Since 2017 eceLINK has published peer reviewed articles, these articles offer a variety of ideas that can be explored individually, by program staff and communities of practice, and by students in post-secondary early childhood education classrooms.

All published eceLINK articles in the peer reviewed collection have undergone blinded (without author information) peer reviews. Each article, authored through a collaboration between academics/researchers and early childhood educators, is firmly grounded in the everyday practice of early childhood education and care. The articles, therefore, have the potential to transform  thinking and practices through critical reflection and dialogue . 

The eceLINK Peer Reviewed Collection will be featured in both Spring and Fall issues. Calls for articles will be made well in advance of publication. If you have any questions about the submission process, please contact the provincial office at [email protected] - 416-487-3157 x 27

It's YOUR membership and support that allows us to produce the eceLINK and make this content available. If you've found these articles useful, we hope you'll consider joining us as an AECEO Member!

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2024

Image of the cover of the Winter 2024 eceLINK showing ECEs displaying the Worth More Parachute

Special Issue: Disability Justice in ECE
Guest Editor: Maria Karmiris

Disability Justice in ECE—Foregrounding Counterstorytelling
Practices

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Including the Voices of Children with ADHD: An Invitation to Disrupt Normalcy

Rory Pereira Vale

Abstract:

This paper shares knowledge of ADHD gathered from children’s experiences and uses it to inform others. To do the
supporting study, I leaned on the New Sociology of Childhood and on Critical Disability Studies and used a qualitative
approach with an ethnographic lens. The findings show: (a) the knowledge children have of ADHD is connected to how
it manifests in their lives; (b) lack of understanding from others may impact children with ADHD’s self-concept; (c)
making friends is difficult for children with ADHD; and (d) children with ADHD can offer valuable information on how
others can understand them better.

Keywords:

children with ADHD, children describing ADHD, Critical Disability Studies, Disability Justice, the New Sociology of
Childhood, research with children

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Mad Autobiographical Stories, Poetry, and Resistances within Post-Secondary Early Childhood Education and Care

Adam W.J. Davies

Abstract:

This article engages readers with a Mad autobiographical poetry and storytelling approach by drawing from principles of disability justice and Mad Studies to share personal and autobiographical stories and poetry regarding teaching and learning within post-secondary early childhood education and elementary education. The author engages in autobiographical writing regarding their lived experiences within Early Childhood Education and Care (ECEC) while critiquing the privileging of sanism within ECEC through developmentalist theories. Through the use of Mad autobiographical poetry, the author seeks to advance Mad narratives and stories in ECEC.

Keywords:

Mad Studies, early childhood education, madness, mad poetics, poetry

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2023

Cover of eceLINK showing a group of educators wearing ECE Power T Shirts

Centring Relational Knowledge in Early Learning and Childcare: Implications for Pedagogy and Pedagogical Leadership

Kim Barton

Abstract:

This article describes tensions between scientific and relational knowledges that have followed the author throughout her journey to become an early childhood educator and pedagogical leader. The author thinks with reconceptualist theories to explore these tensions and then offers relational understandings of pedagogy and pedagogical leadership. In an examination of How Does Learning Happen? Ontario’s Pedagogy for the Early Years for references of educator–educator relationships, it is clear that such relationships are not prioritized within the Ontario Ministry of Education’s view of educators. This article aims to provoke thought around centring educator relationships within Early Learning and Childcare by considering relational knowledges and pursuing parallel practices alongside children.

Keywords:

early childhood educators, early years pedagogy, parallel practice, pedagogical leadership, relational knowledge, relationships

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2022

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Exploring Histories of ECEC to Reconceptualize “Normalcy” through Mad Studies: A Critical Proposition for Early Childhood Education and Care Post-Secondary Programs

Davies, A.W., Watson, D., Armstrong, B., Spring, L., Brewer, K.C., Shay, B., Purnell, A., & Adam, S.

Abstract:

This article engages with the dominance of developmentalism within Early Childhood Education and Care (ECEC)—including its ongoing emphasis in post-secondary ECEC programs—in Ontario and Canada. We describe the potentials and possibilities for new directions for post-secondary ECEC curricula through Mad Studies investigations and inquiries. By describing Mad Studies, Fricker’s (2007) theorization of epistemic injustice, and the relevance of encouraging post-secondary ECEC students to engage with intellectual questioning and curiosity, we – the authors – argue that post-secondary ECEC students’ relationships with knowledge can provide new opportunities to disrupt developmentalism, normalcy, and encourage critical inquiry.

