Title: PowerPointprsentation
1Stig Broström School of EducationAarhus
UniversityTransition to school - Liberation or
adjustment18th EECERA Annual Conference
2008Stavanger, Norway 3th 6th September 2008
Reconsidering the Basics in Early Childhood
EducationKey Note Saturday 6th September
2008
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3Defining transition
- Transition can be seen as being the passage
from one place, stage, state, style or subject to
another over time - Aline-Wendy Hilary Fabian, 2004
-
- The time between the first visit in the new
educational context and the final setting in, and
here the children experience a change of teachers
and also a change of the group of children, and
with that a change in relation to well-known
peers and friends - Inspired of Fabian, 2004 Kagan and Neuman, 1998
Niesel Griebel 2007
4Forms of transitions
- Vertical transition
- From secure attachment in family to créche or
preschool - Thyssen 2000 Kiening 2002, Dali 2002 Clark
2007 Griebel Niesel 2002 - From one age group to another
- From preschool to school
- Dockett Perry 2007 Griebel Niesel 1999
Johansson 2002 Peters 2002 Dunlop 2002
Margetts 2002, 2007 Broström 2002, 2003, 2007
Corsaro Molinari 2008 J. Einarsdóttir, 2006,
2003, 2002 - From preschool to leisure-time centre/after
school - Horizontal transition
- The daily transition
- Dencik et al. 1989
- Transition from home to leisure-time centre/after
and to school and back again - Johansson 2003, 2007
5Problems in transition
- International research suggests that moving from
preschool to school can be challenging, if not
traumatic, for some children - Especially children with les-than-optimal-circumst
ances may be at even higher risk during this
transition - Broström 2002 Shore 1998 Wagner, 2003 Napier,
2002
6Problems in transition
- When children enter school they meet a larger,
physical environment - In preschool the children belong to the eldest
group and in school they are forced to relate to
older children - In school the social environment is much more
complex - In school there are fewer adults
- In school children have less autonomy
- There is a shift in the academic demands of
children - In sum the demands go up and the support goes
down - Fabian 2002, 2007 Merry 2007 Pienta, 2004
7Discontinuities between preschool and schools
- Physical discontinuities
- Fabian 2002
- Social discontinuities
- Broström 2003 Fabian 2002
- Philosophical discontinuities
- Broström 1999, 2001 Fabian 2002
- Communication discontinuity
- Broström et al 2000
- Discontinuity in childrens view on preschool and
school - Einarsdóttir 2003 Broström 2003 Lillemyr 2001
8Childrens view on school
- 5 of the children characterise school as an
authoritarian place, where the teacher commands
the children. - A 6.5 years old boy to the question What do you
think, you will learn in school? - Draw correctly, do homework correctly, play
correctly, play outside in a good matter, eat
correctly, learn to play with plaything
correctly. You will be scold, if you do not play
correctly. If people do not like to play with me,
you have to play with yourself. The teacher will
smack - Broström 2003
9Well adjust to school
- Research on school start shows, that children
who feel relaxed and well adjusted in school are
much more likely, than children who do not feel
well adjusted, to experience school success
beyond preschool - Thompsen 1975 Ladd Priece 1987.
- Corresponding academic, social and emotional
difficulties in school start persist into later
life - Belsky MacKinnon 1994 Cowan et al. 1994
Dunlop 2000 Taylor 1998.
