新西兰奥特罗阿的早期儿童评估:批判的观点和新的开端

Q3 Social Sciences
S. Arndt, M. Tesar
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引用次数: 20

摘要

摘要本文涉及新西兰奥特罗阿的评估实践。国际公认的幼儿课程框架Whāriki是当代叙事评估实践和学习故事概念的根源。我们概述了这些实践的历史和社会基础,并通过学习故事及其特定的本体论和认识论目的和目的来提升评估的本质。本文强调幼儿教与学是一个复杂的关系实践、主体间实践、物质实践、道德实践和政治实践。它采用了一种批判性的视角,并从一个前提出发,即幼儿教师在其本地化、情境化的环境中,与与他们分享教学的儿童一起并为他们做出教学和学习决策时处于最佳地位。我们研究了评估中有效性和“什么有效”的概念,强调了允许不确定性的重要性,以及儿童学习中无形因素的重要性。Whāriki和学习故事被定位为文化和道德开放,丰富和复杂的评估的强大基础,在新西兰和其他地方的每个地方背景下不断重新协商。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Early childhood assessment in Aotearoa New Zealand: Critical perspectives and fresh openings
Abstract This paper engages with assessment practices in Aotearoa New Zealand. Te Whāriki, the internationally recognized early childhood curriculum framework, lies at the root of contemporary narrative assessment practices, and the concept of learning stories. We outline historical and societal underpinnings of these practices, and elevate the essence of assessment through learning stories and their particular ontological and epistemological aims and purposes. The paper emphasizes early childhood teaching and learning as a complex relational, inter-subjective, material, moral and political practice. It adopts a critical lens and begins from the premise that early childhood teachers are in the best position to make decisions about teaching and learning in their localized, contextualized settings, with and for the children with whom they share it. We examine the notion of effectiveness and ‘what works’ in assessment, with an emphasis on the importance of allowing for uncertainty, and for the invisible elements in children’s learning. Te Whāriki and learning stories are positioned as strong underpinnings of culturally and morally open, rich and complex assessment, to be constantly renegotiated within each local context, in Aotearoa New Zealand and beyond.
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来源期刊
Journal of Pedagogy
Journal of Pedagogy Social Sciences-Education
CiteScore
1.10
自引率
0.00%
发文量
5
审稿时长
20 weeks
期刊介绍: The Journal of Pedagogy (JoP) publishes outstanding educational research from a wide range of conceptual, theoretical, and empirical traditions. Diverse perspectives, critiques, and theories related to pedagogy – broadly conceptualized as intentional and political teaching and learning across many spaces, disciplines, and discourses – are welcome, from authors seeking a critical, international audience for their work. All manuscripts of sufficient complexity and rigor will be given full review. In particular, JoP seeks to publish scholarship that is critical of oppressive systems and the ways in which traditional and/or “commonsensical” pedagogical practices function to reproduce oppressive conditions and outcomes. Scholarship focused on macro, micro and meso level educational phenomena are welcome. JoP encourages authors to analyse and create alternative spaces within which such phenomena impact on and influence pedagogical practice in many different ways, from classrooms to forms of public pedagogy, and the myriad spaces in between. Manuscripts should be written for a broad, diverse, international audience of either researchers and/or practitioners. Accepted manuscripts will be available free to the public through JoP’s open-access policies, as well as featured in Elsevier''s Scopus indexing service, ERIC, and others.
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