Milestones or Millstones: How Standard Assessments Mask Cultural Variation and Misinform Policies Aimed at Early Childhood Development

IF 3.4 Q1 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
Lana B. Karasik, S. Robinson
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引用次数: 6

Abstract

Traditionally, the study of motor development—rooted in Western populations and culture—has focused on establishing norms in the timing and sequence of motor skills, inspiring the widely used emphasis on motor milestones in standard assessments (e.g., crawling by 8 months). Motor milestones are only a perceived version of what is an important skill; they are cultural conventions, not universals. Some cultures allow infants floor time; others carry them constantly, limiting practice. Thus, milestones create millstones to considerations of culture and context. Cultural beliefs, practices, and expectations manifest in childrearing practices. The variability in childrearing—or differences in infants’ experiences—offer unique opportunities for posture, balance, and locomotion, which in turn generates variation in motor skills both within and between cultures. Cross-cultural comparisons best illustrate the enormous variability in infants’ everyday experiences and effects on motor skills. We offer suggestions from this cross-cultural perspective to inform policy when designing interventions to help infants and young children thrive.
里程碑或基石:标准评估如何掩盖文化差异和误导儿童早期发展政策
传统上,植根于西方人口和文化的运动发展研究侧重于建立运动技能的时间和顺序规范,这激发了人们在标准评估中广泛使用的对运动里程碑的强调(例如,爬行8个月)。运动里程碑只是一种重要技能的感知版本;它们是文化惯例,而不是普遍现象。有些文化允许婴儿自由活动;其他人经常携带它们,限制了实践。因此,里程碑为文化和背景的考虑创造了基石。文化信仰、实践和期望体现在育儿实践中。养育孩子的可变性——或者婴儿经历的差异——为姿势、平衡和运动提供了独特的机会,这反过来又产生了文化内部和文化之间运动技能的差异。跨文化比较最能说明婴儿日常经历的巨大差异以及对运动技能的影响。我们从这种跨文化的角度提出建议,在设计干预措施以帮助婴幼儿茁壮成长时为政策提供信息。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
Policy Insights from the Behavioral and Brain Sciences
Policy Insights from the Behavioral and Brain Sciences Social Sciences-Public Administration
CiteScore
5.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
24
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