Children's Exploration and Cultural Formation.

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Hedegaard, Mariane.
Other Authors: Eriksen Ødegaard, Elin.
Format: eBook
Language:English
Published: Cham : Springer International Publishing AG, 2020.
Edition:1st ed.
Series:International Perspectives on Early Childhood Education and Development Series
Subjects:
Online Access:Click to View
Table of Contents:
  • Children's Exploration and Cultural Formation
  • Acknowledgement
  • Contents
  • Chapter 1: Introduction to Children's Exploration and Cultural Formation
  • 1.1 A Cultural Historical Approach to Children's Exploration and Cultural Formation
  • 1.2 Examining Cultures of Exploration
  • 1.3 'Glocalisation' - Revisiting the Global and the Local in Early Childhood Education
  • 1.4 The Structure of the Book
  • References
  • Chapter 2: Children's Exploration as a Key in Children's Play and Learning Activity in Social and Cultural Formation
  • 2.1 Introduction
  • 2.2 Children's Exploration in Different Life Periods
  • 2.2.1 Children's Activities in the Different Institutional Settings
  • 2.3 Early Childhood Education
  • 2.4 Three Approaches to Explorative Learning in Kindergarten
  • 2.5 Instructional Conversation (S5) About the Polar Bear's Life
  • 2.6 Evaluation of the Different Educational Approaches
  • 2.7 Conditions for Early Childhood Education that Orient Children Towards Play and Exploration
  • 2.8 Evaluation and Pedagogy Have to Be Seen as a Unit: A Greenlandic Early Childhood -Kindergarten Project with Focus on Exploration
  • 2.9 Conclusion
  • References
  • Chapter 3: Beyond Bullying: Understanding Children's Exploration of Inclusion and Exclusion Processes in Kindergarten
  • 3.1 Bullying in Kindergarten
  • 3.2 Research Focus and Aims
  • 3.3 Children's Exploration
  • 3.4 Earlier Research About Bullying of Relevance to Kindergarten
  • 3.5 Bullying Caused in a Need for Belonging, Can Lead to Exclusion
  • 3.6 The Empirical Excerpt and Methodological Aspects
  • 3.7 A Case About Internal Exclusion in a Free Play Setting
  • 3.7.1 Free-Play Outdoors - Not All the Three Boys Are Drawing
  • 3.8 Bullying Analysed and Discussed as a Complex Exclusion Process
  • 3.8.1 Individual - Relational Level
  • 3.8.2 Activity Setting
  • 3.8.3 Institutional Level.
  • 3.8.4 Society Level
  • 3.9 Conclusion
  • References
  • Chapter 4: Children's Explorative Activities in Kindergarten Playgrounds: A Case Study in China and Norway
  • 4.1 Introduction
  • 4.2 Conditions for Children's Exploration
  • 4.3 Studying Children's Exploration in Kindergarten
  • 4.4 Children's Explorative Activities in Teacher-Organized Activities in Outdoor Playtime
  • 4.4.1 Case 1. The Jumping Relay - Chinese Kindergarten
  • 4.4.1.1 Summary of the Jumping- Relay, Chinese Kindergarten
  • 4.4.2 Case 2. The Chicken Game - Norwegian Kindergarten
  • 4.4.2.1 Summary of the Chicken-Game, Norwegian Kindergarten
  • 4.4.3 Summary of Our Findings
  • 4.5 Discussion of Conditions for Children's Explorations
  • 4.5.1 Societal Needs, Expectations and Demands
  • 4.5.2 Institutional Organization and Demands
  • 4.5.3 Kindergarten Teachers' Motivation and Engagement in the Activity Setting
  • 4.5.4 Children's Motivation and Engagement
  • 4.5.5 Climate and Air Quality
  • 4.6 Conclusion
  • References
  • Chapter 5: Conflict Analyses: A Methodology for Exploring Children's Cultural Formation in Early Childhood Education
  • 5.1 Introduction
  • 5.2 Constructing Theoretical Dialectical Knowledge
  • 5.2.1 Constructing Knowledge by Emphasising Conflicts
  • 5.2.2 Analysis from a Thematic Perspective
  • 5.2.3 Analysis from the Perspective of Cultural Formation in Nature
  • 5.2.4 Illustrating a Multifactorial Methodology for Analysis to Construct Theoretical Dialectical Knowledge
  • 5.3 Method and Material
  • 5.4 Analysis
  • 5.4.1 Conflicts in the Activity (Imaginative Play)
  • 5.4.2 Conflicts from an Institutional Perspective
  • 5.4.3 Conflicts from a Cultural Perspective
  • 5.4.4 Conflicts from the Perspective of Nature
  • 5.4.5 The Conflicts and What Were Explored
  • 5.5 Concluding Reflections
  • References.