10Elements in transition
- Successful transition from preschool to school
requires attention to several related elements - The extend of the childs school readiness
- Support from parents, family and community
- A system of high quality preschools
- A teacher who is able to take the childs
perspective - Continuity in curricula
- Communication between home and school
- A welcoming environment for family and children
- Broström 2002
11Ecological transition model
- Pianta Walsh 1996 Fabian Dunlop 2000
(Inspired of Bronfenbrenner)
12Transition strategies/activities
- Griebel Niesel 2007
- Pedagogical and programme continuity, curricula
development - Administration continuity
- Personal or professional interaction
- - School groups in preschool
- - The school invites the parents
- - Lots of mutual visits during the year
- - A joint document defining school readiness
- - Meetings with parents about school readiness
- - Conferences on childrens readiness
- - Children and preschool teachers are involved
in lessons in school - - During spring the neighbourhood preschools
have shared projects - - A teacher from preschool follows the group of
children in school - - Formation of classes are done as regard to
childrens friendship - - Teaching in school on the basic of childrens
portfolios - Broström 2007
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13Transition strategies/activities
- Neumann 2002
- Structural continuity
- - ECEC and school under same administrative
auspice - Continuity with families and homes
- - Parents are invited to meeting before school
start - - Parents and children gets letters during the
summer - - Parents and children collect artefacts to the
childs portfolio - Johanna Einarsdóttir, 2007
14Building bridges a critical reflection
- Too much support can result in helplessness
- Trust in childrens agency
- James, Jenks Proud 1998
15Economical and political demands
- National policy
- The aim is to create coherence and continuity
between different forms of care and education and
secure continuity in transition and must
contribute to a harmonious transition to school
and leisure-time centre - Denmark, Ministry of Welfare, 2007
- European policy
- - The Treaty of Lisbon, EU, 2000
- - The two Starting Strong reports, OECD, 2001,
2006 - International policy
- - Strong Foundations, UNESCO, 2007 recommends
to integrate ECEC more closely with primary
school.
16Economical and political demands
- EDUCATIONAL CHANGES
- A movement towards following tendencies
- An increasing use of standards and manuals
- A use of narrow intermediate aims and indicatives
in order to measure childrens return - A variation of evaluation batteries and test
methods - Implementation of quality reports, which make the
preschool teachers responsible for their work,
accountability
17A critical preschool education and care
- A CRITICAL THEORY OF SOCIETY
- Western neo-liberal democracy as the end of
history, or? - Fukuyama 1989
- The Empire and the Crowd
- Hardt Negri 2000, 2006
- The Empire holds three dimensions
- - En exclusive circle of the most powerful
countries - - Multinational companies
- - Non government organizations and other lobby
org. - The Crowd
- - A manifold of productive and creative subjects
18A critical preschool education and care
- A CRITICAL THEORY OF SOCIETY
- Three political demands in order to develop a
global direct democracy a radical democracy - The right of citizen ship of the world
- The right to civic pay
- The right to control means of production and also
control of own body and consciousness - Hardt Negri 2000, 2006
19A critical preschool education and care
- A CRITICAL THEORY OF SOCIETY
- A demand of recognition on three levels
- Private sphere ? Relations of love ? Basic
confidence ? Physical integrity - Sphere of legal relations ? Legally universal
rights ? Self respect ? Social integrity - Sphere of community of value ? Cultural and
political communities ? Self esteem ? Honour
dignity - Honneth 1995
20A critical preschool education and care
- A FIGHT FOR DEMOCRATIC MEETING PLACES
- A democratic meeting place is a concrete set of
learning conditions where people come together to
speak, to dialogue, to share their stories, and
to struggle together within social relations that
strengthen rather than weaken the possibility for
active citizen ship - Arend in Giroux 1997, s. 106
21A critical preschool education and care
-
- Education should not only empower students by
giving them the knowledge and skills they need to
be able to function in the larger society as
critical agents, but also educate them for the
transformative action in the interest of creating
a truly democratic society - Giroux, 1988 s. xxxiii
22A critical preschool education and care
- Two necessary tasks in order to go beyond a
traditional adjustment to school - Reflect on the educational aims, to formulate the
long perspective the future people in the future
society - Formulate aspect of an educational content, which
is in close connection to the overall aims in
other words the involvement of critical themes.
23A critical preschool education and care
- OVERALL DEMOCRATIC AIMS
- A legitimating basis for a critical and
emancipatory education -
- Equip individuals to engage in active and
democratic participation - The Treaty of Lisbon, 2000
- Day care must give children possibility for
participation in decision making and joint
responsibility and understanding for democracy.
More contribute to childrens autonomy and
abilities to participate in binding social
communities - Denmark The ministry of Welfare 2007
24A critical preschool education and care
- THE EDUCATIONAL CONTENT
- Category Bildung and epoch typical problems
- War and peace
- The North-South, East-West conflict
- The problem of nationalism
- The ecological problem
- The social produced disparity
- The danger and possibility of new management- and
communications media. - Klafki 1994
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