Keywords:

mad studies; post-secondary education; pre-service ECEC; developmentalism; madness

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Sanism in Early Childhood Education and Care: Cultivating Space for Madness and Mad Educators in ECEC

Adam W.J. Davies, Kailyn C. Brewer, and Bronte Shay

Abstract: 

This article engages with critical questions regarding the exclusion and stigmatization of Early Childhood Educators who experience madness and the presence/absence of madness in early learning settings. Through a Mad Studies analysis, we argue for more critical conversations challenging the pathologization of madness and educators who openly live with mental illness or identify as Mad. Drawing from Langford’s (2006, 2007, 2008) work on the “good” ECE, we argue that the Mad ECE is a way of re-imagining ECE identity and the professionalized ideals that regulate ECEs’ professional practices and self-presentation at work.

Keywords:

early childhood education; identity; mad studies; mental illness; professionalism

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Reimagining Communities of Practice: Using Marginalized Feminist Knowledge to Create Spaces of Resistance

Nidhi Menon

Abstract:

This reflexive paper explores the process of engaging Early Childhood Educators (ECEs) within communities of practice (CoPs). The author contemplates the use of feminist theories such as Black feminist thought to complexify the discourse on the professionalism of ECEs. This paper addresses possibilities of using Black feminist thought to amplify voices and lived experiences of marginalized women while underscoring their uniquely relevant perspective, capacity, and right to contribute to a CoP. The author advocates re-envisioning CoPs as spaces of resistance where marginalized voices are heard and embodied, lived experiences are valued, and possibilities emerge to resist and interrupt the oppression faced by all ECEs within a professionalism discourse.

Keywords:

activism, Black feminist thought, Early Childhood Educators, professionalism

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Give Race Its Place: An Anti-racism Knowledge-sharing Initiative for Early Childhood Educators in Ontario

Rachel Berman, Zuhra Abawi, Fikir Haile, Kerry-Ann Escayg, Alana Butler, Natalie Royer, and Beverly-Jean Daniel

Abstract:

In the fall of 2020, a group of researchers, along with the Association of Early Childhood Educators Ontario (AECEO) and the College of Early Childhood Educators (CECE), came together to discuss the necessity of providing anti-racism training, with a specific focus on addressing anti-Black racism, to the early childhood sector in Ontario. In the summer of 2021, this group offered four no-cost, two-hour online sessions in antiracism praxis. This project was funded by a SSHRC Connections Grant in partnership with the AECEO and the College of ECE. In this paper the authors discuss the contextual factors that led to this crucial knowledge sharing initiative, provide an overview of the sessions, some participant input and feedback, and conclude with lessons learned and a call to action for moving forward.

Keywords:

anti-racism; anti-racism praxis; children, early childhood education; knowledge sharing

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2021

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Outdoor Learning and Experiences as a Way Forward During the COVID-19 Pandemic and Beyond

Kimberly Squires, Tricia van Rhijn, Debra Harwood, and Megan Coghill

Abstract: 

This article examines how the inclusion of outdoor learning can provide early childhood education and care (ECEC) a way forward during the COVID-19 pandemic and beyond. The pandemic has significantly impacted ECEC programs and, although it is not a new concept, outdoor learning provides opportunities to mitigate negative impacts of pandemic-related restrictions for children and educators. Practice-based examples from an early learning setting are provided to highlight some of these opportunities. Some of the challenges and limitations of outdoor learning and experiences are also discussed, and a resource list to support programs to begin embracing outdoor learning is provided.

Keywords:

COVID-19, early childhood education and care, early years pedagogy, outdoor environments, outdoor learning

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Leading Post-pandemic Organizational Change in Early Childhood Education: How Self-Awareness as a Leader and Distributed Leadership are Foundational to the Change Process

Heather Beaudin

Abstract:

The changes required to work through the COVID-19 pandemic have prompted the ECE community to consider new ways of thinking about how formal and informal leaders and early childhood educators work together through small and large organizational change. Complex changes have occurred throughout the pandemic, requiring leaders to think more deeply about how they plan for and execute organizational change. The aim of this article is to initiate dialogue around factors that must be considered post-pandemic in order to lead sustainable change in early years settings. Specifically, emergent ways of thinking about how change is led in early years education through both self-reflection on the part of leaders and a culture of distributed leadership are explored.

