scholarly journals What Makes A Great Preschool Teacher Best Practices and Classroom Quality in an Urban Early Childhood Setting

2021 ◽  
Vol 13 (2) ◽  
pp. 227-239
Author(s):  
Charles J. Infurna
Author(s):  
Christine Lux

This chapter describes an early childhood teacher educator's path to embracing the importance of building relationships and making connections with children and families. An early field experience as an undergraduate inspired the author to pursue a career as a Montessori preschool teacher where important lessons about listening to children and parents were learned. Throughout the author's career, important events confirmed values and beliefs that are now applied in the author's role as a parent and an early childhood teacher educator.


2016 ◽  
pp. 222-251
Author(s):  
Anne Katz ◽  
Jackie Hee-Young Kim

With a mission of creating a new paradigm of instructional methods to increase engagement in student learning in order to help develop more resilient students in a high-needs school district, this study examined implementation of the flipped classroom model in an early childhood and childhood education setting. This chapter will start by locating challenges in the current K-12 educational field. It will then examine how flipped classroom model approaches will simultaneously help educators meet long-standing challenges and support teachers to meet the diverse needs of students. This chapter will further discuss a pedagogical rationale for the flipped classroom model. It will then proceed to showcase best practices in utilizing the Flipped Classroom (FC) Model through the presentation of multiple teacher case studies. Lastly, this chapter will discuss considerations that should be examined while executing the Flipped Classroom model.


2019 ◽  
pp. 146394911986420
Author(s):  
Tove Lafton

Research concerning play and technology is largely aimed at expanding the knowledge of what technological play may be and, to a lesser extent, examines what happens to children’s play when it encounters digital tools. In order to explore some of the complexity in play, this article elaborates on how Latour’s concepts of ‘translation’ and ‘inscription’ can make sense of a narrative from an early childhood setting. The article explores how to challenge ‘taken-for-granted knowledge’ and create different understandings of children’s play in technology-rich environments. Through a flattened ontology, the article considers how humans, non-humans and transcendental ideas relate to one another as equal forces; this allows for an understanding of play as located within and emerging from various networks. The discussion sheds light on how activation of material agents can lead us to look for differences and new spaces regarding play. Play and learning are no longer orchestrated by what is already known; rather, they become co-constructed when both the children and the material world have a say in constructing the ambiguity of play. Lastly, the discussion points to how early years practitioners need tools to challenge their assumptions of what play might become in the digital age.


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