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JournalISSN: 1463-9491

Contemporary Issues in Early Childhood 

SAGE Publishing
About: Contemporary Issues in Early Childhood is an academic journal published by SAGE Publishing. The journal publishes majorly in the area(s): Early childhood education & Early childhood. It has an ISSN identifier of 1463-9491. Over the lifetime, 849 publications have been published receiving 16169 citations. The journal is also known as: CIEC.


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Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the extent to which children in the USA today participate in active, outdoor play, compared with the previous generation, was discussed. And the study revealed several fundamental reasons for this decline, including dependence on television and digital media, and concerns about crime and safety.
Abstract: This study discusses the extent to which children in the USA today participate in active, outdoor play, compared with the previous generation. Eight hundred and thirty mothers nationwide were surveyed regarding their active, outdoor play experiences as children, as well as their children's play experiences today. The mother's play experiences, compared with the child's, clearly indicate that children today spend considerably less time playing outdoors than their mothers did as children. The study reveals several fundamental reasons for this decline, including dependence on television and digital media, and concerns about crime and safety. The study also conveys findings related to the frequent use of electronic diversions and discusses several suggestions for early childhood professionals, classroom teachers, and parents for fostering the child's enjoyment for outdoor play.

511 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the dominant construction of professionalism as created and promoted by the United Kingdom Government through policy is discussed and analyzed. But the focus of the paper is on the UK professionalism.
Abstract: The aim of this article is to problematise the dominant construction of ‘professionalism’ as created and promoted by the United Kingdom Government through policy. Like other professionals working i...

362 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: The notion of concrete manipulatives is embedded in educational theories, research, and practice, especially in mathematics education as discussed by the authors, and the use of such manipulative ideas has been studied extensively in psychology and education.
Abstract: The notion of ‘concrete,’ from concrete manipulatives to pedagogical sequences such as ‘concrete to abstract,’ is embedded in educational theories, research, and practice, especially in mathematics education. In this article, the author considers research on the use of manipulatives and offers a critique of common perspectives on the notions of concrete manipulatives and concrete ideas. He offers a reformulation of the definition of ‘concrete’ as used in psychology and education and provides illustrations of how, accepting that reformulation, computer manipulatives may be pedagogically efficacious.

261 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
TL;DR: In this paper, the authors investigated the learning of feelings for caring occupations, and presented a detailed case study, based on both quantitative and qualitative data, of a group of childcare students throughout their two-year course.
Abstract: There is debate among early years experts about the appropriate degree of emotional engagement between nursery nurses and the children in their care. Through research into the learning cultures of further education (in the Economic and Social Research Council’s Teaching and Learning Research Programme), the author considers how prospective nursery nurses first learn to deploy emotion in their work. Few researchers have investigated the learning of feelings for caring occupations, and this article presents a detailed case study, based on both quantitative and qualitative data, of a group of childcare students throughout their two-year course. In analysing its official, unwritten, and hidden curricula, and the social practices of learning it entails, the author draws on feminist readings of Marx and Bourdieu to reveal how gendered and class-fractional positionings combine with vocational education and training to construct imperatives about ‘correct’ emotions in childcare. The author compares theorisations of emotional capital and emotional labour, and suggests we need social rather than individualised understandings of how feelings are put to work. The author concludes that emotional labour carries costs for the nursery nurse, not because children consume her emotional resources, but because her emotional labour power is controlled and exploited for profit by employers.

238 citations

Journal ArticleDOI
Peter Moss1
TL;DR: In this article, the authors consider what forms change might take, both structurally and in terms of how the worker and her work is understood, arguing for the need to connect restructuring with rethinking to re-envision the workforce.
Abstract: As early childhood services move up the policy agenda, so too does the early childhood workforce. Its members are recognised as the main resource for such services, and there is an increasing recognition that the work is complex and requires enhanced education. But despite this recognition, the situation in many countries — where the early childhood workforce remains split between a minority of teachers and a growing majority of childcare workers with lower qualifications and poorer work conditions — is highly problematic. The article considers what forms change might take, both structurally and in terms of how the worker and her work is understood, arguing for the need to connect restructuring with rethinking to re-envision the workforce. It also examines how understandings of the workforce are produced from different discourses and how different understandings relate to concepts of professionalism, proposing a politics of occupational identity and values that moves beyond the dualistic ‘non-professional...

236 citations

Performance
Metrics
No. of papers from the Journal in previous years
YearPapers
202329
202247
202146
202050
201935
201833