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Birbili, Maria; Hedges, Helen – International Journal of Early Years Education, 2022
Curriculum policy and enactment in early childhood education is a political phenomenon that plays out in particular cultural contexts. Comparative lenses to curriculum articulate locally constructed and implicit knowledge to external audiences. In doing so, global commonalities and tensions may become explicit. This paper interrogates curricular…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Educational Policy, Documentation, Curriculum
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Hedges, Helen – Journal of Early Childhood Research, 2014
Young children are keenly motivated to inquire into and make meaning about their worlds. This article discusses "working theories", one of two indicative learning outcomes of the New Zealand early childhood curriculum, "Te Whariki". Working theories occur as children attempt to find connections between their experiences and…
Descriptors: Young Children, Foreign Countries, Preschool Curriculum, Early Childhood Education
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Hedges, Helen; Fleer, Marilyn; Fleer-Stout, Freya; Hanh, Le Thi Bich – International Research in Early Childhood Education, 2016
Collaborative and reciprocal teacher-parent partnerships have been established in prior research as vital in empowering ethnic-minority children to be competent learners who value their home background, culture, and language and also learn the language used by teachers as the medium of education. Such collaborative relationships may be challenging…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Parent Teacher Cooperation, Minority Group Students, Cultural Influences
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Hedges, Helen – Australasian Journal of Early Childhood, 2011
Children's interest in popular culture was clear in my study of interests-based curriculum. Yet, perhaps unsurprisingly, it was a contentious site of curriculum co-construction. This article explores this tension. It argues that interpreting popular culture as "funds of knowledge" might assist teachers to consider a different view of this interest…
Descriptors: Popular Culture, Knowledge Level, Curriculum Development, Student Interests