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Beyond quality in early childhood education and care: postmodern perspectives

Philadelphia, PA: Falmer Press. Edited by Peter Moss & Alan R. Pence (1998)

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  1. Deconstructing and transgressing the theory—practice dichotomy in early childhood education.Hillevi Lenz Taguchi - 2007 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 39 (3):275–290.
    This article theorizes and exemplifies reconceptualized teaching practices, both in early childhood education 1 and in a couple of programs within the new Swedish Teacher Education . 2 These programs are tightly knit to the last 12 years of reconceptualized early childhood education practices in and around Stockholm, built on deconstructive, co‐constructive, and re‐constructive principles, inspired by poststructural and feminist poststructural theories. The aim is foremost to work towards a dissolution and/or transgression of the modernist theory‐practice binary that dominates ECE (...)
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  • (Re)positioning the child in the policy/politics of early childhood.Christine Woodrow & Frances Press - 2007 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 39 (3):312–325.
    How a community constructs the notion of childhood and the child is fundamentally implicated in the practices and policies of that community. This article explores the positioning of the child in historical, contemporary and emerging trends in the provision and practices of Australian early childhood education and care. It argues that if left uncontested, emerging contemporary constructions have the potential to normalise policies, practices and pedagogies derived from a commercialised view of childhood. Drawing on the experiences and practices of early (...)
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  • Deconstructing and Transgressing the Theory—Practice dichotomy in early childhood education.Hillevi Lenz Taguchi - 2007 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 39 (3):275-290.
    This article theorizes and exemplifies reconceptualized teaching practices, both in early childhood education (ECE) and in a couple of programs within the new Swedish Teacher Education (since 2001). These programs are tightly knit to the last 12 years of reconceptualized early childhood education practices in and around Stockholm, built on deconstructive, co‐constructive, and re‐constructive principles, inspired by poststructural and feminist poststructural theories. The aim is foremost to work towards a dissolution and/or transgression of the modernist theory‐practice binary that dominates ECE (...)
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  • Looking for Theory in Preschool Education.Christine Stephen - 2012 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 31 (3):227-238.
    This paper sets out to examine the place of theory in preschool education, considering the theories to which practitioners and providers have access and which provide a rationale for everyday practices and shape the experiences of young children. The paper reflects the circumstances of preschool provision, practices and thinking in the UK in general and in Scotland in particular. The central argument is that while there may be little obvious recourse to theorising and limited exposure to explicit theory about children’s (...)
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  • Multilateral Organizations And Early Child Care And Education Policies For Developing Countries.Fúlvia Rosemberg - 2003 - Gender and Society 17 (2):250-266.
    This article describes and interprets the impact, particularly on women and children, of pressure by multilateral organizations on contemporary Brazilian early child care and education policies. Based on an analysis of macro data and documents, the author argues that this pressure is old, existing prior to the introduction of the concept of globalization into the vocabulary of the media and the social sciences. A first wave of pressure dates from the 1970s, during the cold war, and the second, beginning in (...)
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  • Meetings across the paradigmatic divide.Peter Moss - 2007 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 39 (3):229–245.
    The problematique addressed by the article is the growth of a dominant discourse in early childhood education and care, which has a strong effect on policy and practice, paralleled by an increasing number of other discourses which problematise most of the values, assumptions and understandings of the former. Yet there is very little engagement between these discourses, in large part because they are situated within different paradigms—modernity in the former case, postfoundationalism in the latter. The author argues that the absence (...)
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  • Using engaged philosophical inquiry to deepen young children’s understanding of environmental sustainability: Being, becoming and belonging.Margaret MacDonald, Warren Bowen & Cher Hill - 2017 - Journal of Philosophy in Schools 4 (1):50-73.
    This research paper shares findings related to our use of Engaged Philosophical Inquiry with a group of young children as a pedagogical method taken up to extend young children’s thinking about human use of forest parkland and to determine the children’s ontological positions related to environmental sustainability. The study was conducted in a forested area adjoining a ‘living building’ childcare centre. Here researchers, along with a core group of 9-13 children, their teachers, and a Philosopher-in-Residence visited the forest environment on (...)
