Description
Efnisyfirlit
- Half-title
- Title page
- Copyright information
- Table of contents
- About the authors
- Acknowledgements
- Chapter 1 Introduction
- Unpacking the elements of an early childhood curriculum
- The early childhood curriculum
- How to use this book
- Connecting to the Early Years Learning Framework and Te Whriki
- Online resources
- Chapter 2 Theory, research and the early childhood curriculum
- What is a curriculum?
- Curriculum models
- Performance model
- Competence model
- Dominant ideologies
- Scholar academic ideology
- Social efficiency ideology
- Learner-centred ideology
- Social reconstruction ideology
- Changes in thinking about curriculum
- 1. Aims or objectives
- 2. Content or subject matter
- 3. Methods or procedures
- 4. Assessment or evaluation
- Research as a driver for change in early childhood curriculum
- Summary
- Chapter 3 Play, learning and development: How views of development shape how curriculum is framed
- Development and curriculum
- Curriculum and child development
- DAP view of development
- A cultural-historical view of development
- Imperatives in curriculum
- Italy: Reggio Emilia
- Nordic countries
- United States: NAEYC position statement
- Australia: EYLF
- New Zealand: Te Whariki
- Summary
- Chapter 4 Curriculum as a cultural broker
- Curriculum and culture
- Reflecting on the broker: What should the curriculum mediate?
- Mediating culture and curriculum: A cultural-historical perspective
- Brokering curriculum for the future?
- Thinking professionally about brokering curriculum for the future
- Summary
- Chapter 5 Interpreting early childhood curriculum
- Understanding early childhood curriculum
- Working with early childhood curriculum frameworks
- Relating early childhood curriculum to children, families and communities
- The role of professional learning in curriculum interpretation
- Summary
- Chapter 6 Cultural-historical curriculum in action
- Thinking theoretically
- Understanding cultural-historical approaches to curriculum
- Beyond multiculturalism: Using cultural practices and engagement to support learning
- Play and a cultural-historical early childhood curriculum
- Extending learning within a cultural-historical curriculum
- Summary
- Chapter 7 Curriculum as a conceptual tool: Observation, content and programming
- Linking observation to planning in the curriculum
- What is observation and why is it important?
- The role of environments: Observations in the early childhood setting
- Zone of Proximal Development and Zone of Actual Development as a framework for assessment
- Assessment
- Scaffolding
- Cultural
- Collectivist
- Zone of Potential Development
- The role of play: Observing the child in action
- The role of transitions: The importance of observation, documentation and reflection
- The role of relationships: Documenting observations in the early childhood setting
- Shaping curriculum around key informants
- Summary
- Chapter 8 Assessing children and evaluating curriculum: Shifting lenses
- What is assessment?
- What is the purpose of assessment?
- Who is the assessment for?
- Assessing the individual or assessing groups
- Assessment across borders
- Side-by-side assessment
- The relationship between assessment and curriculum
- How others assess us
- A cultural-historical approach to assessment in schools
- Assessment, learning and evaluation are interdependent concepts
- Evaluation and assessment: Why evaluation matters
- Ethical framework for evaluation
- Planning for evaluation
- Leading evaluations: Process, input, design and outcome
- Process evaluation
- Input evaluation
- Design evaluation
- Outcome evaluation
- Curriculum, assessment and evaluation
- Summary
- Acknowledgements
- Chapter 9 Content knowledge: Science, technology, engineering and mathematics (STEM)
- Mathematical concept formation within everyday practice
- A cultural-historical reading of concept formation
- Thinking consciously about concepts
- Conceptual learning by infants and toddlers
- A curriculum model for working with everyday concepts and scientific concepts
- Curriculum in practice: Building scientific conceptual knowledge
- A way forward: Concepts, contexts and pedagogy
- Summary
- Acknowledgements
- Chapter 10 Content knowledge: Languages and literacies
- Languages and literacies
- How to encourage languages and literacies in the early years
- Assessing children’s interests in and experiences with literacies
- Storybook reading
- Writing and drawing
- Language and phonemic awareness
- Letter-name/alphabet awareness
- Environmental print
- Logical and analytical abilities
- Narrating stories
- A social practice perspective on literacies
- How to incorporate ‘out of school’ literacies in the early years setting
- Digital technologies
- Thinking about the working example (Figure 10.3)
- Summary
- Chapter 11 Content knowledge: The arts and health, wellbeing and physical activity
- Health, wellbeing and physical activity
- Physical play in the early childhood curriculum
- Thinking about the working example (Figure 11.1)
- The arts
- Thinking about the working example (Figure 11.2)
- Summary
- Chapter 12 Conclusions
- References
- Index




