日本儿童在新西兰幼儿教育环境中的经验

Madoka Takemoto
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摘要

新西兰奥特罗阿的早期儿童教育(ECE)环境正变得越来越种族多样化。本文借鉴了一个研究项目,该项目研究了日本儿童在新西兰欧洲经委会背景下有时遇到的文化挑战,这是我为教育学博士所做的。数据分析使用从适用于第三文化个体(TCI)的五个关键概念发展而来的概念框架。在这个项目中,一个孩子的经历和他作为一个日本孩子的自我认同所经历的紧张关系被描述出来,他们对他对中心孩子群体的归属感的影响被考虑在内。调查结果显示,尽管老师的意图是好的,但由于老师缺乏对日本文化的了解,孩子的日本文化认同以及他试图分享日本文化的努力经常受到挑战。我认为这些经历给日本孩子和他的老师带来了复杂的情况。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Japanese children’s experiences in New Zealand early childhood education settings
Early childhood education (ECE) settings in Aotearoa New Zealand are becoming increasingly ethnically superdiverse. This article draws on a research project that examined the cultural challenges that Japanese children sometimes encounter in New Zealand ECE contexts which was undertaken for my Doctor of Education. Data were analysed using a conceptual framework developed from five key notions that apply to third-culture individuals (TCI). The experiences of one child in this project and the tensions he experienced negotiating his self-identity as a Japanese child are described and their impact on his sense of belonging to the group of children at the centre is considered. The findings revealed that, despite the good intentions of teachers, the child’s Japanese cultural identity, and his attempts to share it, were frequently challenged by his teachers’ lack of cultural knowledge about Japan. I argue that these experiences resulted in complex situations for both the Japanese child and his teachers.
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