scholarly journals Maker Literacies and Maker Citizenship in the MakEY (Makerspaces in the Early Years) Project

2018 ◽  
Vol 2 (3) ◽  
pp. 50 ◽  
Author(s):  
Jackie Marsh ◽  
Hans Arnseth ◽  
Kristiina Kumpulainen

In this paper, the potential relationship between creative citizenship and what may be termed ‘maker literacies’ is examined in the light of emergent findings from an international project on the use of makerspaces in early childhood, “MakEY” (see http://makeyproject.eu). The paper outlines the concept of creative citizenship and considers the notion of maker literacies before moving on to examine how maker literacies might be developed in early-years curricula in ways that foster civic engagement. Three vignettes are offered of makerspaces in early-years settings and a museum in Finland, Norway, and the UK. The activities outlined in the vignettes might be conceived of as ‘maker citizenship’, a concept which draws together understandings of making, digital literacies, and citizenship. The paper considers the implications of this analysis for future research and practice.

eye brings you another batch of the latest products and books on offerEarly Years Assessment: Physical Development: Moving and handling Trudi Fitzhenry, Karen Murphy ISBN 9781472954565 £14.99. Paperback Publisher Pre-school Learning Alliance Orders Tel: 01256 302699; www.bloomsbury.com/uk Review by Neil HentyAn A-Z Collection of Behaviour Tales: From Angry Ant to Zestless Zebra Susan Perrow ISBN 9781907359866 £15.99. Paperback Publisher Hawthorn Press Orders Tel: 01453 757040 [email protected] www.hawthornpress.com Review by Neil HentyUnderstanding sustainability in early childhood education: case studies and approaches from across the UK Edited by Diane Boyd, Nicky Hirst, John Siraj-Blatchford ISBN 9781138188297 £24.99. Paperback Publisher Routledge Orders via 01235 400400 www.routledge.com/education Review by Neil HentyThe Lost Words by Robert McFarlane and Jackie Morris [£20.00 from Hamish Hamilton; ISBN: 9780241253588]All the Way Home by Debi Gliori [£12.99 from Bloomsbury; ISBN: 9781408872079]The Gnome's Winter Journey by Ernst Kreidolf [£10.99 from Floris Book; ISBN: 9781782504375]The Snowbear by Sean Taylor and Claire Alexander [£11.99 from Words and Pictures; ISBN: 9781910277393]The Shepherd Boy and the Christmas Gift by Aly Hilberts and Sanne Dufft [£10.99 from Floris Books; ISBN: 9781782504382]Developing young children's mathematical learning outdoors: linking pedagogy and practice Lynda Keith ISBN 9781138237155 £19.99. Paperback Publisher Routledge Orders www.routledge.com/education; orders via 01235 400400 Review by Neil HentyDisability and Inclusion in Early Years Education Edited by Chris Collett ISBN 9781138638280 £19.99. Paperback Publisher Routledge Orders www.routledge.com/education; orders via 01235 400400 Review by Neil HentyMaking Sense of Neuroscience in the Early Years Sally Featherstone ISBN 9781138937949 £18.99 Paperback Publisher Bloomsbury Orders Tel: 01256 302699; www.bloomsbury.com/uk Review by Neil Henty

2017 ◽  
Vol 19 (8) ◽  
pp. 46-48

2018 ◽  
Vol 43 (1) ◽  
pp. 43-51 ◽  
Author(s):  
Lydia Foong ◽  
Mariani Binti ◽  
Andrea Nolan

THIS STUDY EXPLORED INDIVIDUAL and collective reflection as pedagogical approaches to support early childhood pre-service teachers’ reflection during practicum. Current trends in the literature show a shift from individual reflection to collective reflection, with an emphasis on social constructivist perspectives. This qualitative study focused on a Malaysian teacher education institution conducting an undergraduate early years program from the UK as the selected case. Sources of evidence came from interviews, direct observations and documents such as student teachers’ teaching portfolios, their reflection journals and assessment forms. The results show that collective reflection supported higher levels of reflective thinking during practicum at the integration, validation and appropriation levels of reflection, compared to when they reflected individually. Collective reflection provided Malaysian teachers with a new platform for problem-solving, connecting theory to practice, as well as the sharing and consideration of multiple perspectives, resulting in a deeper understanding of classroom practices.


