, double spacing with American Psychological Association (APA 7th edition) formatting.
Option B: Literature Review
Choose a topic covered in this course that is of particular interest to you. Research and choose a selection of academic writing on your chosen topic (for example, 3-4 journal articles). Write a 8-10-page literature review (including References) that is grounded in your chosen topic and that includes:
· A brief summary of each chosen reading (connecting the readings by topics and authors, and linking one sub-topic to the next);
· A final summary that synthesizes all the research messages, and;
· A short concluding section that offers your own, grounded perspectives on the topic.
In this paper, pay direct attention to the concise and sequential presentation of the material while also ensuring that writing is in Times New Roman font, size 12, double spacing with American Psychological Association (APA 7th) formatting. Please ensure that you add three main headers (Introduction, Literature Review and Conclusions) and a Reference list with citations matching your references.
For Options A or B
· Check with the instructor regarding the topic/books or references proposed
· Please ensure that your thoughts are organized clearly and concisely
· Employ Times New Roman, Arial or Calibri font, size 12, double spacing, first line indent for paragraphsand hanging indents for references following American Psychological Association (APA 7th) formatting
· UBC Library has REFWORKS for all students for free (
https://guides.library.ubc.ca/refworksLinks to an external site.
) - do make use of this excellent database for your references!V o l u m e 3 3 N u m b e r 2 J u n e 2 0 0 8 33
Outdoor play
Does avoiding the risks reduce the benefits?
helen little
shirley Wyver
Institute of Early Childhood, Macquarie University
AlthOuGh thE tErM ‘risk-tAkiNG’ often has negative connotations, the reality is
that the willingness to engage in some risky activities provides opportunities to learn
new skills, try new behaviours and ultimately reach our potential. Challenge and risk,
in particular during outdoor play, allows children to test the limits of their physical,
intellectual and social development. This paper examines the current status of outdoor
play in urbanised, Western societies such as Australia and provides a critical analysis
of the literature to present an argument for the inclusion of positive risk-taking
experiences in children’s outdoor play, principally in the context of early childhood
education. The increasingly restrictive regulation of early childhood services is
considered in terms of the impact of risk avoidance in outdoor play for children’s optimal
growth and development. Finally, a model of possible developmental outcomes resulting
from the minimisation of risk-taking in early childhood contexts is proposed.
WithiN thE EArlY ChilDhOOD field, play has
long been acknowledged as an important context
for children’s learning and development. Play is a
significant aspect of their lives, reflecting their social
and cultural contexts. Consequently, changes within
these contexts impact on both the nature and quality
of children’s play experiences.
This paper aims to examine outdoor play in the light of
social and environmental factors that have impacted on
children’s play experiences, particularly in urban Western
culture. It provides a review of the literature since 1990,
drawing on findings from a range of disciplines. It is argued
that stimulating and challenging experiences involving
physical risk are an important and necessary aspect of
children’s healthy growth and development; yet social,
institutional and educational factors apply implicit and explicit
pressure on early childhood staff to eliminate or minimise
experiences involving physical risk. The reviewed literature
was accessed through electronic databases (EBSCO, OVID,
Science Direct) and includes empirical research and other
scholarly sources such as practitioner viewpoints to provide
a comprehensive discussion of the relevant issues. The
significant role of early childhood education settings and
practitioners in supporting opportunities for well-managed
risks in the context of stimulating and challenging outdoor
play provision is considered.
Value of play
There has been considerable research documenting the
vital role of play in fostering optimal growth, learning and
development across all domains—physical, cognitive,
social, emotional—throughout childhood (Fisher, 1992;
Isenberg & Quisenberry, 2002; Stine, 1997). Play provides
a vehicle for children to G U E S T E D I T O R I A L
Neuroscience, Early Childhood Education and Play: We are Doing
it Right!
Stephen Rushton
Published online: 12 February 2011
� Springer Science+Business Media, LLC 2011
Abstract This editorial examines neuroscience and its
impact on the field of education. Starting with a narrative
between two young children, the author intertwines
research with basic principles of learning, using the inter-
action between two 4-year-olds to illustrate the precepts.
The four principles are: (1) the brain is uniquely organized;
(2) the brain is continually growing; (3) a ‘‘brain-compat-
ible’’ classroom enables connection of learning to positive
emotions; and (4) children’s brains need to be immersed in
real-life, hands-on, and meaningful learning experiences.
