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Social Contexts of Early Education, and Reconceptualizing Play
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Points to the multiple perspectives that teachers, researchers, parents, and children bring to our understanding of play.
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18 November 2004

This volume revisits a number of themes that have appeared in earlier "Advances" publications, including "Social Contexts of Early Development" and "Education and Reconceptualizing Play". New social contexts for early education and care often require that we aim our inquiry at social conditions that have not existed in the past, as well as elaborating long-standing concerns. Studies of some of the social contexts of early education point to how many of the needs of the field are unique, depending on where and when we do our work, and with whom we work. "Reconceptualizing Play" points to the multiple perspectives that teachers, researchers, parents, and children bring to our understanding of play. Culture, policy, belief, and values prove to be worthy lenses for enhancing our developmental views of childhood play and practice. Our hope is that others will build on some of these reconceptualizations, to assist teachers and families to improve the lives of children in their programs.
Price: $152.99
Pages: 308
Publisher: Emerald Group Publishing Limited
Imprint: JAI Press Inc.
Series: Advances in Early Education & Day Care
Publication Date:
18 November 2004
ISBN: 9780762311460
Format: Hardcover
BISACs:
EDUCATION / Preschool & Kindergarten, Pre-school & kindergarten, Child, developmental & lifespan psychology
Part I: Social Contexts of Early Education. Young Children's Ideas about Poverty: Gender, Race, Socioeconomic Status, and Setting Differences. (J.A. Chafel, C. Neitzel). Blocks, Building and Mathematics: Influences of Task Format and Gender of Play Partners Among Preschoolers. (J.L. Eberly, S.L. Golbeck). Beyond Quality, Advancing Social Justice and Equity: Interdisciplinary Explorations of Working for Equity and Social Justice in Early Childhood Education. (S. Campbell et al.). Between a Rock and a Hard Place: Teachers' Experiences in Meeting the Abbott Mandate. (D.J. Ackerman). Lessons From Home: A Look at Culture and Development. (I.C. Woods). Part II: Reconceptualizing Play (II). Beyond Fun and Games Towards a Meaningful Theory of Play: Can a Hermeneutic Perspective Contribute? (K. VanderVen). From Context to Texts: DAP, Hermeneutics, and Reading Classroom Play. (S. Reifel et al.). Reconceptualizing Rough and Tumble Play: Ban the Banning. (N.K. Freeman, M.H. Brown). War Play, Aggression, and Peer Culture: A Review of the Research Examining the Relationship between War Play and Aggression. (H.L. Malloy, P. McMurray-Schwarz). Los Padres y Los Maestros: Perspectives of Play among Bilingual Stakeholders in Public Schools. (M. Riojas-Cortez, B. Bustos Flores).