Abstract

Early childhood education and care is a current interest in many countries. Many international studies have highlighted the importance of high-quality early education environments where learning and play are integrated. Studies show that these types of learning environments have a positive impact on children’s future prospects and overall development. Critical curriculum steering documents from Finland and Brazil form the basis of this study and can similarly be shown to define the quality of these environments, as well as providing definitions of playful learning in these differing cultural contexts. A content analysis explores patterns of the cultural and pedagogical difference of definition. This descriptive comparison permitted similarities and differences between the countries with regard to play to emerge. In this article, the authors explore what these different cultural and pedagogical definitions of play and playful learning are and what they might mean. The article thus makes a methodological contribution to a broader discussion of comparative studies of national curricula in early childhood education with specific regard to children’s engagement, learning and development in and through play. The theoretical conclusions are, however, more tentative, but the authors suggest some innovative ways to conceptualise cultural and pedagogical differences in play by making an analogy with Wittgenstein’s analysis of games in his Philosophical Investigations.

Highlights

  • In recent years, the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) has taken the initiative to explore the contrasts and complexities of different national policies and approaches to early childhood education and care

  • Referring to the United Nations’ (1989) Convention on the Rights of the Child, the OECD advocates an understanding of the curriculum in which children should have a high degree of initiative; stresses the reinforcement of ‘those aspects of curriculum that contribute to the well-being and involvement of the child’ (Bennett, 2005: 7); and recognises children as active meaning-makers in educational processes and practices (Kangas and Reunamo, 2019)

  • We have formulated the following research question: How are ‘play’ and ‘playful learning’ described in Finnish and Brazilian curriculum guidelines for early childhood education? As data we use official documents from the respective countries, and we explore the textual data with the help of structural content analysis

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Summary

Introduction

The Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) has taken the initiative to explore the contrasts and complexities of different national policies and approaches to early childhood education and care (see Directorate for Education and Skills, 2018) In this examination, Bennett (2005) has identified two broad categories in national settings, which are visible in Europe: the pre-primary tradition (e.g. Belgium, France, Ireland, the UK and the USA), focusing on cognitive goals and ‘readiness for school’ as important aims, and the social pedagogic tradition (e.g. Nordic countries and many parts of Central Europe), focusing more on children’s play and social development with an emphasis on children’s agency. In a crossnational study by Harju-Luukkainen et al (2019), the early childhood educators viewed free play differently, making much about play and its definition culturally bonded

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