The editorial concludes with an illustration of how the
brain works while two children are playing at the small
animal center in their classroom.
Keywords Neuroscience � Play � Early childhood
education � Four principles
The Power of Emotions
Returning from our weekly Kindergarten swimming les-
sons, Alexandra was in a hurry to get to the classroom and
have her snack before launching into her hour of free
exploration. On her way, she passed a group of boys
enjoying their snack. They were engrossed in a deep con-
versation about dinosaurs. Alexandra’s backpack inad-
vertently knocked over Michael’s glass-lined thermos
container, a relic from the past. The inside shattered when
it hit the ground. Alexandra turned pale, became speech-
less, and was afraid to move. You could see the excitement
drain out of her. Michael, on the other hand, looked
fascinated as he held up the thermos and a trickling sound
rattled inside, somewhat akin to a modern-day rain-stick.
I watched Alexandra’s face turn red, consumed with
some internal sense of guilt. Nothing was said between the
two. A moment etched in time. Should I intervene? What
would I say? I stood motionless, waiting. Decisively,
Alexandra ran to the paint center, grabbed a long, thin
brush, dipped it in the black paint and started methodically
painting. She began at the top right corner and slowly,
deliberately, painted the paper one precise stroke at a time.
Until the once-white paper was covered in black paint.
Then she took a deep breath and let it all out as she gazed
toward her emotions displayed on the paper. A smile slowly
spread across her face. Placing the paint brush back in its
container, she sprang back into life, headed over to the
house center and started playing as though nothing had
happened.
(Junior Kindergarten, Ontario, Canada).
Introduction
Many years have passed since I taught Kindergarten. And
yet the memory of watching Alexander’s shock at breaking
Michael’s thermos and the subsequent release of her
emotions through the painting etched a vivid memory
within my own neuro-pathways.
I often share this story with my pre-service students and
early childhood teachers,Volume 5, Number 1, © JSSE 2006 ISSN 1618-5293
Lothar Krappmann
The Rights of the Child as a Challenge to Human Rights
Education
Often human rights education of children does not include childrens
rights. Children get the impression that human rights are rights of adults
and are mainly violated in faraway regions of the world. The United Nations
Convention on the Rights of the Child (1989) ratified by almost all states
has clarified that human rights are valid for children as well, that they have
a right to be educated about these rights and to claim these childrens
human rights. This step has opened a new approach to childrens human
rights education, because rights of children belong to the social reality
which children experience and, therefore, are not only theoretically learned,
but can also be actively implemented. The article argues that the active
exercise of their rights challenges childrens evolving capacities and
promotes their insight in childrens and human rights.
Keywords:
Human rights, human rights education, child, rights of the child, childrens
rights, Declaration of Human Rights, Convention on the Rights of the Child
1 Human Rights Education in the Universal Declaration of
Human Rights (1948)
Education about human rights is indissolubly connected with the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights that was proclaimed by the General Assembly
of the United Nations in 1948. Firstly, all members of the human family
should know which rights they irreversibly enjoy, so that in case of
violations they can complain and claim their rights. And secondly, they
should know these human rights, because these rights form the basis upon
which human beings have to become active in order to strive for full
implementation of these rights everywhere where they are not observed,
and to assist others, who are deprived of their human rights.
For these reasons, human rights education as such is one of the rights
enshrined in the Universal Declaration of Human Rights. Article 26 (2)
demands that education, amongst other goals, shall be directed to the
strengthening of respect for human rights and fundamental freedoms. It
shall promote understanding, tolerance and friendship among all nations,
60
Volume 5, Number 1, © JSSE 2006 ISSN 1618-5293
racial and religious groups. Since the Declaration of Human Rights was
adopted, there was consent that serious efforts must be made to make
these rights known to everybody. There was consent as well, that children
must be a target of prior importance, when knowledge of and insight in
human rights shall be spread.
It took some time, however, until it was understood that more than
thorough information of adults and younger persons was needed.
Eventually the United Nations Decade of HFull Terms & Conditions of access and use can be found at
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Early Years
ISSN: 0957-5146 (Print) 1472-4421 (Online) Journal homepage: https://www.tandfonline.com/loi/ceye20
Realizing childrens right to participation in early
childhood settings: some critical issues in a
Norwegian context
Berit Bae
To cite this article: Berit Bae (2010) Realizing childrens right to participation in early childhood
settings: some critical issues in a Norwegian context, Early Years, 30:3, 205-218, DOI:
10.1080/09575146.2010.506598
To link to this article: https://doi.org/10.1080/09575146.2010.506598
Published online: 09 Oct 2010.