1991 ◽  
Vol 22 (5) ◽  
pp. 422-428
Author(s):  
John Clement

The International Congress on Mathematical Education, which convenes every four years to discuss issues in mathematics education research and practice, last met in 1988. This book is the product of the subgroup on early childhood education within the Congress, which took as its charge “to identify the issues, problems, and opportunities presented by constructivism for mathematics education in early childhood and to make recommendations for the work in this area over the next four years.” Thus the book not only contains reports on previous research, but also recommendations for future research and practice in early childhood mathematics education.


2021 ◽  
Vol 7 (1) ◽  
pp. 47-68
Author(s):  
Madhu Govind ◽  
Marina Bers

Children’s robotics skills can be assessed in various ways, one being examining the unique projects that they create. This paper discusses the multi-phase development and testing of a robotics project rubric. The rubric considers both the programming concepts and the aesthetic design elements of a project, which enables researchers and practitioners to determine the overall level of complexity exhibited in the robotics project. This paper presents the background literature and theoretical framework that contributed to the rubric design and summarizes findings from iteratively developing and testing the rubric with a total of 173 robotics projects. Implications for future research and practice are also discussed.


2013 ◽  
Vol 43 (12) ◽  
pp. 2615-2626 ◽  
Author(s):  
I. Culpin ◽  
J. Heron ◽  
R. Araya ◽  
R. Melotti ◽  
C. Joinson

BackgroundPrevious studies suggest a link between parental separation or divorce and risk of depression in adolescence. There are, however, few studies that have prospectively examined the effects of timing of biological father absence on risk for depressive symptoms in adolescence while controlling for a range of confounding factors.MethodWe examine the association between father absence occurring in early (the first 5 years) and middle childhood (5–10 years) and adolescent depressive symptoms in a sample comprising 5631 children from the UK-based Avon Longitudinal Study of Parents and Children (ALSPAC). Self-reported depressive symptoms at 14 years were assessed using the Short Mood and Feelings Questionnaire (SMFQ). Father absence was assessed from maternal questionnaires completed at regular intervals from the birth of the study child up to 10 years.ResultsThere was evidence for an association between father absence in early childhood and increased odds of depressive symptoms at 14 years. This association was stronger in girls than in boys and remained after adjusting for a range of socio-economic, maternal and familial confounders assessed prior to the father's departure. Conversely, there was no evidence for an association between father absence in middle childhood and depressive symptoms at 14 years.ConclusionsFather absence in early childhood increases risk for adolescent depressive symptoms, particularly in girls. Future research should be aimed at identifying possible biological and psychosocial mechanisms linking father absence to depressive symptomatology to enable the development of family-based early prevention and intervention programmes targeting young children at risk.


2020 ◽  
Vol 3 (2) ◽  
pp. 158-178
Author(s):  
Ryan W Pontier ◽  
Ivian Destro Boruchowski ◽  
Lergia I Olivo

The population of bilingual students learning and using more than one language in the United States has more than doubled in the past 30 years. This is especially true in early childhood, which makes it crucial that educators of young emergent bilingual children understand and support these young children’s bi/multilingual development, including critically understanding the implication of adopting different perspectives of bi/multilingualism. Although much is known about classroom practices in support of emergent bilingual children in Kindergarten and beyond, little is known about those practices in the early years. This article provides a systematic review of relevant empirical studies that investigated teachers’ and children’s dynamic language use in bi/multilingual early childhood education settings. The authors identify several strategic languaging practices enacted by both teachers and children, and strategies for fostering these practices; as well as ways in which teachers leveraged their agency through their languaging practices. Implications for future research, practice, professional development, and policy are discussed.