Keywords:

change, COVID-19, distributed leadership, early childhood education, leadership

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An Outcome Evaluation of a Professional Development Opportunity Focusing on Sexuality Education for Early Learning Professionals

Alice Simone BalterDeborah GoresTricia van RhijnJennifer Katz

Irene Kassies, Mary GleasonJanelle Joseph

Abstract: 

This outcome evaluation assesses the impact of a one-day professional development opportunity in sexuality education for early learning professionals. A non-experimental pre-test/post-test research design evaluated the experiences of 28 participants. Thematic analysis and paired samples t-tests analyzed the perceived impacts and differences between pre- and post-test assessments. Positive changes were demonstrated in participants (a) perceptions of their daily practice, specifically increases in knowledge, comfort, and confidence in answering childrens questions about sexuality, and increased communication between staff and parents; and (b) preparedness to address sexuality in early learning settings. Recommendations for practice aim to increase professional capacity and provide the necessary support for early learning professionals.

Keywords:

child development, early childhood education, early learning, professional developmentprogram evaluation, public health, sexuality education 

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ECE’s Early Experiences in Full-Day Kindergarten: “They just weren’t ready for us!”

Rose Walton 

Abstract: 

Full-day kindergarten in Ontario is built on a legislated partnership between Registered Early Childhood Educators (RECEsand kindergarten teachers governed by the Ontario College of Teachers (OCT). These partners share professional space in local schools and have a duty to cooperate. narrative case study used open-ended, semi-structured questions to learn how RECE participants experience daily events within this partnership. Three RECE participants, who identified as female, were employed by three different district school boards. Employing positioning theory (Harre & van Langenhove, 1999) and a thematic and plot analysis of RECE storied daily practices (Creswell, 2009)this paper provides a deeper understanding of how RECEs position themselves within the partnership. Four broad themes emerged: communication barriers between partners, marginalized status within the school hierarchy, differential valuing of roles and responsibilities of the partners, and limited RECE professional learning opportunities.  

An examination of full-day kindergarten 10 years later suggests RECEs continue to experience systemic and structural inequities due to policies, roles and responsibilities, hierarchies, and professional inequities in the full-day kindergarten partnership.  

Keywords:

hierarchyinter-professionalkindergarten, legislation, marginalization, policy, Registered Early Childhood Educator, teacher, roles, responsibilities

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How Early Years Professionals Can Inform an Early Years Policy Framework Prototype

Céline Bourbonnais-MacDonald, Tabatha Anderson, Veronica Clough, Haille Ifabumuyi, and Amy Williams

Abstract: 

This study outlines the first phase of a co-design approach to construct an Early Years policy framework prototype by focusing on the perspective of Early Years professionals in the London–Middlesex area. Previous information was collected from parents/caregivers and child care providers; this study adds the voice of the Early Years professional. Empowering key stakeholders, including Early Years professionals, in the co-design of a policy provides the opportunity for those most impacted by the policy to provide insights beyond consultations. The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic has demonstrated an urgent need for an Early Years policy framework that includes the perspectives of various stakeholders directly impacted by child care.  

Keywords:

Early Years policy framework, Early Years policy design, human-centred policy design, policy co-design

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2020

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The Making of Paths: How Movement Forms Plant–Child Relations Indoors 

Leah Shoemaker 

Abstract: 

Thinking with post-qualitative theories, this research explores the relations between plants and children through observations of movement. Human supremacy is decentred in both the material makeup of the classroom as well as in definitions used to categorize the learning that takes place in early childhood education environments. Data is distributed through lively re-storying as plants and 11 young children share an indoor play area. These stories demonstrate how the democracy of relations in a Toronto preschool classroom can use movement to observe the flow of power dynamics within common worlds. The study argues that observations of movement can contribute to the development of pedagogy that promotes collaborative and interrelated relations within human and more-than-human societies. 