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Early Years
Vol. 30, No. 3, October 2010, 205–218
ISSN 0957-5146 print/ISSN 1472-4421 online
© 2010 TACTYC
DOI: 10.1080/09575146.2010.506598
http://www.informaworld.com
Realizing children’s right to participation in early childhood
settings: some critical issues in a Norwegian context
Berit Bae*
Department of Teacher Education and International Studies, Oslo University College,
Oslo, Norway
Taylor and FrancisCEYE_A_506598.sgm10.1080/09575146.2010.506598Early Years0957-5146 (print)/1472-4421 (online)Original Article2010Taylor & Francis303000000October [email protected]
The UN Convention on the Rights of the Child has during recent decades
influenced professionals and policy-makers in Norway as well as in other
countries, resulting in changes in documents regulating early childhood
institutions. Little is known, however, about the way this right is understood and
realized in everyday practice. How is the concept of participation understood by
professionals in the field? What issues emerge as problematic in everyday practice?
Combining findings from an evaluation study and research from early childhood
institutions, it is possible to unravel three problem areas. They are described under
these headings: (a) Interpreting participation with a bias towards individualism? (b)
Play and playful interaction – an integral part of children’s right to participation?
(c) Are the youngest children ‘mature’ enough? The article is roFull Terms & Conditions of access and use can be found at
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International Journal of Early Years Education
ISSN: 0966-9760 (Print) 1469-8463 (Online) Journal homepage: https://www.tandfonline.com/loi/ciey20
Early childhood professionals and children’s rights:
tensions and possibilities around the United
Nations General Comment No. 7 on Children’s
Rights
Glenda Mac Naughton , Patrick Hughes & Kylie Smith
To cite this article: Glenda Mac Naughton , Patrick Hughes & Kylie Smith (2007) Early childhood
professionals and children’s rights: tensions and possibilities around the United Nations General
Comment�No.�7 on Children’s Rights, International Journal of Early Years Education, 15:2,
161-170, DOI: 10.1080/09669760701288716
To link to this article: https://doi.org/10.1080/09669760701288716
Published online: 04 May 2007.
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International Journal of Early Years Education
Vol. 15, No. 2, June 2007, pp. 161–170
ISSN 0966-9760 (print)/ISSN 1469-8463 (online)/07/020161–10
© 2007 Taylor & Francis
DOI: 10.1080/09669760701288716
Early childhood professionals and
children’s rights: tensions and
possibilities around the United Nations
General Comment No. 7 on Children’s
Rights
Glenda Mac Naughtona, Patrick Hughesb* and Kylie Smitha
aUniversity of Melbourne, Australia; bDeakin University, Australia
Taylor and FrancisCIEY_A_228775.sgm10.1080/09669760701288716International Journal of Early Years Education0966-9760 (print)/1469-8463 (online)Original Article2007Taylor & Francis152000000June [email protected]
Young children’s views are heard rarely in public debates and are often subordinated to adults’
views. This article examines how early childhood staff could support and enhance young children’s
participation in public decision making. We argue that when early childhood staff use their exper-
tise in young children’s physical, social and cognitive development to facilitate consultations with
young children, they are likely to reinforce the view that young children are unable to form and
express their own views. Whatever their intentions, this weakens the notF a i r D e a l i n g ( S h o r t E x c e r p t )
Reading: Linking Play and Relationship (in Ch. 4. Relationships) (excerpt) (Authentic Childhood: Experiencing
Reggio Emilia in the Classroom)
Author: Fraser, Susan
Editor: N/A
Publisher: Nelson Publication Date: 2006 Pages: 87-89
Course: ECED 400 93Q 2022S1-2 Introduction to Early Childhood Education and Care
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
http://copyright.ubc.ca/requirements/fair-dealing/. The copy may only be used for the purpose of research, private
study, criticism, review, news reporting, education, satire or parody. If the copy is used for the purpose of review,
criticism or news reporting, the source and the name of the author must be mentioned. The use of this copy for any
other purpose may require the permission of the copyright owner.