2017 ◽  
Vol 8 (2) ◽  
pp. 173-183 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria Hatzigianni

The aim of this article is to stimulate a discussion beyond just the use of digital technologies in the early years of education, to also consider the broader societal implications of their use. The Freirian notion that education has the power to transform lives is reflected upon in this article, and it explores the use of new technologies in ways that have the potential to significantly alter the everyday practices adopted in the early years curriculum experience. Projects underpinned by a critical or postmodern framework and how they used digital technologies to make crucial changes in the lives of their participants will also be analysed in an attempt to further inspire the future research endeavours.


Author(s):  
Saddam Husein

This paper aims to investigate the curriculum of early childhood education in Indonesia and the United Kingdom (UK) and how they pertain to each other. Library research was conducted to gather information intended. The findings confirm that the curriculum of early childhood education in Indonesia applies curriculum 2013 which consists of aspect development of curriculum structure, and the learning process with a scientific approach. While the UK applies the curriculum according to the statutory Early Years Foundation Stage (EYFS) framework which recognizes the importance of play and a balance of adult-led and child-initiated activities. Moreover, there is a basic difference between these two curriculum aspects, which Indonesia includes the religious and moral values to the body of the curriculum, while the UK does not. However, both Indonesia and UK are closely similar which promotes a balance between the development of academic and literacy skills, socio-emotional development, and creative and physical development.


2011 ◽  
Vol 2 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ingela Naumann

Extensive public debate is being waged across mature welfare states as to whether social services are best provided by the state or the market. This article examines developments in Early Childhood Education and Care (ECEC) policy in Sweden and the United Kingdom, identifying trends towards marketization and universalization of ECEC that suggest a complex picture of competing policy logics and goals in the restructuring of welfare states. This article first discusses two models of early-years provision, the market model, and the universal model, outlining underlying assumptions, tensions, and implications of market and state provision of ECEC. A comparison of recent reforms in Sweden and the UK highlights how similar ideas and trends play out differently in different national contexts. In Sweden an integrated public ‘educare' programme gradually developed over time, and market mechanisms introduced in the 1990s have so far had limited effect on the system overall. In the UK ideas about universal early childhood education became influential as part of a new social-investment agenda in the 1990s but have, owing to their restricted implementation, not fundamentally altered the existing childcare market. Historical policy trajectories continue to matter, yet tensions and incoherencies between policies can open spaces for change.


Author(s):  
Fiona Scott ◽  
Jackie Marsh

The study of digital literacies in early childhood (0–8 years) is an emergent and fast-growing area of scholarship. Young children’s communicative practices are today more complex and diverse in scope than ever before, encompassing both “traditional” reading and writing and a growing range of “new” communicative competencies across multiple digital media contexts. Scholars are increasingly interested in children’s literacy practices outside traditional print-based texts, and the theory of multimodality helps them to understand children’s communicative practices in relation to a range of modes, including those present in digital technology. At the same time, the boundaries between what constitutes “digital” and “traditional” literacies are themselves blurred. Multiple academic disciplines have contributed to our understanding of children’s digital literacy practices. Numerous definitions for digital literacy or literacies exist, and scholars have proposed a range of theoretical approaches to the topic. Bill Green’s “3D model” of literacy provides a useful starting point for understanding the different dimensions of children’s digital literacy: operational, cultural, and critical. It is acknowledged that children’s digital literacy practices are specific to particular social and cultural contexts. In particular, scholars have identified important differences between accepted literacy practices in schools and early years’ settings (“school literacies”) and children’s literacy practices in a socioculturally diverse range of home settings (“home literacies”). A growing field of research is explicitly concerned with the unique skills developed at home, as children learn to produce and interpret a range of “new” digital and multimodal texts. At the same time, numerous scholars have suggested that there is still a general lack of progress with regard to early years’ practitioners’ use of technology in the curriculum. Gaps and absences in knowledge still exist, and it will be important for scholars over the coming years to continue research into young children’s digital literacy practices, both in homes and communities and across early years’ settings.


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