Relationships with Families in Early Childhood Education and Care
Beyond Instrumentalization in International Contexts of Diversity and Social Inequality
Relationships with Families in Early Childhood Education and Care
Beyond Instrumentalization in International Contexts of Diversity and Social Inequality
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Relationships with Families in Early Childhood Education and Care radically challenges the role assigned to parents in neoliberal discussions of early childhood education and care, and presents new ways of thinking about relationships with families.
With contributions from international early childhood scholars and practitioners, this book includes outlooks of practitioners, families and children, particularly about the meanings they assign to relationships. Bringing together key understandings about how parent-partnerships can be understood, this book provides innovative examples of how to…mehr
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With contributions from international early childhood scholars and practitioners, this book includes outlooks of practitioners, families and children, particularly about the meanings they assign to relationships. Bringing together key understandings about how parent-partnerships can be understood, this book provides innovative examples of how to enact democratic partnerships with parents in diverse contexts.
Relationships with Families in Early Childhood Education and Care is an ideal text for ECEC practitioners and policy makers, trainers, graduate students and researchers.
- Produktdetails
- Towards an Ethical Praxis in Early Childhood
- Verlag: Routledge / Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 224
- Erscheinungstermin: 13. Juli 2022
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 12mm
- Gewicht: 280g
- ISBN-13: 9780367417581
- ISBN-10: 0367417588
- Artikelnr.: 63266256
- Towards an Ethical Praxis in Early Childhood
- Verlag: Routledge / Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 224
- Erscheinungstermin: 13. Juli 2022
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 234mm x 156mm x 12mm
- Gewicht: 280g
- ISBN-13: 9780367417581
- ISBN-10: 0367417588
- Artikelnr.: 63266256
- Foreword: For a re-socialisation and re-politicisation of the parent-professional relationship- Michel Vandenbroeck
- Introduction: Why we need to move beyond instrumentalization when discussing families and early childhood education and care- Joanne Lehrer, Katrien Van Laere, Fay Hadley, and Elizabeth Rouse
Section I: Disrupting Partnerships
- Parent-centred partnerships: Early childhood educators addressing barriers to building reciprocal partnerships with parents- Fay Hadley and Elizabeth Rouse
- Mothers, educators, and teachers contesting and transforming the metanarrative of pedagogicalisation in childcare and preschool- Joanne S. Lehrer, Nathalie Bigras, and Isabelle Laurin
- " Will you please tell your wife...." fathers, second grade parents for young children?- Jan Peeters
- Problematizing partnerships from the vantage point of children- Tanja Betz
- Storylines and place: accessing kindergarten in remote Queensland- Sue Dockett and Bob Perry
- What Early Childhood Teachers need to know about fostering black children's positive identification with blackness: foregrounding mother's perspectives- Patricia Hall and Rachel Berman
- Listening matters: Experiences of a migrant facilitator in listening to parents- Hanif Reza Jaberipour
- Wait, watch and learn: Parental perspectives on difficult emotions in relationships with ECEC practitioners- Catharine Gilson
- Centre partnerships through a Singaporean lens: The role of mothers, fathers, grandparents and domestic helpers- Angela Chng
- Shifting the balance of power for families through a strengths-based book gifting program- Lennie Barblett and Caroline Barratt-Pugh
- Pedagogy-in-Participation: promoting a deep connectivity between children, families and practitioners- Joana de Sousaa and Inês Machadob
- Decolonizing stories during the transition from childcare to school: Collaborating with indigenous families- Lisa Provencher, Andrea Maurice, and Kim Rud
