Description
Diverse international perspectives on the ways in which young children’s learning and care may be supported converge in this book. Traversing the field of early childhood education and care from its established philosophical underpinnings to 21st century research, policies, and practices, the contributions to this volume draw together past and present discourses as a basis for shaping future trajectories.
In spite of a growing international consensus on the strong influence of early childhood experiences on lifetime outcomes, the nineteen chapters reveal contemporary early childhood pedagogy as a collection of spaces characterised by plurality, complexity, and dissonance. These characteristics signal the importance of recognising early childhood pedagogies: multiple models of practice for the many diverse learning and care contexts that have the capacity to value young children as individuals and enable each to flourish now and throughout their lives. Moreover, such characteristics disrupt notions that a single ‘optimal’ early childhood pedagogy is either possible or desirable.
Table of Contents
1. Early childhood pedagogies: spaces for young children to flourish Jane Murray
2. Who cares? Infant educators’ responses to professional discourses of care Belinda Davis and Sheila Degotardi
3. Maternal thinking and beyond: towards a care-full pedagogy for early childhood Paulette Luff and Mallika Kanyal
4. Pedagogy with babies: perspectives of eight nursery managers Peter Elfer and Jools Page
5. Proximity with under two-year-olds in early childhood education: a silent pedagogical encounter Elizabeth Jayne White and Bridgette Redder
6. Pedagogical positioning in play – teachers being inside and outside of children’s imaginary play Marilyn Fleer
7. Child-initiated pedagogies in Finland, Estonia and England: exploring young children’s views on decisions Leena Helevaara Robertson, Jarmo Kinos, Nancy Barbour, Maarika Pukk and Leif Rosqvist
8. Children’s agentive orientations in play-based and academically focused preschools in Hong Kong Doris Cheng Pui-Wah, Jyrki Reunamo, Paul Cooper, Karen Liu and Keang-ieng Peggy Vong
9. Estonian preschool teachers’ aspirations for curricular autonomy – the gap between an ideal and professional practice Maire Tuul, Rain Mikser, Evelyn Neudorf and Aino Ugaste
10. Can we have an international approach to child-centred early childhood practice? Jan Georgeson, Verity Campbell-Barr, Éva Bakosi, Magdolna Nemes, Sándor Pálfi and Paolo Sorzio
11. Developmentally universal practice: visioning innovative early childhood pedagogy for meeting the needs of diverse learners Kathleen I. Harris
12. An international perspective on value learning in the kindergarten – exemplified by the value forgiveness Arve Gunnestad, Sissel Mørreaunet and Silas Onyango
13. Empowerment through pedagogy: positioning service-learning as an early childhood pedagogy for pre-service teachers Christian Winterbottom and Philip J. Mazzocco
14. Being a tour guide or travel companion on the children’s knowledge journey Karin Franzén
15. Family pedagogy: parent–child interaction in shared book reading Liang Li and Marilyn Fleer
16. Age group, location or pedagogue: factors affecting parental choice of kindergartens in Hungary Eleonora Teszenyi and Denise Hevey
17. ‘Pedagogic Strategies’: a conceptual framework for effective parent and practitioner strategies when working with children under five Penny Lawrence, Tracy Gallagher and the Pen Green Team
18. Preschool teachers’ perceptions of children’s rough-and-tumble play (R&T) in indoor and outdoor environments Rune Storli and Ellen Beate Hansen Sandseter
19. Outdoor play in preschools in England and South Korea: learning from polyvocal methods Kwi-Ok Nah and Tim Waller
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