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She's not a teacher, she's a mummy': reflections from four-year-olds on a researcher's identity. ... 'children from a surprisingly early age can understand the ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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1
Shes not a teacher, shes a mummy reflections
from four-year-olds on a researchers identity.
  • Julie Evans
  • College of St Mark and St John
  • Email jevans_at_marjon.ac.uk

2
  • The younger a child is the less likely they are
    likely to be engaged in participatory research
    and yet
  • children from a surprisingly early age can
    understand the basic elements of the research
    process and their role within it if this
    information is presented in an age appropriate
    manner (Thompson, 199260)

3
  • Moreover
  • Mindful that adults such as parents and
    teachers cannot give valid accounts of childrens
    social worlds (Mahon et al. 1996)

4
  • Children were traditionally viewed as beings
    rather than becomings.
  • In the early nineties Lansdown was highlighting
    we simply do not have a culture of listening to
    children (199438)

5
  • Arguably, what has evolved is a culture whereby
  • listening can become a cliché, whereby
    nobody really knows what it means but somehow
    no-one can object to it either (Clark et al,
    200512).

6
The research set out to
  • 1 Examine the ways in which teachers plan for
    and organise role play in reception classes.
  • 2 Examine the ways in which children respond to
    different types of role-play provision in
    reception classes.
  • 3 Understand childrens perspectives on their
    experiences of play in school.
  • 4 Develop methodologies for studying childrens
    role play in educational settings.

7
Listening to Young Children The Mosaic Approach
Clark and Moss (2001)
  • Multi-method- recognises the different voices
    or languages of children
  • Participatory Treats children as experts in
    their own lives
  • Reflexive Includes children, practitioners,
    parents, other adults, caregivers

8
  • Adaptable- to different settings
  • Focused on childrens lived experiences
  • Embedded into practice potential to be an
    evaluative tool

9
Sample
  • A reception and year 1 mixed class in a rural
    primary school
  • A reception class in a primary school in a small
    town
  • An early years unit in a large, urban first school

10
  • 80 children in term 1 rising to 144 in terms 2
    3
  • Children aged 4/5 years
  • 6 teachers (female)
  • 6 teaching assistants (1 male)
  • 3 reception classes
  • 71 visits (av. 8 visits per term)

11
Methods
  • Observations
  • Video recordings
  • Childrens photographs
  • Small group work
  • Childrens drawings
  • Vignettes
  • Interviews - teachers
  • Dialogue with teachers and support staff

12
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15
Ethos and approach
  • As a researcher understanding your own values and
    positioning of children and childhood
    (Connolly in James et al., 1998)
  • Power differential may be lessened if children
    have support from their peers (Hood et al.,
    1996)
  • Mandells (1991) least-adult
  • To eradicate generational differences between
    adults and children is not possible within the
    research setting (Mayall 2000)

16
Childrens responses to the research process
  • Direct and indirect feedback
  • Using the researcher to manipulate
    situations(!)
  • Adults asking them for consent was often an
    alien concept particularly at this age
  • At times we were clearly the outsiders
  • Children make their own decisions about
    participation (or not) in research
    (Davis,
    1998)

17
  • With hindsight would argue that to eradicate
    generational differences between adults and
    children is not possible within the research
    setting (Mayall 2000), certainly not in an
    educational setting where adult authority is so
    acute.
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