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Dominic Wyse; Alice Bradbury – Review of Education, 2023
The debates about what are the most effective ways to teach young children to learn to read have been described as 'the reading wars'. In 2022 the research published in a paper by Wyse and Bradbury (2022) stimulated widespread attention including in the media. Wyse and Bradbury concluded on the basis of four major research analyses that although…
Descriptors: Reading Instruction, Phonics, Ethics, Reading
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Lawrence, Penny – Early Child Development and Care, 2021
A 'Dialogical Approach to Observation' proposes refreshed and enhanced interpretation of dialogue. It attends to potential dialogical relation depending on "how" the protagonists regard others. Rather than assuming any exchange whatsoever is dialogue, the nature of the observed interaction indicates it is dialogical. Buber's…
Descriptors: Dialogs (Language), Observation, Young Children, Interaction
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French, Amanda; Lowe, Rose; Nassem, Elizabeth – Education 3-13, 2019
Whilst within universities, research on rather than with children/pupils is a well-established methodology, this paper reports on teachers' responses to a schools and university-based partnership project, 'Pupils as Research Partners in Primary (PARPP), which works to co-create pupil-led research opportunities for pupils in research projects…
Descriptors: Elementary School Students, Young Children, Participatory Research, College School Cooperation
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Archer, Nathan – Global Studies of Childhood, 2017
In 2015, the British government implemented a national Baseline Assessment policy for children at the start of their Reception Year (aged 4-5 years) in England. Adding further assessment to the national Early Years Foundation Stage, the Baseline policy was predicated on reform for improved school accountability, with a focus on measurement of both…
Descriptors: Caring, Young Children, Summative Evaluation, Early Childhood Education
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Albon, Deborah; Barley, Ruth – Journal of Early Childhood Literacy, 2021
This paper brings together sociocultural theorising about language and literacy learning, as well as work which explores ethical issues associated with young children's participation in research in order to interrogate unplanned discussions between researchers and young children about research writing. The data discussed were derived from two…
Descriptors: Ethnography, Research, Young Children, Dialogs (Language)
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Barron, Ian; Taylor, Lisa – Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 2017
This paper examines how early childhood policy initiatives in the United Kingdom and internationally currently reflect neoliberal concerns with school readiness in the development of human capital and what diverse theoretical perspectives might offer. The focus is a project involving a group of early childhood academics from one university and a…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Early Childhood Education, Educational Policy, Neoliberalism
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Evans, Katherine – Complicity: An International Journal of Complexity and Education, 2015
This paper considers the landscape of early childhood education in England to be dominated by discourses of "readiness-for-school" and "readiness-for-learning" that act to heavily stratify the educational spaces inhabited by young children. The "ready-child" is constructed as a normative identity towards which the…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Young Children, Behavior Standards, Social Behavior
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Taggart, Geoff – Early Years: An International Journal of Research and Development, 2011
This paper argues that early childhood education and care (ECEC) has a legitimate aspiration to be a "caring profession" like others such as nursing or social work, defined by a moral purpose. For example, practitioners often draw on an ethic of care as evidence of their professionalism. However, the discourse of professionalism in…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Foreign Countries, Ethics, Social Work
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Waller, Tim; Bitou, Angeliki – European Early Childhood Education Research Journal, 2011
This paper adopts a sociocultural perspective to provide a critical consideration of participatory approaches to research with young children. The particular focus is on the use of pedagogical documentation and learning stories as "participatory" tools to elicit children's perspectives for research. The paper will argue that, despite the…
Descriptors: Research Design, Sociocultural Patterns, Participatory Research, Ethnography
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Aubrey, Carol – Journal of Early Childhood Research, 2008
The introduction to this article will seek to present a distillation of Sally Lubeck's achievements in order to provide a benchmark of existing knowledge in the field of early childhood care and education from her perspective and an indication of its likely future. Her work, it is suggested, provides an exemplification of the new sociology of…
Descriptors: Poverty, Early Childhood Education, Social Control, Criticism
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Brooker, Liz – International Journal of Early Years Education, 2003
An ethnographic study explored cultural belief systems of four-year-olds' families and school staff from Anglo and Bangladeshi families in England. Case study of one child/family illustrates how parental beliefs about childhood, the home, uses and purposes of literacy, and children's learning influence children's school experience. How data were…
Descriptors: Beliefs, Case Studies, Child Rearing, Early Childhood Education