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Linking Play and Relationship
For the last one hundred years, since the Froebelian kindergartens were estab
lished in North America, play has been given the central position philosophi
cally in most early childhood education programs. The key question for early
childhood educators in implementing the Reggio Emilia approach is this: If we
are to place relationship at the centre of the curriculum, how will this affect our
belief in the importance of play? Loris Malaguzzi said, We should not forget
NEL C H A P T E R 4 Relationships 87
the relevant role of make-believe play. This type of symbolic play is pervasive
in young childrens experience and has an important role in the social devel
opment of intelligence, development of the skills needed for reciprocity
among children, the potential for children to persist in activity and conversa
tion together, and development of the ability to create symbols (1993, 12).
Children in the preschools in Reggio Emilia spend much of their time engaged
in play, but the teachers in Reggio Emilia do not focus their attention on the
childrens play, as do educators in many other programs.
In preschools where play is the central philosophical perspective, teachers
spend much of their time and energy on creating environments that foster play.
Then, when children become fully engaged in play, the teachers tend to with
draw and observe. Therefore, the teacher is more of a facilitator than a partici
pator with the children in the play. For instance, the teachers at the Sexsmith
Multicultural Preschool, described above, observed that the children used the
cooking theme most frequently in their play in the dramatic play area. The
teachers then used this theme as the foundation for building the content of the
program. The children, as they prepared the fo65
EXPLORING THE RESISTANCE: AN AUSTRALIAN
PERSPECTIVE ON EDUCATING FOR SUSTAINABILITY IN
EARLY CHILDHOOD
Sue Elliott and Julie Davis
SUMMARY
Climate change and sustainability are issues of global significance. While other education sectors have
implemented education for sustainability for many years, the early childhood sector has been slow to take up
this challenge. This position paper poses the question: Why has this sector been so slow to engage with
sustainability? Explanations are proposed based on a review of research literature and the authors’ long
engagement in seeking to bring early childhood education and education for sustainability together. The
imperative is for the early childhood sector to engage in education for sustainability without delay and to ‘get
active’ for a sustainable future.
RÉSUMÉ
Les changements climatiques et le développement durable sont chargés d´une signification globale. Alors que
d´autres secteurs de l´éducation se sont impliqués dans l’éducation au développement durable depuis
plusieurs années, celui réservé à la petite enfance a tardé à relever le défi. La question que pose cet article
est: Pourquoi ce secteur a pris tant de temps à s´engager vis-à-vis le développement durable? Des
explications sont proposées sur la base d’une revue de la recherche et de l’engagement des auteurs qui
tentent de réunir l´éducation de la petite enfance et l´éducation pour le développement durable. Il est impératif
que le secteur de la petite enfance s´engage dans l´éducation pour le développement durable sans délai et
qu’il demeure alerte dans le futur.
RESUMEN
El cambio climático y la sustentabilidad son cuestiones de importancia global. Mientras que otros sectores
educativos han implementado la educación para la sustentabilidad hace muchos años, el sector de la
temprana infancia ha sido lento en asumir este desafío. Este trabajo plantea la siguiente cuestión: ¿Por qué
este sector sido tan lento para comprometerse con la sustentabilidad? Las explicaciones que se proponen
han sido basadas en un estudio de investigación literaria y el largo compromiso del autor buscando unir la
educación de la temprana infancia con la educación para la sustentabilidad. El imperativo es que el sector de
la temprana infancia se comprometa con la educación para la sustentabilidad sin más demora y se plantee
activamente por un futuro sustentable.
Keywords: Sustainability, early childhood education, education for sustainability, environmental
education.
66 International Journal of Early Childhood, Vol. 41, No. 2, 2009
INTRODUCTION
National and international media events, reports and conferences such as Al
Gore’s An Inconvenient Truth (2006), the Stern Review of the economics of climate
change (2006), the reports of the Intergovernmental Panel on Climate Change
(2006; 2007), the Garnaut Climate Change Review (Commonwealth
Government of Australia, 2008) and most recently, the United NationsJANUARY 2020 33 Vol. 45 No. 1
JOURNAL OF CHILDHOOD STUDIES ARTICLES FROM RESEARCH
Ethics of Care in Practice: An Observational Study of
Interactions and Power Relations between Children and
Educators in Urban Ontario Early Childhood Settings
Rachel Langford and Brooke Richardson
Rachel Langford is a professor in the school of early childhood studies at Ryerson University. She is the principal investigator of an
SSHRC-awarded project that seeks to theorize and frame a robust and coherent integration of care, ethics of care, and care work into
Canadian childcare advocacy, policy, and practice. She is a co-editor of an edited volume, Caring for Children: Social Movements and
Public Policy in Canada (UBC Press), and the editor of an anthology, Theorizing Feminist Ethics of Care in Early Childhood Practice:
Possibilities and Dangers (Bloomsbury Academic Press).
