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Open AccessJournal ArticleDOI

Power, Space, and Place in Early Childhood Education

Cory Jobb
- 30 Sep 2019 - 
- Vol. 44, Iss: 3, pp 211-232
TLDR
This paper explored early childhood educators' perceptions on how power relations are shaped by interactions between themselves, children, and the material environment, and found that power circulates between bodies and spatialities, in the complex interactions between individuals and the physical spaces they encounter.
Abstract
This paper addresses early childhood educators’ perceptions on how power relations are shaped by interactions between themselves, children, and the material environment. In a qualitative three-phase case study I explored educators’ perceptions on how power relations are enacted within one preschool classroom in Southern Ontario, and how power relations are affected when educators conceptualize the environment through the perspective of space and place. Drawing on reconceptualist theory in early childhood education, children’s spatialities, and Michel Foucault’s work on power in society, I suggest that power circulates between bodies and spatialities, in the complex interactions between individuals and the physical spaces they encounter. The findings suggest that while early childhood educators may understand intuitively the demarcation between space and place, external constraints – real or perceived – are barriers to change. I argue that shifting philosophical and pedagogical stances in early childhood education have resulted in two binarized positions, where philosophy and pedagogy are frequently understood as either child-centred, or teacher-directed orientations and that troubling the binary by thinking with place can help refigure power relations between educators and young children. The conceptual distinction between thinking of early childhood classrooms as space or place is significant and I argue that viewing the environment as place is one possible way educators can reconceptualize traditionally hierarchical and binarized power dynamics between themselves and young children.

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Approaches to teaching and learning

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TL;DR: Active learning as mentioned in this paper is a collection of practices and principles for active learning, which is defined as "being actively engaged in learning" rather than passive recipients of teaching, and is defined by Vygotsky (1978) as the zone of proximal development.
Journal ArticleDOI

Early childhood teachers making multiliterate learning environments: The emergence of a spatial design thinking process

TL;DR: This article explored and elicited early childhood teachers' thinking and making multiliterate learning environments, with an ethnographic approach, and found that teachers' design thinking process is culturally situated and child interest-driven, enabling some child agency in spatial meaning-making as co-authors of the multilink environments they inhabit, where a wide range of people, texts, practices, meanings, and cultural contexts intersect to build communication.
Journal ArticleDOI

Place, Peers, and Play: Children’s Belonging in a Preprimary School Setting

TL;DR: In this article, the authors focus on children's perspectives of belonging to a place, in this case a Finnish pre-primary school setting, and explore "place-belonging" in photographs originally taken by the children in their preprimary school activities, showing how the children can make places of their own and contribute to the setting, how they build their own places, and how these places and associated structures affect the children's actions.
Journal ArticleDOI

Pedagogies of place-spaces: walking-with the post-professional

Nicola Fairchild
- 20 Aug 2021 - 
TL;DR: There has been a re-politicisation of the professional identity of English Early Childhood Education and Care (ECEC) teachers following revisions to the Early Years Foundation Stage curriculum.
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