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  • Review of Kathy Hall et al. Loris Malaguzzi and the Reggio Emilia Experience: Continuum, 2010. [REVIEW]Margaret MacDonald - 2011 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 30 (6):631-639.
  • Overflowing Every Idea of Age, Very Young Children as Educators.Nina Johannesen - 2013 - Studies in Philosophy and Education 32 (3):285-296.
    In this article I explore if and how very young children can be the educators of their early childhood educators. I describe and discuss a story constructed form a fieldwork done in one early childhood setting in Norway. The story is read with Levinas and his concepts Said and Saying. Further I discuss if and how this might be understood as education arguing that the children`s expressions are offering new beginning and change in the pedagogical thinking and praxis within the (...)
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  • Relativism and the critical potential of philosophy of education.Frieda Heyting - 2004 - Journal of Philosophy of Education 38 (3):493–510.
    How can philosophy exert its critical function in society and in education if any appeal to independent and even relatively ‘certain’ criteria seems problematic? The epistemological doubts that foundationalist models of justification encounter unavoidably seem to raise this question. In particular, the relativist implications that seem to result from rejecting such models seem to paralyse the critical potential of philosophy of education. In order to explore the possibilities of a conception of educational critique that avoids the pitfalls of foundationalism, I (...)
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  • Shift Recording in Residential Child Care.Mark Hardy - 2012 - Ethics and Social Welfare 6 (1):88-96.
    Recording is a task often perceived by residential child care workers as boring or taking time away from the ‘real work’, direct engagement with young people. It is required by legislation and policy but has been undertheorized and treated as a technical/rational task. In this essay, Foucauldian and feminist perspectives are applied to shift recording, a routine aspect of residential practice, in order to problematize the positivist approach assumed in legislation and policy. The analysis suggests that this approach represses emotional (...)
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  • The politics of processes and products in education: An early childhood metanarrative crisis?Andrew Gibbons - 2007 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 39 (3):300–311.
    This paper critically engages with the theme of ‘process over product’—a theme that is argued to be increasingly problematised as an influential narrative in the construction and transmission of a philosophy of early education. The importance of producing children of ‘competence’ through appropriate educational processes is associated with assumptions regarding what counts as an appropriate educational journey for children before they reach school age. Drawing upon the work of Michel Foucault, and Jean‐François Lyotard, this paper considers the purpose and tensions (...)
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  • Constructing The Triangle Of Care: Power And Professionalism In Practitioner/Parent Relationships.Liz Brooker - 2010 - British Journal of Educational Studies 58 (2):181-196.
    This paper draws on recent re-conceptualisations of the notions of 'care' and 'caring' (Noddings, 1992; Tronío, 1993) to explore data from semi-structured interviews with the parents and key workers for about twenty children under three who were attending two London children's centres. Located in an environment of frequent new policy initiatives, including an advocacy of parental partnership, it seeks to describe the ways that these adults construct their mutual relationships, and the difficulties which may attend this process. Class and cultural (...)
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  • Conceptions of the self in early childhood: Territorializing identities.Liselott Borgnon - 2007 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 39 (3):264–274.
    This article draws upon the Deleuzian/Guattarian idea of territorializing movements to trouble the notion of the identity of the learning pre‐school child, produced by developmental psychology, as an individual, natural and developing child as well as the more recent image of the child characterised by autonomy and flexible behaviour. Accordingly, a child's apprenticeship of walking is associated here with the movements of a surfer. This association disturbs the orthodox thought of recognition and representation that makes us define, include and exclude (...)
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  • Conceptions of the Self in Early Childhood: Territorializing identities.Liselott Borgnon - 2007 - Educational Philosophy and Theory 39 (3):264-274.
    This article draws upon the Deleuzian/guattarian idea of territorializing movements to trouble the notion of the identity of the learning pre‐school child, produced by developmental psychology, as an individual, natural and developing child as well as the more recent image of the child characterised by autonomy and flexible behaviour. Accordingly, a child's apprenticeship of walking is associated here with the movements of a surfer. This association disturbs the orthodox thought of recognition and representation that makes us define, include and exclude (...)
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