Email: [email protected]
Brooke Richardson is a postdoctoral fellow in the department of sociology at Brock University. She is currently working on an SSHRC-
funded project examining the increasing privatization of childcare in Canada and editing a forthcoming anthology, Mothering on the
Edge: A Critical Examination of Mothering within the Child Protection System (Demeter Press).
Email: [email protected]
Dominant discourses around care and care workers
in Canadian early childhood programs conceptualizes
care as instrumental1 and carried out by women with a
“natural” propensity for the work. The idea that care is
“natural” to women (increasingly, poor and racialized
women) has undermined, and continues to undermine,
its social and economic value while situating it as immune
to change. At the same time, dominant conceptualizations
of care work in early childhood programs are relegated to
outcome-based activities and interactions instrumentally
addressing children’s immediate physical and social
needs. These discourses and understandings contribute
to care’s taken-for-granted nature, with care often taking
place in the private sphere, and systematic devaluation
in the formal market economy (Daley, 2012). Ironically,
“care is so fundamental to our capacity to live together
that we simply cannot see its significance and it becomes
possible to ignore it” (Barnes, 2012, p.3).
The marginalization/occlusion of care work is particularly
poignant in early childhood education (ECE), where the
contemporary trend in most Western, English-speaking
nations (e.g., Canada, the US, the UK, Australia, and
New Zealand) has been to separate care and education
policy and provision. One problematic consequence has been the inferior positioning of care relative to education
in early childhood programs. The widespread belief that care work carried out in ECE programs comes “naturally”
to women legitimizes its subordination and glosses over the inherent complex, messy, contextual, and emotional
nature of working with young children. Instead, the primary path to professionalizaF a i r D e a l i n g ( S h o r t E x c e r p t )
Reading: Ch. 3. Dewey, Piaget, Vygotsky: Connections with Malaguzzi and the Reggio Approach (Next Steps
Toward Teaching the Reggio Way: Accepting the Challenge to Change)
Author: Rankin, Baji
Editor: Hendrick, Joanne
Publisher: Pearson/Merrill/Prentice Hall Publication Date: 2004 Pages: 27-35
Course: ECED 400 93Q 2022S1-2 Introduction to Early Childhood Education and Care
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
http://copyright.ubc.ca/requirements/fair-dealing/. The copy may only be used for the purpose of research, private
study, criticism, review, news reporting, education, satire or parody. If the copy is used for the purpose of review,
criticism or news reporting, the source and the name of the author must be mentioned. The use of this copy for any
other purpose may require the permission of the copyright owner.
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Dewey, Piaget, Vygotsky
Connections with Malaguzzi and
the Reggio Emilia Approach
Baji Rankin
Professional Development and Training Specialist, La Madrugada Early
Head Start Program, Office of Child Development, Albuquerque,
New Mexico
27
28 Chapter 3
Dewey, Piaget, and Vygotsky were powerful figures in education and psy
chology in their lifetimes and all three continue to have strong influences
on early childhood education in the U nited States, in Reggio Emilia, and
throughout the world. While these three theorists lived in different eras
and worked in very different social contexts, the work o f each is still a rich source for
our thinking and educational systems today.
In this chapter, I present several key points about the lives and theories of these
three men. I point out similarities and differences in some o f the current debate and
reflection about their work today, and I examine the im pact o f these theorists upon
theory and practice in Reggio Emilia. I also look at how Loris Malaguzzi and other
Reggio educators, while generating their own ideas and practices, put the principles
o f these three men into practice in an educational setting more fully, in my view, than
any o f the three were able to do in their lifetimes.
I will examine only some aspects of the theories and experiences o f these men: the
role o f collaboration and the co-construction o f knowledge, the interdependence o f in
dividual and social learning, and the role o f cul
ture in understanding this interdependence.
