Looking into Early Childhood Education and Development Spaces: Visual Ethnography's Contribution to Thinking about Quality
Author(s) -
Ailie Cleghorn,
Larry Prochner
Publication year - 2012
Publication title -
global studies of childhood
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.244
H-Index - 4
ISSN - 2043-6106
DOI - 10.2304/gsch.2012.2.4.276
Subject(s) - ethnography , early childhood education , sociology , space (punctuation) , poverty , early childhood , context (archaeology) , centrality , quality (philosophy) , pedagogy , epistemology , social science , psychology , developmental psychology , anthropology , political science , geography , linguistics , philosophy , mathematics , archaeology , combinatorics , law
Discussions about what constitutes a quality early childhood (EC) environment rarely focus on visual or spatial aspects, except to provide background information for talking about EC practice and children's development in the preschool years. There is a need to look beyond the usual quality indicators, which tend to focus on poverty and children's developmental potential so that context and cultural dimensions are often omitted in the discussion. This article thus explores the contribution of visual ethnography for thinking more about, or rethinking, some of the prevailing notions of quality in early childhood education (ECE). To do so, culture is seen as central to the discussion. This includes the organisation of space and the use of materials in EC settings. The idea in this article is to present images that stand in contrast to some of the current globalising discourse about what is good for the world's children. In so doing, the authors thread together seemingly disparate ideas stemming from the centrality of culture and space theory, to the organisation of space, to the use of materials and to transitions in ECE.
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