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Showing 1 to 15 of 56 results Save | Export
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Anna Backman – Early Childhood Education Journal, 2024
The purpose of this study is to explore a theoretical idea in relation to a body of empirical material from a reading activity involving a picturebook on shadow. The theoretical idea, sprung from variation theory, entails children's discernment through synchronic simultaneity as a key to their ability to imagine. To explore this idea, an analysis…
Descriptors: Imagination, Picture Books, Preschool Children, Learning Activities
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Marilyn Fleer – American Journal of Play, 2023
The author draws on Lev S. Vygotsky's conception of play and Gunilla Lindqvist's methodology concerning the aesthetics of play to discuss play practice in early childhood classrooms. Based on the study of an educational experiment at a primary school, she discusses how children in a school setting simultaneously engage in developed forms of…
Descriptors: Preschool Children, Kindergarten, Young Children, Imagination
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Fleer, Marilyn; Rai, Prabhat; Fragkiadaki, Glykeria – International Journal of Early Years Education, 2022
Play acts as the source of children's development in the preschool period. Yet, the global pandemic has changed children's play conditions in ways that are not yet fully understood. With movement restrictions, families have struggled to find ways of bringing children together for play. We studied how family day care (FDC) educators across a remote…
Descriptors: Play, Child Care, Child Development, Preschool Children
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Aysun Gündogan – International Journal of Early Years Education, 2025
Preschoolers have different experiences in different environments. These experiences can stimulate children's imaginations. This longitudinal study examines the impact of preschool children's three-year experiences in early childhood institutions, which are their primary educational environments. The question 'Do preschoolers imagine different…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Preschool Children, Experience, Imagination
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Geist, Eugene; Jung, Jeesun – Childhood Education, 2022
Do young children understand the complex mathematics in the petals of a daisy, the Fibonacci sequence in the spiral of a pinecone, the fractal geometry in the leaves of a fern, or the "golden ratio" in the seed pattern of a sunflower? Probably not, but they certainly can observe and recognize the patterns and compare them to similar…
Descriptors: Gardening, Geometry, Mathematical Concepts, Concept Formation
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Ellis, Cheryl; Beauchamp, Gary; Sarwar, Sian; Tyrie, Jacky; Adams, Dylan; Dumitrescu, Sandra; Haughton, Chantelle – Journal of Early Childhood Research, 2021
It is widely accepted that play and 'free play' in particular, is beneficial to young children's holistic development. However, there is a lack of evidence of the role that the natural environment can have in relation to young children's play. This study examined the elements of 'free play' of children aged 4-5 years within a woodland university…
Descriptors: Play, Outdoor Education, Child Development, Natural Resources
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Devi, Anamika – Pedagogies: An International Journal, 2022
There are some studies indicating that parents make a significant contribution to children's conceptual learning through play, whereas very few studies have been done to identify parents' pedagogical positioning in children's imaginative play for supporting their learning and development. This paper is seeking how Indian-Australian immigrant…
Descriptors: Teaching Methods, Play, Parent Role, Immigrants
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Huf, Christina; Kluge, Markus – Ethnography and Education, 2021
This paper engages with the question of how ethnographers in the field of Early Childhood Education and Care (ECEC) can respond to the ontological turn in the social studies of childhood. Against the background of ECEC's deeply sedimented orientation towards the uniqueness of the individual child, the paper wishes to complicate the rationale of…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Child Care, Ethnography, Foreign Countries
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Ade Dwi Utami; Marilyn Fleer; Liang Li – Journal of Early Childhood Research, 2025
Structured and teacher-directed play focused on children's academic outcomes has proven problematic in Indonesian early childhood education. This contrasts with the PlayWorlds model, which emphasises both the primary activity of play and conceptual learning. However, there has been little research in Indonesia on the pedagogical aspects of the…
Descriptors: Foreign Countries, Early Childhood Education, Early Childhood Teachers, Play
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Walker, Sue; Fleer, Marilyn; Veresov, Nikolai; Duhn, Iris – Australasian Journal of Early Childhood, 2020
This paper presents the findings of a study conducted with preschool teachers trialling an intervention in which executive function activities are embedded in teachers' daily practices and imaginary play is used to build meaningful problem situations that children solve using executive functions. The participants were 227 preschool children (53%…
Descriptors: Executive Function, Imagination, Preschool Teachers, Preschool Children
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Taylor, Ellie K.; Kervin, Lisa – Journal of Museum Education, 2022
There is more to know about children's play and learning in public spaces, including the long-term benefits of exposure to established play spaces such as children's museums. Nested within an 18-month mixed-method longitudinal study, this qualitative descriptive study sought to understand how children aged three to five years develop and learn…
Descriptors: Parent Attitudes, Caregiver Attitudes, Play, Learning
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Somolanji Tokic, Ida; Borovac, Tijana – International Journal of Early Years Education, 2020
Grounded in the sociocultural perspective, this paper analyses current Croatian theory and practice on the transition to school and addresses the importance of fostering a play-based pedagogy and symbolic play in particular. Despite the contemporary theoretical background on early childhood and children's transition to school, the mainstream…
Descriptors: Play, Preschool Children, Teaching Methods, Foreign Countries
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Veraksa, Alexander Nikolaevich; Gavrilova, Margarita Nikolaevna; Bukhalenkova, Daria ?lexeevna; Almazova, Olga; Veraksa, Nickolay Evgenievich; Colliver, Yeshe – Early Child Development and Care, 2021
Previous research has indicated that young children's executive functions (EFs) can be bolstered through role-play [e.g. the 'Batman™ effect'; White et al.]. However, what is not clear is whether it is the role-playing of another's perspective, or something about the role played, which is responsible for the Batman™ effect. The current experiment…
Descriptors: Executive Function, Child Development, Comparative Analysis, Role Playing
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Dimitropoulos, Anastasia; Doernberg, Ellen A.; Russ, Sandra W.; Zyga, Olena – Journal of Autism and Developmental Disorders, 2022
Prader-Willi Syndrome (PWS) is a rare neurodevelopmental disorder associated with social cognitive challenges, and pretend play has been demonstrated as a tool to achieve developmental goals. Following previous report on feasibility and acceptability of a remote, play-based parent-training program (Zyga, Russ, & Dimitropoulos, 2018), we now…
Descriptors: Genetics, Intervention, Response to Intervention, Genetic Disorders
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Shaw, Janet – Early Child Development and Care, 2021
The paper looks at the relevance of W.R. Bion's 'Theory of Thinking' to the interpretation of young child observations. Bion describes a process whereby emotional experience, when contained by a caregiver, gives rise to a capacity for symbol formation, which is at the root of imagination and language. The study consists of eight written hour-long…
Descriptors: Psychiatry, Child Development, Preschool Children, Observation
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