- They are who they are! Equity versus equality - our journey in overcoming the divide- Bernadette Hayes and Cindy Treverrow
- Parents as first educators at Elmer Childcare Centre: A human-centred story of respect, inclusion and shared responsibilities- Katrien Van Laere, Nima Sharmahd and Liesbeth Lambert
- Koala days-Parent partnership and heart connections in a 'home early childhood centre' setting- Anuja Jena-Crottet
- Conclusion: A conversation about insights related to democratic relationships with families- Joanne Lehrer, Fay Hadley, Elizabeth Rouse, Katrien Van Laere, Silvia Blanch Gelabert, and Ute Ward
Section II: Parent Perspectives
Section III: Innovative Enactment of Partnerships
parent-professional relationship- Michel Vandenbroeck
2. Introduction: Why we need to move beyond instrumentalization when
discussing families and early childhood education and care- Joanne
Lehrer, Katrien Van Laere, Fay Hadley, and Elizabeth Rouse
Section I: Disrupting Partnerships
1. Parent-centred partnerships: Early childhood educators addressing
barriers to building reciprocal partnerships with parents- Fay Hadley
and Elizabeth Rouse
2. Mothers, educators, and teachers contesting and transforming the
metanarrative of pedagogicalisation in childcare and preschool-
Joanne S. Lehrer, Nathalie Bigras, and Isabelle Laurin
3. " Will you please tell your wife...." fathers, second grade parents
for young children?- Jan Peeters
4. Problematizing partnerships from the vantage point of children-
Tanja Betz
5. Storylines and place: accessing kindergarten in remote Queensland-
Sue Dockett and Bob Perry
Section II: Parent Perspectives
6. What Early Childhood Teachers need to know about fostering black
children's positive identification with blackness: foregrounding
mother's perspectives- Patricia Hall and Rachel Berman
7. Listening matters: Experiences of a migrant facilitator in listening
to parents- Hanif Reza Jaberipour
8. Wait, watch and learn: Parental perspectives on difficult emotions in
relationships with ECEC practitioners- Catharine Gilson
9. Centre partnerships through a Singaporean lens: The role of mothers,
fathers, grandparents and domestic helpers- Angela Chng
Section III: Innovative Enactment of Partnerships
10. Shifting the balance of power for families through a strengths-based
book gifting program- Lennie Barblett and Caroline Barratt-Pugh
11. Pedagogy-in-Participation: promoting a deep connectivity between
children, families and practitioners- Joana de Sousaa and Inês
Machadob
12. Decolonizing stories during the transition from childcare to school:
Collaborating with indigenous families- Lisa Provencher, Andrea
Maurice, and Kim Rud
13. They are who they are! Equity versus equality - our journey in
overcoming the divide- Bernadette Hayes and Cindy Treverrow
14. Parents as first educators at Elmer Childcare Centre: A human-centred
story of respect, inclusion and shared responsibilities- Katrien Van
Laere, Nima Sharmahd and Liesbeth Lambert
15. Koala days-Parent partnership and heart connections in a 'home early
childhood centre' setting- Anuja Jena-Crottet
16. Conclusion: A conversation about insights related to democratic
relationships with families- Joanne Lehrer, Fay Hadley, Elizabeth
Rouse, Katrien Van Laere, Silvia Blanch Gelabert, and Ute Ward
- Foreword: For a re-socialisation and re-politicisation of the parent-professional relationship- Michel Vandenbroeck
- Introduction: Why we need to move beyond instrumentalization when discussing families and early childhood education and care- Joanne Lehrer, Katrien Van Laere, Fay Hadley, and Elizabeth Rouse
Section I: Disrupting Partnerships
- Parent-centred partnerships: Early childhood educators addressing barriers to building reciprocal partnerships with parents- Fay Hadley and Elizabeth Rouse
- Mothers, educators, and teachers contesting and transforming the metanarrative of pedagogicalisation in childcare and preschool- Joanne S. Lehrer, Nathalie Bigras, and Isabelle Laurin
- " Will you please tell your wife...." fathers, second grade parents for young children?- Jan Peeters
- Problematizing partnerships from the vantage point of children- Tanja Betz
- Storylines and place: accessing kindergarten in remote Queensland- Sue Dockett and Bob Perry
