Early childhood and compulsory education : reconceptualising the relationship

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Bibliographic Information

Early childhood and compulsory education : reconceptualising the relationship

edited by Peter Moss

(Contesting early childhood series)

Routledge, 2013

  • : hardback
  • : pbk

Available at  / 11 libraries

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Note

Other contributors: Lucia Balduzzi, John Bennett, Margaret Carr, Gunilla Dahlberg, Hildegard Gobeyn, Peder Haug, Sharon Lynn Kagan, Arianna Lazzari, Nadine De Stercke and Michel Vandenbroeck

Includes biblographical references (p. [206]-221) and index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

What should be the relationship between early childhood and compulsory education? What can they learn from one another and by working together? The rapid expansion of early childhood education and care means that most children in affluent countries now have several years at pre-school before compulsory education. This raises an important question about the relationship between the two. Whilst it's widely assumed that the former should prepare children for the latter, there are alternatives. This book contests the 'readying for school' relationship as neither self-evident nor unproblematic; and explores some alternative relationships, including a strong and equal partnership and the vision of a meeting place. In this ground-breaking book, Professor Peter Moss discusses the issue with leading early childhood figures - from Belgium, France, Italy, New Zealand, Norway, Sweden and the United States -who bring very different perspectives to this contentious relationship. The book starts with an extended essay by Peter Moss, to which the other contributors are invited to respond critically, as well as offering their own thinking about the relationship between early childhood and compulsory education, both their current understandings and suggestions on future directions. Students, researchers and academics in the field of early childhood education will find this an insightful and timely text. But so too will their peers in compulsory education, since the book time and again raises searching questions about pedagogical purpose and practice in this sector.

Table of Contents

Notes on contributors Part One: Introductory essay 1. The relationship between early childhood and compulsory education: a properly political question Part Two: Authors' responses 2. A response from the co-author of 'a strong and equal partnership' 3. A dialogue with the co-author of 'the vision of a meeting place' Part Three: Five other responses 4. Making a borderland of contested spaces into a meeting place: The relationship from a New Zealand perspective 5. From indifference to invasion: The relationship from a Norwegian perspective 6. David, Goliath and the ephemeral parachute: The relationship from a United States perspective 7. Bruno Ciari and 'educational continuity': The relationship from an Italian perspective 8. What if the Rich Child has Poor Parents? The relationship from a Flemish perspective Part Four: Concluding Reflections 9. Citizens should expect more! References

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