Fr. 87.60

Whose Childhood Is It? - The Roles of Children, Adults and Policy Makers

English · Paperback / Softback

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Description

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The purpose of this book is to promote a thoughtful engagement with key issues and theories that inform our understanding of childhood. Readers will enjoy, and be provoked by, a sophisticated analysis of the role and function of childhood in twenty-first century Britain, which can be used as a springboard for further enquiry and exploration.Two intertwined themes permeate the text: - Children''s sense of self and adults'' temporal and cultural fabrications of childhood, and the articulation of these with policy and provision for young children. - Young children and representation: how they are represented, the sense they make of such representations and their own representational activity. Whose Childhood Is It? intends to turn readers away from our collective tendency to simplify the experiences of young children and replace this with a fuller, more complex, and more realistic understanding of the social dynamic that constitutes childhood today. This book takes a user-friendly approach, with key questions and reflection boxes throughout as well as chapter summaries and suggested further reading. It will provide a rich resource for students of Early Childhood Studies, and for Early Years professionals and those training to be Early Years practitioners.>

List of contents










Contents

List of Contributors
Abbreviations and Acronyms

Introduction

Part 1: Policy and Childhood

Introduction

Chapter 1: Give Sure Start a Fair Start
Sue Norman

Chapter 2: "How well am I doing on my outcomes?"
Helen Butcher Jane Andrews

Chapter 3: Earlier and Earlier to School?
Christine Screech

Chapter 4: Integrating professional roles in early years around children's lives and learning
Jane Tarr

Part 2: Representation and Childhood

Introduction

Chapter 5: Children and Screens
Mandy Lee and Richard Eke

Chapter 6: Learning who can talk about what in early years settings
John Lee and Richard Eke

Chapter 7: Children Representing Experience
Richard Eke and John Lee

Chapter 8: Where do I fit in? Children's Spaces and Places
Alison Bailey and Stephen Barnes


About the author










Richard Eke is Joint Head of Academic Development in the Faculty of Social Sciences and Humanities at the University of the West of England, Bristol, UK. Helen Butcher is Lecturer in Early Childhood Provision and Developments at the University of the West of England, Bristol, UK. Mandy Lee is Senior Lecturer in Education at the University of the West of England, UK, where she specialises in children's engagement with contemporary media.

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