John Dewey (1859 -1952) Dewey, Piaget, and Vygotsky agree that the in-
Jean Piaget (1896-1980) dividual child is active in constructing his
Lev Vygotsky (1896-1934) o r ^ ¡nteueciuai an{j socjal development;
Loris MalagF a i r D e a l i n g ( S h o r t E x c e r p t )
Reading: The Childs Environment - The Where (in Ch. 2. Children, Environments, Programs and
Practitioners) (Foundations of Early Childhood Education: Learning Environments and Childcare in Canada)
Author: Dietze, Beverlie
Editor: N/A
Publisher: Prentice Hall Publication Date: 2006 Pages: 42-46 (excerpt)
Course: ECED 400 93Q 2022S1-2 Introduction to Early Childhood Education and Care
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
http://copyright.ubc.ca/requirements/fair-dealing/. The copy may only be used for the purpose of research, private
study, criticism, review, news reporting, education, satire or parody. If the copy is used for the purpose of review,
criticism or news reporting, the source and the name of the author must be mentioned. The use of this copy for any
other purpose may require the permission of the copyright owner.
For more information on UBC\s Copyright Policies, please visit UBC Copyright
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42 Chapter 2
The Childs Environment-The Where
Children’s environments are the where of early childhood, with the home being the
first physical and socio-cultural environment to which children are exposed and
within which they interact. Children’s physical environments are thought to have
important effects on their behaviour. Bandura’s model of learning and develop
ment (1986, 1998, 2000) suggests that children’s learning is influenced by the sig
nificant people in their worlds and by the environments that are created for them
to grow and learn in. Bandura indicates that each of these factors operates interac
tively, meaning that children’s environments can influence their behaviour, or role
models can influence their behaviour, and vice versa. In fact, children’s environ
ments are often described as their third teacher (Morrison, 2003). Through
perception, children process knowledge and learn new skills. Children are active
perceivers. They are motivated to discover, explore, and wonder. They examine
information, extract information, and differentiate objects within their environ
ment (Read, Sugawara, 8c Brandt, 1999). Recent studies that examine the relation
ship between children’s development and their environmental space are almost
non-existent (Read, Sugawara, & Brandt, 1999), although Nash (1997) indicates
that the experiences within children’s environments affect the neural connections
that are formed early in life. We draw upon Havinghurst and Neugarten’s (1967)
seminal work to introduce the relationship of a child’s life space to development.
We also present the ecological model created by Urie Bronfenbrenner (1967) to
illustrate how children’s families and communities influence development.
ChildF a i r D e a l i n g ( S h o r t E x c e r p t )
Reading: The Roots of Early Childhood Services (in Ch. 1. Exploring the Foundations of Early Learning and Child
Care) (Foundations of Early Childhood Education: Learning Environments and Childcare in Canada)
Author: Dietze, Beverlie
Editor: N/A
Publisher: Prentice Hall Publication Date: 2006 Pages: 9-14
Course: ECED 400 93Q 2022S1-2 Introduction to Early Childhood Education and Care
Course Code: 93Q Term: 2022S1-2
Department: ECED
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study, criticism, review, news reporting, education, satire or parody. If the copy is used for the purpose of review,
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Exploring the Foundations o f Early Learning and Child Care 9
The Roots of Early C hildho od Services
Students frequently ask why it is important to explore the roots of early childhood
services and how historical perspectives impact current practices (see Figure 1.1).
Exploring those roots is essential because the historical perspective gives practi
tioners insight into the beliefs, ideals, and concepts impacting current practices.
Exploring previous practices and determining which ones, according to our belief
system, are appropriate to use in a given situation leads to “new knowledge.”
This new knowledge, combined with a practitioner’s own beliefs, influences
standards of practice. For example, Montessori, Froebel, and Waldorf each deter
mined that young children benefit from outdoor play. Why would this be impor
tant? Each of these theorists recognized that outdoor play provides children with
rich learning experiences about nature and the environment while contributing to
physical development. Children who have hands-on experiences with our natural
environment develop a respect for living things and a curiosity about how things
grow and why our environment is important. At the same time, children are learn
ing to move their bodies, develop balance, and strengthen their kinesthetic aware
ness. As obesity increases among children, and as we try to support children in
learning about their environment, there is a renewed interest in early childhood
practitioners’ increasing the amount o f outdoor play and the options for children
to explore and discover (Crossley & Dietze, 2004).
Examining the roots of early learning and child care helps practitioners
understand how the field has developed over time. Equally imF a i r D e a l i n g ( S h o r t E x c e r p t )
Reading: Ch. 5. Firstschool: A New Vision for Education (School Readiness and the Transition to Kindergarten in
the Era of Accountability)
Author: Ritchie, Sharon; Maxwell, Kelly; Clifford, Richard M.
