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Joanne Alderson; Fi McAlevey; Muni Narayan – Early Childhood Folio, 2024
Kaiako in Aotearoa New Zealand inquire into innovative practice in meaningful ways. This mixed-methods study explored the use of curriculum innovation and key factors that shape kaiako self-belief, relationships, and teaching contexts. Phase 1 utilised a national quantitative survey of early childhood education (ECE) kaiako from a range of…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Educational Innovation, Early Childhood Teachers, Early Childhood Education
Wu, Bin; Oxworth, Catherine – Contemporary Issues in Early Childhood, 2022
Neo-liberalism continues to expand its grip on education, despite fierce opposition. As an economic and political hegemony, neo-liberalism silences alternative viewpoints and neutralises resistance. Using an example of integrating Australian Indigenous pedagogy in early childhood initial teacher education, this article puts forward a typology for…
Descriptors: Neoliberalism, Decolonization, Early Childhood Education, Indigenous Knowledge
Esther Maeers; Jane Hewes; Monica Lysack; Pam Whitty – in education, 2022
In Canada, multiple, intersecting, and incommensurable narratives promote investment in a public ECEC system. These dominant narratives are typically justified through an entanglement of discourses, including gender equity, colonialism, developmentalism, investment in children as future workers, and childcare as social infrastructure. With…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Early Childhood Education, COVID-19, Pandemics
Lees, Anna; Tropp Laman, Tasha; Calderón, Dolores – Theory Into Practice, 2021
Settler Colonialism is marked by the permanent move of mostly European settlers into other territories that requires the ongoing displacement and/or elimination of Indigenous peoples, the enslavement and dispossession of Indigenous peoples from Africa, and the individual ownership of land for capital gain. This displacement and elimination takes…
Descriptors: Land Settlement, Early Childhood Education, Preservice Teacher Education, Indigenous Populations
Loomis, Colleen; Akkari, Abdeljalil – Research in Educational Administration & Leadership, 2021
In studies on educational leadership across African countries, researchers are using different concepts that do not have the same meanings or similar histories, including variations in involvement by local, national, and international leaders. In the first part of this article, we problematize conceptualizing globally minded school leadership in…
Descriptors: Instructional Leadership, Indigenous Knowledge, School Readiness, Educational Quality
Honeyford, Michelle; Ntelioglou, Burcu Yaman – Canadian Modern Language Review, 2021
Over a three-year collaborative partnership involving university researchers, government curriculum specialists, and school division teams and educators, this post-qualitative study has engaged a diffractive methodology to research pedagogical change in relationship to a renewed provincial curriculum framework in English Language Arts (ELA). In…
Descriptors: Kindergarten, Elementary Secondary Education, English, Language Arts
Martin, Brian; Stewart, Georgina; Watson, Bruce Ka'imi; Silva, Ola Keola; Teisina, Jeanne; Matapo, Jacoba; Mika, Carl – Educational Philosophy and Theory, 2020
Being Indigenous and operating in an institution such as a university places us in a complex position. The premise of decolonizing history, literature, curriculum, and thought in general creates a tenuous space for Indigenous and non-Indigenous peoples to confront a shared colonial condition. What does decolonization mean for Indigenous peoples?…
Descriptors: Foreign Policy, Educational Philosophy, Indigenous Populations, Curriculum Development
Douglas, Velta; Purton, Fiona; Bascuñán, Daniela – Alberta Journal of Educational Research, 2020
Indigenous perspectives and knowledges have been rendered "difficult" to teach and learn due to settler-colonial norms that are naturalized in Ontario's public K-12 education system. We explore how we as educators and teachers with diverse populations of students critically engage pedagogy and knowledge to take up Indigenous perspectives…
Descriptors: Indigenous Knowledge, Difficulty Level, Teaching Methods, Intervention
Yang, Weipeng; Li, Hui – ECNU Review of Education, 2022
Purpose: This article presents a scoping review of the internationally published research on the early childhood curriculum (ECC) reforms, policies, measures, and effectiveness in China and Singapore, to explore the joint and interactive effects of globalization and localization in ECC in two different contexts. Design/Approach/Methods: We…
Descriptors: Cross Cultural Studies, Foreign Countries, Preschool Curriculum, Educational Change
Garcia-Olp, Michelle; Nelson, Chris; Saiz, LeRoy – Educational Studies: Journal of the American Educational Studies Association, 2022
This article illustrates the shared work of Indigenous scholars and community members rooted in Indigenous knowledge toward the goal of decolonizing mathematics education. Furthermore, this study highlights "IndigiLogix: Mathematics|Culture|Environment (M|C|E)" programming, which is a mathematics precollege program created to advance…
Descriptors: Mathematics Education, Educational Change, Indigenous Knowledge, College Preparation
Bhengu, Thamsanqa T.; Svosve, Evangelista – Africa Education Review, 2019
This article presents and discusses the findings of a multi-case study that was conducted in four remote rural early childhood development (ECD) schools located in the Chiredzi district, in Masvingo province, Zimbabwe. The article explored how school heads enhanced resources mobilisation in remote rural ECD schools through school-community…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Indigenous Knowledge, School Community Relationship, Case Studies
May, Helen – Global Education Review, 2022
Miss Isabel Little was a Scottish infant teacher who immigrated to New Zealand in 1912. She was described as a "Froebel trained Scot from Edinburgh" and known around Wellington education circles for her "modern methods". In contrast to known Froebelian pioneers, Miss Little's historical footprint is light but the few glimpses…
Descriptors: Educational History, Early Childhood Education, Strategic Planning, Foreign Countries
Hanson, Kelly – LEARNing Landscapes, 2019
In 2016, the province of British Columbia introduced a redesigned K-6 curriculum. Undergirding this plan is the learning philosophy, the First Peoples Principles of Learning. This paper is written from the perspective of a settler teacher as she engages in self-study research to develop her understanding of the curricular plan. The author…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Elementary School Curriculum, Preschool Curriculum, Canada Natives
Anti-Colonial Orientations to Place: Unsettling Encounters with South African Educational Landscapes
Murris, Karin; Francis, Sieraaj; Babamia, Sumaya; Nxumalo, Fikile; Bozalek, Vivienne; Giorza, Theresa – Equity & Excellence in Education, 2020
The authors bring together decolonial, place attuned, and critical posthumanist orientations to analyze an event during a residential workshop organized as part of a state-funded research project on decolonizing early childhood discourses in South Africa. An invitation during the workshop to grapple with what might be unsettling by attending to…
Descriptors: Foreign Policy, Early Childhood Education, Teacher Workshops, Preschool Teachers
Rudolph, Norma – Journal of Pedagogy, 2017
Policy for young children in South Africa is now receiving high-level government support through the ANC's renewed commitment to redress poverty and inequity and creating "a better life for all" as promised before the 1994 election. In this article, I explore the power relations, knowledge hierarchies and discourses of childhood, family…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Poverty, Indigenous Knowledge, African Culture
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