{"title":"A DisCrit Analysis of Quality in Early Childhood: Toward Pedagogies of Wholeness, Access, and Interdependence","authors":"Margaret R. Beneke, Hailey R. Love","doi":"10.1177/01614681221147348","DOIUrl":null,"url":null,"abstract":"Background: In U.S. contexts, the language of “quality” early childhood education is widely invoked to evaluate the “goodness” of teaching and learning and is often leveraged in attempts to ameliorate inequities. Likewise, efforts to define and achieve generalizable conceptualizations of early childhood quality often guide what takes place in teacher education. Though objections to quality reform efforts and the ways they uphold white supremacy have been extensively discussed, less work has explicitly examined how ableism intersects with racism in the ways quality is defined and applied in early childhood. Purpose: The purpose of this conceptual article is to extend prior critiques of quality to critically examine intersections of racism and ableism in the definitions, measurements, and enactments of quality early childhood teaching and learning. We bring disability critical race theory (DisCrit; Annamma et al., 2013) into conversation with literature on quality in early childhood to examine how traditional notions of early childhood quality position and affect multiply-marginalized children, families, and teachers. We emphasize how dominant notions of early childhood quality are reinforced and can be disrupted in teacher preparation. Interpretive Analysis: We utilize DisCrit’s seven interrelated tenets to analyze how ableism and racism mutually reinforce notions of early childhood quality by: (1) predefining universal goals for teaching and learning; (2) reducing the complexity of teaching and learning; and (3) discarding the wisdom of multiply-marginalized children, families, and teachers. Each of these technocratic processes rely on one another (and at times, overlap) to uphold whiteness and ableism in both early childhood practice and teacher education; exposing them allows us to imagine alternate ways of conceptualizing and enacting meaningful early education. Through DisCrit praxis, we offer an alternative language of evaluation that centers multiply-marginalized young children, families, and teachers using pedagogies of wholeness, access, and interdependence. Conclusions: At the nexus of ableism and racism, standardized notions of early childhood quality create myriad forms of harm for multiply-marginalized children, families, and teachers. Although the language of quality pervades the field, we know it is not the only way. We implore teacher educators to support teacher candidates in developing a DisCrit praxis, as we engage in such processes of reflection and action ourselves. When teaching and learning are rooted in principles of wholeness, access, and interdependence, we put multiply-marginalized communities at the heart of our work, reclaiming and enacting meaningful pedagogies in early childhood.","PeriodicalId":22248,"journal":{"name":"Teachers College Record: The Voice of Scholarship in Education","volume":null,"pages":null},"PeriodicalIF":0.0000,"publicationDate":"2022-12-01","publicationTypes":"Journal Article","fieldsOfStudy":null,"isOpenAccess":false,"openAccessPdf":"","citationCount":"0","resultStr":null,"platform":"Semanticscholar","paperid":null,"PeriodicalName":"Teachers College Record: The Voice of Scholarship in Education","FirstCategoryId":"1085","ListUrlMain":"https://doi.org/10.1177/01614681221147348","RegionNum":0,"RegionCategory":null,"ArticlePicture":[],"TitleCN":null,"AbstractTextCN":null,"PMCID":null,"EPubDate":"","PubModel":"","JCR":"","JCRName":"","Score":null,"Total":0}
引用次数: 0
Abstract
Background: In U.S. contexts, the language of “quality” early childhood education is widely invoked to evaluate the “goodness” of teaching and learning and is often leveraged in attempts to ameliorate inequities. Likewise, efforts to define and achieve generalizable conceptualizations of early childhood quality often guide what takes place in teacher education. Though objections to quality reform efforts and the ways they uphold white supremacy have been extensively discussed, less work has explicitly examined how ableism intersects with racism in the ways quality is defined and applied in early childhood. Purpose: The purpose of this conceptual article is to extend prior critiques of quality to critically examine intersections of racism and ableism in the definitions, measurements, and enactments of quality early childhood teaching and learning. We bring disability critical race theory (DisCrit; Annamma et al., 2013) into conversation with literature on quality in early childhood to examine how traditional notions of early childhood quality position and affect multiply-marginalized children, families, and teachers. We emphasize how dominant notions of early childhood quality are reinforced and can be disrupted in teacher preparation. Interpretive Analysis: We utilize DisCrit’s seven interrelated tenets to analyze how ableism and racism mutually reinforce notions of early childhood quality by: (1) predefining universal goals for teaching and learning; (2) reducing the complexity of teaching and learning; and (3) discarding the wisdom of multiply-marginalized children, families, and teachers. Each of these technocratic processes rely on one another (and at times, overlap) to uphold whiteness and ableism in both early childhood practice and teacher education; exposing them allows us to imagine alternate ways of conceptualizing and enacting meaningful early education. Through DisCrit praxis, we offer an alternative language of evaluation that centers multiply-marginalized young children, families, and teachers using pedagogies of wholeness, access, and interdependence. Conclusions: At the nexus of ableism and racism, standardized notions of early childhood quality create myriad forms of harm for multiply-marginalized children, families, and teachers. Although the language of quality pervades the field, we know it is not the only way. We implore teacher educators to support teacher candidates in developing a DisCrit praxis, as we engage in such processes of reflection and action ourselves. When teaching and learning are rooted in principles of wholeness, access, and interdependence, we put multiply-marginalized communities at the heart of our work, reclaiming and enacting meaningful pedagogies in early childhood.
背景:在美国,“优质”幼儿教育的语言被广泛用来评价教与学的“好”,并经常被用来改善不公平现象。同样,定义和实现幼儿质量的可概括概念化的努力经常指导教师教育。尽管对质量改革努力的反对以及他们维护白人至上的方式进行了广泛的讨论,但明确研究残疾歧视与种族主义在早期儿童质量定义和应用方面的交叉方式的工作却很少。目的:这篇概念性文章的目的是扩展先前对质量的批评,批判性地检查种族主义和残疾主义在儿童早期教学和学习质量的定义、测量和制定中的交叉点。我们引入残疾批判种族理论(DisCrit;Annamma et al., 2013)与有关幼儿质量的文献进行了对话,以研究幼儿质量的传统观念如何定位和影响多重边缘化的儿童、家庭和教师。我们强调幼儿质量的主导观念是如何在教师准备中得到加强和破坏的。解释性分析:我们利用DisCrit的七个相互关联的原则来分析残疾歧视和种族主义如何通过以下方式相互强化幼儿质量的概念:(1)预先定义教学和学习的普遍目标;(2)降低教与学的复杂性;(3)抛弃多重边缘化儿童、家庭和教师的智慧。这些技术官僚程序中的每一个都相互依赖(有时重叠),在幼儿实践和教师教育中维护白人和残疾歧视;暴露他们让我们想象概念化和实施有意义的早期教育的替代方法。通过DisCrit实践,我们提供了一种评估的替代语言,该语言以多重边缘化的幼儿、家庭和教师为中心,使用整体性、可及性和相互依赖性的教学法。结论:在残疾歧视和种族主义的关系下,标准化的幼儿质量概念给多重边缘化的儿童、家庭和教师造成了无数形式的伤害。虽然质量的语言在这个领域无处不在,但我们知道这不是唯一的方法。我们恳请教师教育工作者支持教师候选人发展DisCrit实践,因为我们自己也参与了这样的反思和行动过程。当教学植根于整体性、可及性和相互依赖性的原则时,我们将多重边缘化社区置于工作的核心,在幼儿时期重新确立并实施有意义的教学方法。