Editor: Pianta, Robert C.; Cox, Martha J.; Snow, Kyle LaBrie
Publisher: Paul H. Brookes Pub. Co. Publication Date: 2007 Pages: 85-96
Course: ECED 400 93Q 2022S1-2 Introduction to Early Childhood Education and Care
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
http://copyright.ubc.ca/requirements/fair-dealing/. The copy may only be used for the purpose of research, private
study, criticism, review, news reporting, education, satire or parody. If the copy is used for the purpose of review,
criticism or news reporting, the source and the name of the author must be mentioned. The use of this copy for any
other purpose may require the permission of the copyright owner.
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5
F ir s t Sc h o o l
A N ew Vision fo r Education
S h a ro n R itchie, Kelly Maxwell, a n d R ichard M. C liffo rd
K
ious chapters have addressed the reconcepciialization o f transitions, the increased em-
asis on the early years o f schooling, the move toward alignment, and the rethinking
accountability. This chapter outlines the purpose, rationale, conceptual model, fun
damentals, and components o f FirstSchool, an innovative, comprehensive plan for the educa
tion o f children ages 3 -8 years (Bogard, 2003). FirstSchool aspires to promote and support
public school efforts to become more responsive to the needs o f an increasingly younger, more
diverse population o f children. Making a real difference in the lives o f all young children re
quires rethinking public education in complex and meaningful ways that optimize expertise,
broaden the knowledge base, and challenge any practices that sustain inequity.
PURPOSE A N D RATIONALE
Early education in the United States is changing in ways that provide unique opportunities
regarding [he beginning o f school and the potential to influence practice. By the end o f the
20th century, an estimated nearly 1 million children were entering kindergarten prior to the
traditional entry age (Clifford, Early, & Hills, 1999). This num ber equals roughly one fourth
o f all children in this age cohort in the United States. T he time is rapidly approaching that,
for all intents and purposes, school will start a year earlier than it did between the 1980s and
1990s. Currently, 38 states offer prekindergarren services co ar least some 4-year-olds
(Barnett, Hustedt, Robin, & Schulman, 2006), and universal preschool is finding footing
throughout thF a i r D e a l i n g ( S h o r t E x c e r p t )
Reading: Theories That Influence Program Models (in Ch. 4. How Theories Influence Program
Models) (Foundations of Early Childhood Education: Learning Environments and Childcare in Canada)
Author: Dietze, Beverlie
Editor: N/A
Publisher: Prentice Hall Publication Date: 2006 Pages: 97-109 (excerpt)
Course: ECED 400 93Q 2022S1-2 Introduction to Early Childhood Education and Care
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
http://copyright.ubc.ca/requirements/fair-dealing/. The copy may only be used for the purpose of research, private
study, criticism, review, news reporting, education, satire or parody. If the copy is used for the purpose of review,
criticism or news reporting, the source and the name of the author must be mentioned. The use of this copy for any
other purpose may require the permission of the copyright owner.
For more information on UBC\s Copyright Policies, please visit UBC Copyright
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How Theories Influence Program Models 97
P A R E N T I N G P O R T R A I T
We, Margaret and Leo Gandinice, are considering moving from Vancouver to rural
Newfoundland with our 3-year-old twin daughters. One of the deciding factors will
be the types of early learning and child care services available to our family. Our
children have been involved in a Waldorf preschool since they turned 3, and we
love the exposure to music, arts, and drama. We attribute our childrens imagina
tion and pretend play to their play experiences there. We understand that there
may not be a Waldorf program in rural Newfoundland, but we are hoping to find
a program that is rich in play, staffed by individuals who are willing to help our chil
dren adjust to rural living and who value some of our cultural traditions.
As a way to help us examine the early learning and child care programs, we
have identified the following as essential to each facility we visit:
1. The program offers equal indoor and outdoor play experiences, where children
are able to participate in outdoor experiences similar to those indoors, as well
as providing active gross-motor play.
2 . The program is one that offers children a rich play environment rather than one
that is academically focused.
3 . Teachers will accept each of our children as individuals rather than as twins
and will accept and appreciate the childrens Kenyan heritage.
4 . Teachers have specialized training in early childhood studies, and the staff-to-
child ratio is acceptable so that our children will receive adequate attention.
5 . The environment promotes the childrens creations rather than commercial
products.
Our findings will help us make a decision about a new environment for our family.
Do
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