Welcome to the ESD Resource Bank
Global Action Programme on Education for Sustainable Development

Find 643 articles between 2007 and 2015:

search

Reset the form

Education First:

Education First:
Abstract

This paper discusses one aspect of a recently completed two-year study, that of the enactment of relationality within early childhood care and education practice. The research project, Titiro Whakamuri, Hoki Whakamua. We are the future, the present and the past: caring for self, others and the environment in early years’ teaching and learning, involved ten early childhood centres from across New Zealand (Ritchie et al. 2010). Relationality refers to our lived relation to other human beings, other living creatures, and to the non-living entities with whom we share our spaces and the planet. The study has demonstrated some ways in which early childhood educators were able to extend children’s understandings of their relationality, their connectedness to others, and to the natural world, following theoretical underpinnings of the Indigenous Māori, such as manaakitanga (caring, generosity) and kaitiakitanga (environmental stewardship) (Tikanga Māori. Living by Māori values, Wellington, Huia, 2003), and of western epistemologies such as an ethic of care (The challenge to care in schools: An alternative approach to education, New York, Teachers College Press, 2005a; Educating citizens for global awareness, New York, Teachers College Press, 2005c, Philosophy of education, Boulder, Westview Press, 2007).

Metadata
Item Type : File
Url : http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s13158-013-0079-0
Languages : English
Published by : International Journal of Early Childhood
Resource types :
Subject :
Priority Action Area : Priority Action Area 2 Transforming learning and training environments
Collation : 0
Themes :
    ESD General
Regions : Asia Pacific
Attach File :