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The chapters in this book have two goals: One provide the reader with an opportunity to engage with some of the problems that result from putting forward 'quality' as a dominant construct, and second to generate conversations and locations from diverse knowledges and multiple ways of being that could lead to the rethinking of quality.
This second edition of Reconceptualizing Early Childhood Education and Care is a foundational text that presents contemporary theories, debates, and political concerns regarding early education and child care around the globe.
This book offers a powerful, new road map for early childhood teacher preparation through a relational pedagogy that honors students' life experience and that leads to deep reflection and learning.
The chapters in this book have two goals: One provide the reader with an opportunity to engage with some of the problems that result from putting forward 'quality' as a dominant construct, and second to generate conversations and locations from diverse knowledges and multiple ways of being that could lead to the rethinking of quality.
This book tells the story of activist teachers and the very young together in a play-based curriculum in a public school in Texas.
The pedagogical project discussed in Disrupting Gendered Pedagogies in the Early Childhood Classroom examines the tensions associated with one teacher's attempts to rethink gendered narratives and childhood sexuality in her own classroom.
Voices of Early Childhood Educators presents powerful, living stories of early childhood students and practitioners. Susan Bernheimer clearly shows the importance of their stories for understanding the challenges now facing our field, including valuable insights into new forms of resilience and development.
Inside the "Inclusive" Childhood Classroom: The Power of the "Normal" offers a critique of current practices and alternative view of inclusion.
Many saw the 2008 election of Barack Obama as a sign that America had moved past the issue of race, that a colourblind society was finally within reach. But as Marianne Modica reveals in Race Among Friends, attempts to be colourblind do not end racism-in fact, ignoring race increases the likelihood that racism will occur in our schools and in society.
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