幼儿工作理论

IF 0.4 0 RELIGION
Helen Hedges
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引用次数: 1

摘要

孩子们如何在家庭、社区和文化中理解自己的生活,引起了家长、老师和国际研究人员的极大兴趣。“工作理论”起源于新西兰(NZ)早期儿童课程Te Whāriki (Ministry of Education 1996, Ministry of Education 2017)的整体成果。这个词描述了儿童和成人在参与学习过程中形成的临时的、探索性的想法和理解。工作理论帮助儿童和成人理解、解释、预测和解决问题。因此,这个词在新西兰以外具有广泛的教育意义。工作理论与知识发展或注重学习学术概念有联系,但又不相同。发展准确的知识不一定是幼儿的目标。相反,当孩子们试图将新的想法和经验与他们之前的(尽管有限的)知识和经验融合在一起时,理论经常在面对相反的证据时坚持下去,并且涉及到理解的进步和倒退——而不是好奇心和对个人感兴趣和有意义的理解的探究激励着孩子。工作理论不仅关注认知和知识的发展,还包括儿童所有的具体的、语言的、交际的和社会的学习努力。这种努力的目标是更有效和更有能力地参与家庭、社区和文化并作出贡献。因此,有一个期望,成人将参与和支持儿童的工作理论发展在尊重,互惠和响应的互动。目前相关文献多来自新西兰;国际上的兴趣是最近才出现的,而且还在不断增长。未来的研究范围包括儿童理论化的特定主题,特别是成年人可能难以理解或回应的主题;记录工作理论和工作理论发展的方法;在《Whāriki》的双重文化目标下,对Māori概念和实例的探索和应用;以及围绕工作理论设计课程的方式。下面的参考书目有四个部分。第一部分是关于理解工作理论概念的文献。第二部分提供了对儿童、成人教学角色和家庭进行研究的工作理论的例子。第三部分描述了教师对工作理论概念的理解,以及这些理论可能推动课程的方式,第四部分有教学策略和反应的例子。当然,第2部分到第4部分之间会有重叠,而部分作业并不意味着所选的文献不涉及其他部分的材料。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Young Children's Working Theories
Ways children make sense of their lives in their families, communities, and cultures are of immense interest to parents, teachers, and researchers internationally. “Working theories” originated as an holistic outcome of Te Whāriki, the Aotearoa New Zealand (NZ) early childhood curriculum (Ministry of Education 1996, Ministry of Education 2017). The term describes the provisional and exploratory ideas and understandings children—and adults—develop as they participate in learning. Working theories help children and adults with meaning making, explanation, prediction, and problem solving. The term therefore has wide educational relevance beyond NZ. Working theories have connections with, but are not the same as, knowledge development or a focus on learning academic concepts. Developing accurate knowledge is not necessarily a goal for young children. In contrast, theories frequently persist in the face of contrary evidence and involve both progression and retrogression in understandings as children attempt to meld new ideas and experiences with their prior, albeit limited, knowledge and experience—rather curiosity and inquiry into personally interesting and meaningful understandings motivates children. More than a focus on cognitive and knowledge development, working theories include all of children’s embodied, linguistic, communicative, and social efforts to learn. The goal of such efforts is to participate and contribute more effectively and competently in their families, communities, and cultures. Consequently, there is an expectation that adults will engage with and support children’s working theory development in respectful, reciprocal, and responsive interactions. Most related literature is at present from NZ; international interest is more recent and growing. Scope for future research includes specific topics of children’s theorizing, especially topics adults might struggle to understand or respond to; ways to document working theories and working theory development over time; exploration and application of Māori concepts and examples given the bicultural aim of Te Whāriki; and ways curriculum might be designed around working theories. The following bibliography has four sections. The first section is literature that has worked on Understanding the Concept of Working Theories. The second section offers examples of working theories from research undertaken with children, adults in teaching roles, and families. The third section describes teacher understandings of the concept of working theories and ways these might drive curriculum, and the fourth section has examples of pedagogical strategies and responses. Naturally there are overlaps between sections 2 through 4 and section assignment does not mean the selected literature does not address material in other sections.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
1.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
16
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