Reseña del editor:
Politics in the Playground is a lively account of early childhood education and care in postwar New Zealand. The provision of care and education for young New Zealand children expanded significantly after 1945. Whereas some 2,000 children were attending free kindergartens in 1944, there were 171,138 in early childhood education by 2007, representing about 96% of children between the ages of three and four. For the Maori, early childhood education institutions emerged in the 1960s, but evolved dramatically with the Te Kohanga Reo movement in the 1980s - the comprehensive immersion in Maori language and culture, including the spiritual dimension. The place of children in New Zealand's social history also makes this book a remarkable record of social movements. The postwar search for security, the radicalism of the 1960s and 1970s, the rise of feminism, the role of the State in social issues, increasing employment of women - all have impacted early childhood education. The language of the debate has shifted from 'social progress' in mid-century, to the economic terminology of the 1990s, to some considerations of the young child as a citizen in the 2000s. This revised and expanded edition will interest parents along with policy makers, teachers, and students.
Biografía del autor:
Helen May is the former Dean of the University of Otago College of Education. She began her career as a primary school teacher in the mid-1960s, worked in childcare in the 1970s, and began tertiary teaching in the 1980s. During the early 1990s she worked with Margaret Carr on the development of Te Whäriki, New Zealand’s first national curriculum for early childhood education. In 1995, she was appointed to the first New Zealand professorial chair in Early Childhood Education at Victoria University Wellington and in 2005 she was appointed Professor of Education at the University of Otago. She has published six books as sole author.
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