Kindergarten Narratives on Froebelian Education: Transnational Investigations
Editat de Professor Helen May, Dr Kristen Nawrotzki, Professor Larry Prochneren Limba Engleză Hardback – 2 noi 2016
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Specificații
ISBN-13: 9781474254458
ISBN-10: 1474254454
Pagini: 224
Ilustrații: 21 bw illus
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.48 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
ISBN-10: 1474254454
Pagini: 224
Ilustrații: 21 bw illus
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 20 mm
Greutate: 0.48 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom
Caracteristici
International contributors draw on globally-situated historical narratives and case studies of kindergartens and Froebelian education across The Netherlands, New Zealand, Japan, Soviet Russia, Sweden, the UK and the USA
Notă biografică
Helen May is Professor of Education and the former Dean (2006-2011) at the University of Otago College of Education, New Zealand.Kristen Nawrotzki is Lecturer at the University of Education in Heidelberg, Germany.Larry Prochner is Professor of Early Childhood Education and the former Chair of the Department of Elementary Education at the University of Alberta, Canada.
Cuprins
List of IllustrationsNotes on ContributorsKevin J. Brehony 1948-2013 Rosemary Deem Preface, Helen May and Kristen Nawrotzki 1. Tracking Kindergarten as a Travelling Idea, Larry Prochner 2. Working at Play or Playing at Work? A Froebelian Paradox Re-examined, Kevin J. Brehony Part I: International Movement of Ideas: Froebelian Education in Time and Place 3. Happiness, Play, and Bourgeois Morality: The Early Years of Froebel Schooling in the Netherlands, 1858-1904, Nelleke Bakker 4. Froebelian Teachers Abroad: Implementing a Modern Infant Education System in Colonial Wellington, New Zealand, 1906-1925, Kerry Bethell 5. In the Name of Froebel: Fundraising for Kindergartens in Sweden, 1890-1945, Johannes Westberg6. 'Such Marvelous Training': Grand Rapids, Michigan as a Kindergartening Centre, 1870-1905, Kristen D. Nawrotzki Part II: Curricular and Pedagogical Change: Froebelians Beyond the Kindergarten 7. Kindergarten at the Dewey School, University of Chicago, 1898-1903, Larry Prochner and Anna Kirova 8. Guiding Creativity: English Froebelian Educators and Plays for Children, 1892-1939, Amy Palmer 9. Freeing the Child: Froebelians and the Transformation of Learning Through Play, Self-Activity and Project Work in English Junior School Classrooms, 1920-1952, Jane Read Part III:Radical by Tradition: Long-Term Perspectives on Kindergarten Education 10. 'Come, Let Us Live With Our Children': Undokai, The Children's Play Festival at a Froebelian Kindergarten in Japan, 1889-2015, Yukiyo Nashida and Fusa Abe 11. Relocation, Continuity and Change: Dunedin Kindergartens, New Zealand, 1890s-2010s, Helen May Selected ReferencesIndex
Recenzii
This book honours the contribution of Professor Kevin Brehony (1948-2013), an internationally respected Froebelian scholar, through taking up some of the challenges he explored in which historical perspectives can play a role in current debates, informing policies and practices globally. This is achieved through the dialogic spaces created by the authors which interrogate the internal challenges of Froebelian early childhood education as well as the ways in which Froebelians have engaged with the world beyond that framework at different points in history. It makes an exciting read because it has so much to say that is important for policy and practice in early childhood education globally today.
This rich collection of new research, written by prominent international scholars in the field of kindergarten history, is a fitting tribute to Professor Kevin Brehony and to the legacy of Friedrich Froebel. President of the International Froebel Society, Professor Brehony's work was well known and respected within the community of early childhood and kindergarten researchers and educators, and he is remembered as the heart of organized international scholarship on Froebel. Early childhood education continues to be contested terrain and this volume speaks to the core and flexibility of Froebel's ideas, demonstrating that after 175 years his philosophy and methods remain vital to scholarly and public discourses on best practices. Today, in debates over work or play, child centered or adult centered pedagogies, Froebelian principles still provide a powerful justification for advocates of child-centered learning. These essays represent the fulfilment of Froebel's own hope, "If only the seed be cast abroad, its springing up will not fail nor the fruit be wanting." For early childhood scholars, educators, and policy makers especially, these highly textured, transnational case studies of applied Froebelian pedagogy are essential reading.
In my opinion, all contributors attempted to highlight core aspects of an educational historical phenomenon, the internationalization of the kindergarten movement, thus successfully contributing to a better understanding and interpretation of contemporary debates concerning the theory and practice in early childhood education.
The volume is well worth the effort and covers much new ground.
This rich collection of new research, written by prominent international scholars in the field of kindergarten history, is a fitting tribute to Professor Kevin Brehony and to the legacy of Friedrich Froebel. President of the International Froebel Society, Professor Brehony's work was well known and respected within the community of early childhood and kindergarten researchers and educators, and he is remembered as the heart of organized international scholarship on Froebel. Early childhood education continues to be contested terrain and this volume speaks to the core and flexibility of Froebel's ideas, demonstrating that after 175 years his philosophy and methods remain vital to scholarly and public discourses on best practices. Today, in debates over work or play, child centered or adult centered pedagogies, Froebelian principles still provide a powerful justification for advocates of child-centered learning. These essays represent the fulfilment of Froebel's own hope, "If only the seed be cast abroad, its springing up will not fail nor the fruit be wanting." For early childhood scholars, educators, and policy makers especially, these highly textured, transnational case studies of applied Froebelian pedagogy are essential reading.
In my opinion, all contributors attempted to highlight core aspects of an educational historical phenomenon, the internationalization of the kindergarten movement, thus successfully contributing to a better understanding and interpretation of contemporary debates concerning the theory and practice in early childhood education.
The volume is well worth the effort and covers much new ground.