  • Chapter 6: Dialogical Engagement and the Co-Creation of Cultures of Exploration
  • 6.1 Introduction
  • 6.2 Cultural-Historical Perspective and Ecological Inspiration
  • 6.3 A 'Glocal' Awareness and Moving Away from Unsustainability
  • 6.4 A Pedagogical Model of Exploration as Dialogical Engagement
  • 6.5 Time-Emergence and Manifestations of Practice
  • 6.6 Characteristics of Exploration in Pedagogy
  • 6.7 Activity, Relations, Place and Space
  • 6.8 Illustrations and Discussions of Conditions
  • 6.9 Meaning-Making and Participatory Space
  • 6.10 The Relevance of 'Exploration' in Early Years Pedagogy in the 'Glocal' Landscape
  • 6.11 Conclusion-Cultures of Exploration
  • References
  • Chapter 7: Historical Roots of Exploration - Through a Fröbelian Third Space
  • 7.1 Play and Exploration in Friedrich Fröbel's Educational Philosophy
  • 7.2 Tracing Exploration Through Friedrich Fröbel's Educational Philosophy
  • 7.3 The Holistic Approach and the Invisible Third
  • 7.4 Exploring Conditions for the Third Space
  • 7.5 Roundtrip to the Future: Through a Fröbelian-Inspired Third Space
  • Appendix
  • References
  • Chapter 8: Institutional Conditions for Exploration: Chinese Kindergarten Teachers' Perspectives and Practices
  • 8.1 Introduction and Background
  • 8.2 The Present Study
  • 8.2.1 Research Question
  • 8.2.2 Research Sites
  • 8.2.3 Data Collection and Participants
  • 8.2.4 Data Analysis
  • 8.3 Findings and Discussion
  • 8.3.1 Teachers' Conceptions of Children's Exploration
  • 8.3.2 Explorative Activities Children Engage In
  • 8.3.2.1 The General Exploration Process and Teachers' Role in It
  • 8.3.2.2 Common Exploratory Activities across the Kindergartens
  • 8.3.2.3 Explorative Activities of Own Distinctive Features
  • 8.4 Conclusion and Implications
  • References
  • Chapter 9: Kindergarten as a Budding Explorative Scientific Community.
  • 9.1 Introduction
  • 9.2 Learning and Development from a Cultural-Historical Perspective
  • 9.2.1 Social Activities as Starting Points of Learning and Development
  • 9.2.2 Learning and Development as Mediated
  • 9.3 The Concept of Exploration
  • 9.4 'Science as inquiry' and 'Practices of science'
  • 9.5 Sciencing in Kindergarten
  • 9.5.1 Incidental Sciencing
  • 9.5.2 Informal Sciencing
  • 9.5.3 Formal Sciencing
  • 9.6 Bridging and Challenging Beliefs about What Constitute Good Educational Practices in Kindergarten
  • 9.7 What Competences Do the Teachers Need?
  • 9.8 Closing Remarks
  • References
  • Chapter 10: Musical Exploration in Everyday Practices - Identifying Transition Points in Musicking
  • 10.1 Introduction
  • 10.2 How Music Works in Institutional Settings
  • 10.3 Musicking
  • 10.4 Reconstructing Narratives to Understand Musicking Transition Points
  • 10.4.1 Narrative 1: Music Circle Time - Exploration with Music Instruments
  • 10.4.2 Narrative 2: The Sword Dance - Exploration through Rhythm and Imagination
  • 10.4.3 Narrative 3: Fictional Drama - Exploration in a Joint Community
  • 10.5 Conceptualising Exploration Through Identifying Transition Points
  • 10.6 Music and Musical Exploration
  • References
  • Chapter 11: Exploration Through Process Drama with Kindergarten Children
  • 11.1 Introduction
  • 11.2 Part I Process Drama
  • 11.3 Process Drama and children's Play
  • 11.4 The Teacher's Responsibility, Role, and Attitude in Process Drama
  • 11.5 Part II: An Example - With Analysing Comments
  • 11.6 At the Courthouse
  • 11.7 Conclusion
  • References.