Keywords:

childhood, common world, movement pedagogy, plants, post-qualitative, power 

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I Speak Frog: Storying Seasonal Narratives of Children’s Common Worlds

Olga Rossovska and Louise Zimanyi with Lynn Short, Avneet Singh, Kaitlin Beard, Jennifer Casale, Alessandra Silvestro, and Walter Garcia

Abstract:

This article stories and (re)stories experiences of young children from three urban preschool classrooms
participating in The Willows, a land-based program. The intentions of reciprocal relationship building
with the land and the other-than-human (also known as “All Our Relations” in many Indigenous
cultures) become the focus of engagement in and with nature. The central figures of children’s seasonal
narratives—Lucy the blue mint leaf beetle, John the snail, the Frog, the Stick, the Medicine/Teaching
Garden, and the Crack Willow tree—illustrate the inter-related common worlds children live in and
attend to in nature. Pedagogical documentation is used to capture the struggles to understand and
adopt the “common worlds” lens and to delve deeply into pedagogies of places where children and the
other-than-human live, learn, and grow.

Keywords:

land-based program, common worlds, pedagogical documentation, Indigenous stories

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Plastic City: A Small-Scale Experiment for Disrupting Normative Borders

Angela Molloy Murphy, Ed.D.

Abstract:

Since plastics became available in the 1950s, consumers have dealt with the issue of plastic discards by
simply sending them “away”—considering them “out of sight and out of mind” and looking away from any
responsibility for this material and its ongoing effects. In this article, an interactive exhibit was generated to provoke relational encounters between children and plastic discards. Situated on a university campus that wins annual awards for sustainability, Plastic City was erected anew each week; a compelling small-scale experiment regarding what is made visible and what is outcast in the utopian settler-colonial imaginary of the U.S. Pacific Northwest.

Keywords:

Environmental education, remida, plastics, more-than-human kin, border crossing

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Thinking with Plastics: Common Worlds Waste Pedagogies Disrupt the Early Childhood Classroom

Kelly-Ann MacAlpine, with Hayley Johnstone, Laurie Minten, Lindsay Sparkes, and Brenda Grigg

Abstract:

that troubled the very notion of early childhood education. Over the past two years, our team of researchers, pedagogists, and early childhood educators has been engaging in a participatory ethnographic research project that explores innovative common worlds pedagogies and alternative plastic waste practices in an early childhood classroom. Our research is informed by the common worlds framework, which challenges child-centred approaches to learning by decentering the human and attending instead to complex, entangled human–nonhuman relations that emerge in everyday encounters with nonhuman others, in this case plastics. Through our ongoing plastics inquiry, we notice how plastics and the concept of excess invite us to respond to plastic waste. While this research is still in progress, we have found that our plastic waste inquiry, alongside other common worlds waste pedagogies, disrupts dominant discourses of early childhood education, the role of the educator, and the very materiality of the classroom.

Keywords:

common worlds, waste pedagogies, plastics, early childhood education, materiality, nonhuman

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Pedagogies of Indeterminacy

Adrianne Bacelar de Castro and Sarah Hennessy, MA

Abstract:

What might pedagogies of indeterminacy do? As researchers and educators, we ask that question, inspired by common worlds pedagogies, exploring pedagogies of indeterminacy. Drawing on pedagogical inquiries using charcoal and cardboard in an early childhood centre, we challenge early childhood narratives conformed by neoliberal-informed productivity models and choose to think with a pedagogy of indeterminacy. The larger concept of indeterminacy, for this work with charcoal and cardboard, encompasses working with boredom and contemplation to challenge dominant neoliberal constructs of productivity in early childhood education. 

We begin by confronting the neoliberal-informed productivity concepts that continue to dominate practices in early childhood education. We then note three ways in which early childhood education conforms to these concepts. Then we trouble these three ways with the possibilities from indeterminacy, boredom, and contemplation.

What we propose with pedagogies of indeterminacy is an alternative narrative that challenges dominant
productivity logics.

