String Figuring young children's perspectives of quality in English early childhood education and care

Nikki Fairchild, Éva Mikuska
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摘要

幼儿教育和保育(ECEC)的质量是一个有争议的概念,通常是通过相互关联的指标,如工作人员的资格、教育环境、政策或儿童与工作人员的比例来进行概念化的。对幼儿如何感知和体验质量的强调则较为有限。这篇实证性论文采用了研究-创作方法,结合女权主义唯物主义理论,特别是哈拉维的《弦图》,来探讨幼儿生活世界中的质量表现。我们从 17 个英国幼儿保育和教育机构的非参与者观察中收集并分析了数据,重点是儿童主导的活动,在这些活动中,我们观察到了儿童对物体、物质、资源、空间和场所的代理和自主参与。结果发现了一系列 "症结":安全、空间、物质、自主和其他儿童。我们在六个小故事中举例说明了这些 "结",并提出这些 "结 "是幼儿对其教育环境的体验的表现形式。通过分析,我们认识到在儿童通过探索自己选择的空间而感到安全的地方,质量是如何体现出来的。这使得儿童在独自或与其他儿童一起玩耍时拥有自主权。我们展示了 "字符串图法 "如何为深入理解幼儿在各种幼儿保育和教育环境中的生活世界的复杂性和细微差别提供了机会,并认为所发现的 "结 "可以为认识幼儿的质量体验提供情景和背景方法。通过这样做,就有可能开发出新的知识,推进质量的理论和专业实践概念。
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String Figuring young children's perspectives of quality in English early childhood education and care
Quality in early childhood education and care (ECEC) is a contested concept and has generally been conceptualised by inter‐related indicators such as staff qualifications, educational environment, policy or child‐to‐staff ratios. There has been a more limited emphasis on how young children might perceive and experience quality. This empirical paper employs a research‐creation methodology in combination with feminist materialist theory, notably Haraway's String Figuring, to consider how quality manifests in young children's lifeworlds. Data from non‐participant observations in 17 English ECEC settings were collected and analysed by focusing on child‐led activities where agentic and autonomous engagement with objects, matter, resources, space and places were observed. This resulted in the identification of a series of ‘knots’: security, space(s), material objects, autonomy and other children. We present examples of these knots in six vignettes and propose that these are manifestations of young children's experiences of their educational environments. The knots developed from our analysis recognise how quality was manifested where children felt secure by exploring their chosen spaces. This led to children having autonomy over their play, both alone and with other children. We demonstrate how String Figuring can provide an opportunity to develop a deeper understanding of the complex and nuanced nature of young children's lifeworlds in various ECEC settings, and argue that the identified knots can provide situated and contextual ways to recognise young children's experiences of quality. By doing so it is possible to develop new knowledge that advances theoretical and professional practice conceptualisations of quality.
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