- What Early Childhood Teachers need to know about fostering black children's positive identification with blackness: foregrounding mother's perspectives- Patricia Hall and Rachel Berman
- Listening matters: Experiences of a migrant facilitator in listening to parents- Hanif Reza Jaberipour
- Wait, watch and learn: Parental perspectives on difficult emotions in relationships with ECEC practitioners- Catharine Gilson
- Centre partnerships through a Singaporean lens: The role of mothers, fathers, grandparents and domestic helpers- Angela Chng
- Shifting the balance of power for families through a strengths-based book gifting program- Lennie Barblett and Caroline Barratt-Pugh
- Pedagogy-in-Participation: promoting a deep connectivity between children, families and practitioners- Joana de Sousaa and Inês Machadob
- Decolonizing stories during the transition from childcare to school: Collaborating with indigenous families- Lisa Provencher, Andrea Maurice, and Kim Rud
- They are who they are! Equity versus equality - our journey in overcoming the divide- Bernadette Hayes and Cindy Treverrow
- Parents as first educators at Elmer Childcare Centre: A human-centred story of respect, inclusion and shared responsibilities- Katrien Van Laere, Nima Sharmahd and Liesbeth Lambert
- Koala days-Parent partnership and heart connections in a 'home early childhood centre' setting- Anuja Jena-Crottet
- Conclusion: A conversation about insights related to democratic relationships with families- Joanne Lehrer, Fay Hadley, Elizabeth Rouse, Katrien Van Laere, Silvia Blanch Gelabert, and Ute Ward
Section II: Parent Perspectives
Section III: Innovative Enactment of Partnerships
parent-professional relationship- Michel Vandenbroeck
2. Introduction: Why we need to move beyond instrumentalization when
discussing families and early childhood education and care- Joanne
Lehrer, Katrien Van Laere, Fay Hadley, and Elizabeth Rouse
Section I: Disrupting Partnerships
1. Parent-centred partnerships: Early childhood educators addressing
barriers to building reciprocal partnerships with parents- Fay Hadley
and Elizabeth Rouse
2. Mothers, educators, and teachers contesting and transforming the
metanarrative of pedagogicalisation in childcare and preschool-
Joanne S. Lehrer, Nathalie Bigras, and Isabelle Laurin
3. " Will you please tell your wife...." fathers, second grade parents
for young children?- Jan Peeters
4. Problematizing partnerships from the vantage point of children-
Tanja Betz
5. Storylines and place: accessing kindergarten in remote Queensland-
Sue Dockett and Bob Perry
Section II: Parent Perspectives
6. What Early Childhood Teachers need to know about fostering black
children's positive identification with blackness: foregrounding
mother's perspectives- Patricia Hall and Rachel Berman
7. Listening matters: Experiences of a migrant facilitator in listening
to parents- Hanif Reza Jaberipour
8. Wait, watch and learn: Parental perspectives on difficult emotions in
relationships with ECEC practitioners- Catharine Gilson
9. Centre partnerships through a Singaporean lens: The role of mothers,
fathers, grandparents and domestic helpers- Angela Chng
Section III: Innovative Enactment of Partnerships
10. Shifting the balance of power for families through a strengths-based
book gifting program- Lennie Barblett and Caroline Barratt-Pugh
11. Pedagogy-in-Participation: promoting a deep connectivity between
children, families and practitioners- Joana de Sousaa and Inês
Machadob
12. Decolonizing stories during the transition from childcare to school:
Collaborating with indigenous families- Lisa Provencher, Andrea
Maurice, and Kim Rud
13. They are who they are! Equity versus equality - our journey in
overcoming the divide- Bernadette Hayes and Cindy Treverrow
14. Parents as first educators at Elmer Childcare Centre: A human-centred
story of respect, inclusion and shared responsibilities- Katrien Van
Laere, Nima Sharmahd and Liesbeth Lambert
15. Koala days-Parent partnership and heart connections in a 'home early
childhood centre' setting- Anuja Jena-Crottet
16. Conclusion: A conversation about insights related to democratic
relationships with families- Joanne Lehrer, Fay Hadley, Elizabeth
Rouse, Katrien Van Laere, Silvia Blanch Gelabert, and Ute Ward