Keywords:

pedagogy, common worlds, early childhood education, indeterminacy, boredom, contemplation

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2019

Hidden Messages: Barriers Toward Professional Recognition

Meaghan MacDonell & Lisa McCorquodale

Abstract:

The Early Childhood Education and Care (ECEC) field faces many challenges. Poor compensation, difficult working conditions, and low professional recognition in particular have had a significant impact on the recruitment and retention of quality Early Childhood Educators (ECEs). This research considers how the language used in public discourse around the ECEC field contributes to knowledge, understanding, and, ultimately, the value placed on childcare professionals. A qualitative content analysis of two publicly available Ontario secondary school curriculum documents is used to gain insight into how the language used affects perceptions of ECE’s. Primary findings reveal a construct of ECEs characterized by a limited professional identity. The article argues that such a construct and its language undermine the professional status of educators and justifies the inequitable way ECEs are compensated for their work.

Keywords:

Professional recognition, professional identity, early childhood educators, content analysis

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The (Not) Good Educator: Reconceptualizing the Image of the Educator

Lisa Johnston 

Abstract:

This article tells the story of an early childhood educator caught with an incomplete program plan during a Ministry inspection. The author situates the story within the grand narratives of neoliberalism and developmentalism. Then using reconceptualist theories, she deconstructs the discourse of the good educator and reconstructs a new subjectivity as an intentional (not) good educator. The author further discovers the discourse of the (not) good educator within How Does Learning Happen?’s positioning of the educator as a researcher with an invitation to challenge the status quo. The article ends with a retelling of the original story from a transformed perspective.

Keywords:

Early childhood educator, program planning, neoliberalism, developmentalism, How Does Learning
Happen?

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Inclusion is an Experience, Not a Placement 

Elaine B. Frankel, Ed.D., Cherry Chan, M.A., Kathryn Underwood, Ph.D.

Abstract:

Early education, care, and intervention programs are part of a complex system of services as experienced by children and their families. Based on a study of institutional processes and relationships from the standpoint of families with children who are thought of as disabled in the Inclusive Early Childhood Service System (IECSS) project, this article highlights common components of inclusion as an experience rather than merely a placement in a class. Early childhood educators and childcare programs are encouraged to play a critical role as part of this system providing accessible, equitable and integrated services to children.

Keywords:

Inclusion, early years, childhood disability, early intervention system

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2018

Deepening Collaboration with Children Through the Principles of Cooperative Learning

Kimberly Squires, MEd, RECE, OCT

Abstract:

The educators’ and children’s co-construction of the early learning and care curriculum is of growing
importance in Ontario. Regretfully, this collaboration sometimes emerges in a tokenistic or superficial manner in practice. This article presents thoughts on the opportunity for early learning educators to consider another perspective that could deepen their collaboration with children during curriculum development. Drawing on the principles of cooperative learning, a pedagogical model often used in grade school and adult learning, early learning educators are encouraged to reflect on the decisions they are making and interactions they are having to ensure that they are supporting a view of co-construction.

Keywords:

Cooperative learning, early childhood education, co-construction, collaborative practices, emergent curriculum, pedagogical approaches.

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Preservice Early Childhood Education Degree Students’ Career Aspirations: Examining Decisions to Enter the Field

Caitlyn Osborne, Tricia van Rhijn, Andrea V. Breen 

Abstract:

This article summarizes a study that examined the intentions of Early Childhood Education degree students to work in early childhood education. Participants were recruited from nine institutions across Ontario, and 214 online surveys were completed. Independent t-tests indicated that there were significant differences between students who intend to enter the field and those who do not. Those not intending to enter the field perceived significantly more barriers to a successful career in the field. Results from thematic analyses provide further insight into students’ perceptions of their career choices and professional identities. The paper concludes with recommendations for stakeholders who are attempting to attract a highly qualified workforce.

Keywords:

Early Childhood Education; childcare; ECE training; ECE workforce

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Decolonizing and Co-Constructing Contexts that Welcome Indigenous Practices and Knowledges in Early Childhood Education

Karyn Callaghan, Faith Hale, Michelle Taylor Leonhardi, Monique Lavallee

Abstract:

Colonialism takes many forms. In early childhood education, the dominance of the normative gaze of developmentalism and the tendency to compartmentalize and sidestep spiritual aspects of life serves to marginalize other ways of knowing, distancing mainstream culture from opportunities to recognize and reconsider assumptions and established practices. In this article, Indigenous and settler educators draw on lived experience to critically reflect on perspectives and practices they have been taught and consider, with optimism, possibilities arising from the intersection of Indigenous knowledges with How Does Learning Happen? Ontario’s Pedagogy for the Early Years.

