讲述我的故事的书:转变澳大利亚职前教师对儿童多样化和多元文化文学的态度

IF 0.9 Q3 EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH
Kym Simoncini, Hilary Smith, Lara Cain-Gray, Darlene Sebalj
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引用次数: 0

摘要

儿童文学在澳大利亚的课堂中无处不在,绘本在幼儿课堂中扮演着尤为重要的角色。教师使用儿童文学来教授早期识字概念,包括词汇,并帮助儿童了解世界和他们的身份。从历史上看,大多数儿童文学作品都以白人角色和视角为特色,这使得许多儿童无法从书中看到他们自己和他们的生活。本研究的目的是探讨一项评估任务,要求职前教师(pst)选择儿童文学中代表性不足的方面,找到与该主题相关的书籍,并反思自己小时候的阅读经历,如何改变他们对未来课堂实践的态度。从40名pst的反思中发现,许多pst以前没有考虑到那些生活没有反映在书籍中的儿童的经历,对被认为是不同群体成员的人所写的真实文本的需求,或者儿童文学多样性的重要性。讨论了对日益多元文化的澳大利亚教师教育计划的建议。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Books That Tell My Story: Transforming the Attitudes of Australian Preservice Teachers Towards Children’s Diverse and Multicultural Literature
Children’s literature is ubiquitous in Australian classrooms with picture books playing a particularly important role in early childhood classrooms. Teachers use children’s literature to teach early literacy concepts including vocabulary and to help children learn about the world and their identity. Historically, the majority of children’s literature has featured White characters and perspectives, excluding many children from seeing themselves and their lives reflected in books. The aim of this study was to explore how an assessment task that asked preservice teachers (PSTs) to select an underrepresented aspect of children’s literature, locate books on that topic, and reflect upon their own reading experiences as a child, could change their attitudes towards future classroom practice. Reflections from 40 PSTs revealed that many PSTs had not previously considered the experiences of children whose lives were not mirrored in books, the need for authentic texts written by people who identified as members of diverse groups, or the importance of diversity in children’s literature. Recommendations for teacher education programs in increasingly multicultural Australia are discussed.
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来源期刊
Australian Journal of Teacher Education
Australian Journal of Teacher Education EDUCATION & EDUCATIONAL RESEARCH-
CiteScore
1.80
自引率
0.00%
发文量
22
期刊介绍: The purpose of the Australian Journal of Teacher Education is to enhance the quality of teacher education through the publication of research reports, learned points of view and commentaries. Contributions may address proposals for, or descriptions of, development in the purpose, structure and methodology of teacher education; curriculum issues; changes in schools; or general social, ideological or political issues relating to teacher education. Papers must make an explicit connection with teacher education. The Australian Journal of Teacher Education, which is blind peer reviewed by a minimum of two members of the Editorial panel, is access free, electronic and published by Edith Cowan University. The Journal is indexed by the Australian Education Index and ERIC. It was rated ‘A’ by Australian Research Council in 2010 (www.arc.gov.au/era/era_journal_list/htm ) and is ranked .496 on SCImago. It is pleased to offer authors an efficient publication service. Manuscripts that have been through the review and revision cycle and have been accepted for publication will typically be published within two months. The time to first review can take up to six months, due to the large number of papers being submitted for review. Intending authors should be aware that the Journal has a rejection rate in excess of 50%.
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