From home to the home corner : Observing children's identity-maintenance in early childhood settings
暂无分享,去创建一个
This article draws on data from two recent studies of young children in early childhood settings. One study was of children in a Korean private kindergarten, the other of children in a UK reception class. In each study, the data discussed include both evidence from ‘home’ (including parent interviews) and evidence from ‘school’ (including conversations with the children themselves) on the gendered and ethnic identities the children display in the classroom. The children's stated beliefs and preferences, and their observed choice of activities and friends, appear to be influenced both by the beliefs and behaviour of their families, and by the early childhood environments they are offered. The transition from home to group settings, it is suggested, may reinforce rather than diminish the stereotyping along gendered and ethnic lines, while participation in ‘research’ conversations may provide a rare opportunity for the children to question and reflect on stereotypes.
Copyright © 2006 The Author(s).
[1] L. Brooker,et al. The cooking teacher: investigating gender stereotypes in a Korean kindergarten , 2005 .
[2] J. Banks. Race, Knowledge Construction, and Education in the USA: Lessons from history , 2002 .
[3] S. Bem. Gender Schema Theory and Its Implications for Child Development: Raising Gender-Aschematic Children in a Gender-Schematic Society , 1983, Signs: Journal of Women in Culture and Society.
[4] Vivian Gussin Paley,et al. Boys & girls : superheroes in the doll corner , 1984 .