Keywords:

Indigenous knowledges; colonialism; developmentalism; early childhood education

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Dramatic Play in Northern Aboriginal Head Start Classrooms: Supporting Indigenous Children’s Learning of their Culture and Language

Shelley Stagg Peterson, Tina Gardner, Eugema Ings, Kayla Vecchio

Abstract:

Three Aboriginal Head Start educators and a university professor report on a collaborative inquiry that examined video recordings of children’s dramatic play with Indigenous cultural materials to learn how children interacted with materials and see the role of the Ojibway language in their play. In their play, children imitated Indigenous cultural practices carried out in the home, at sacred ceremonies, and on the land. The children showed an understanding of Ojibway words but did not speak them in their dramatic play. We propose suggestions for non-Indigenous educators who wish to introduce children to Indigenous cultural practices and languages or to incorporate the cultural practices of children’s families into classroom dramatic play.

Keywords:

Aboriginal Head Start (AHS), Indigenous cultural practices, teaching Ojibway language and culture, play-based learning, pedagogical documentation

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Gizhaawaso: Culture as a Protective Factor for Indigenous Children with Disabilities

Nicole Ineese-Nash

Abstract:

This article examines Indigenous approaches to health and treatment in order to critique the current early intervention system for children with disabilities. Seeing disability as a social construct, this article suggests that disability as defined within the early intervention system is based on Eurocentric ideals that pathologize Indigenous ways of being. From this conceptualization, this article will illustrate the gaps within the current early childhood support service systems and offer suggestions for developing culturally appropriate support services for Indigenous children with disabilities.

Keywords:

Indigenous disability, Indigenous early childhood, early intervention, cultural healing

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The Leadership Journey in the Spirit of Indigenous Early Childhood Educators in Remote Northern First Nations Communities

Lori Huston

Abstract:

This article examines Indigenous approaches to health and treatment in order to critique the current early intervention system for children with disabilities. Seeing disability as a social construct, this article suggests that disability as defined within the early intervention system is based on Eurocentric ideals that pathologize Indigenous ways of being. From this conceptualization, this article will illustrate the gaps within the current early childhood support service systems and offer suggestions for developing culturally appropriate support services for Indigenous children with disabilities.

Keywords:

Indigenous educators, early childhood programs, leadership, Wildfire Circle, professional development


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2017

“Good-bye Mr. Raccoon, we’ll miss you!” Supporting children’s explorations of life and death in a forest

Debra Harwood, Nicola Facchini, Farhanna Khan, Helene Randle, Susanne Robitaille & Chelsea Ratilainen

Abstract:

As educators following and supporting children’s emerging inquiries within a forest school model, we question each day the dynamism and fluidity required as we pedagogically respond to the needs of the learning/playing child within the messy, mixed-up, co-existent, multi-species context of the woods. We reflect as professionals constantly and intensely, particularly when ‘big questions’ emerge like those we encountered upon discovering a dead raccoon in the forest. How do we negotiate complex and ethical issues with children such as life, death, or our place in this world? What are the possibilities and complexities of pursuing a collective and emerging inquiry like the ‘dead raccoon’?

Keywords:

Forest schools, collective-emergent pedagogies, death as a sensitive topic


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(Re)Imagining and (Re)Engaging in Relational Encounters: Communities of Practice for (Re)Vitalizing Pedagogies

Denise Hodgins, Kim Atkinson, Lynne Wanamaker 

Abstract:

This article provides an example of pedagogical collaboration among educators, children, families, materials and places. Drawing on moments of practice from the Investigating Quality (IQ) Project we share several dollchild encounters as provocations for (re)imagining and (re)engaging with pedagogy as essential, lively, ethicopolitical, and more-than-human relational encounters. We begin with an overview of the ethos that guide this model, followed by an analysis of thinking-with dolls that experiments with the potential of this model in supporting educators to collaborate, risk, grow, question, and (re)vitalize pedagogies. We conclude with some considerations about this approach as an act of social justice.

Keywords:

Pedagogical development, communities of practice, critically reflective practice, dolls, post-qualitative research


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