Abstract

AbstractThe aim of this chapter is to argue for, discuss and outline conditions for a pedagogy that promote exploration and how they contribute to children’s cultural formation as it can be understood in the complex context of early childhood education. The conditions and characteristics of explorative practices, found in earlier literature and experiences, interact in dynamic ways and are therefore difficult to grasp. Central to the chapter is the attempt to visualise how characteristics of explorative practices interact with some central conditions in local settings. I formulated a pedagogical model of exploration as dialogical engagement. Moreover, I will present a setup of binary pairs of educational cultures, principles and practices to answer a curiosity about what the characteristics in cultures of exploration will be. By such a setup, the importance of pedagogical dialogical engagement is highlighted. The chapter is anchored in a cultural historical approach, drawing on concepts like heteroglossia, speech genres and Mikhail Bakhtin’s loophole, among others (Bakhtin MM, The problem of the speech genre. In McGee VW (trans.), Speech genres and other late essays. University of Texas Press, Austin, TX, 60–102, 1986); The chapter argues that dialogism is central to cultures of exploration. Also, Seth Chaiklin and Mariane Hedegaard’s arguments and ideas for a radical local pedagogical approach (Chaiklin Z, Hedegaard M, Radical-local teaching and learning. Århus University Press, London, 2005) are a thinking tool, along with Roland Robertson’s (Featherstone M, Lash S, Robertson R, Global modernities. Sage, London, 1995) concept of ‘glocalisation’ (Khondker HH, Bangladesh J Sociol, 1(2): 1–9. Retrieved from http://muktomona.net/Articles/habibul_haque/Globalization.pdf, 2004). Alternative viewpoints and awareness of the local and the global in framing and recognising children’s experiences are set out in order to argue for a respectful exchange when considering the content and values of the ‘what’ in exploration. Cultures of exploration in early childhood education introduce a promise of a pedagogy where the teacher co-creates kindergarten content when operating in practice, in planning and meeting children and families in their local community and in considering activities, relations, place and space.

Highlights

  • A continuous inquiry exists regarding how the older generation can best create conditions for children to survive and live good, responsible lives

  • ‘Dialogism’ refers to the literary work of Mikhail Bakhtin and the Bakhtin circle and to the diversity of socially specific discourses in research as well as in pedagogy inspired by Bakhtin’s work. In pedagogy this implies the role of a teacher who orchestrates the diverse voices in a classroom and raises awareness of how cultural expressions wander and how spoken and bodily language, positions and performative actions are linked through time and place

  • The model has the shape of a halfway loophole that contains a layer of key dynamics conditioning exploration, and at far left, at what is the end or the starting point, there is a handle to set off or end the dialogical engagement, or taking on a discourse, a specific genre of pedagogical performance that carries the possibility of change

Read more

Summary

Introduction

A continuous inquiry exists regarding how the older generation can best create conditions for children to survive and live good, responsible lives. Eriksen Ødegaard educational cultures, principles and practices is presented to answer a curiosity about what the characteristics in cultures of exploration will be By such a setup, the importance of pedagogical dialogical engagement is highlighted. The framework includes both social and environmental dimensions, in which space, as well as global and local concerns, is considered in a pedagogy that is relevant for teachers, children and families today for active citizenship that values diversity and the survival of nature

Cultural-Historical Perspective and Ecological Inspiration
A ‘Glocal’ Awareness and Moving Away from Unsustainability
A Pedagogical Model of Exploration as Dialogical Engagement
Time—Emergence and Manifestations of Practice
Characteristics of Exploration in Pedagogy
Activity, Relations, Place and Space
Illustrations and Discussions of Conditions
Meaning-Making and Participatory Space
6.10 The Relevance of ‘Exploration’ in Early Years Pedagogy in the ‘Glocal’ Landscape
6.11 Conclusion—Cultures of Exploration
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call