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Reconceptualizing Quality Early Care and Education with Equity at the Center. Occasional Paper Series 51

Authors :
Bank Street College of Education
Mark Nagasawa
Cristina Medellin-Paz
Helen Frazier, Contributor
Virginia Dearani, Contributor
Charis-Ann Sole, Contributor
M. Nalani Mattox-Primacio, Contributor
Shin Ae Han, Contributor
Soyoung Park, Contributor
Sunmin Lee, Contributor
Nnenna Odim, Contributor
Jennifer Keys Adair, Contributor
Angie Zapata, Contributor
Mary Adu-Gyamfi, Contributor
Adrianna González Ybarra, Contributor
Seung Eun McDevitt, Contributor
Louella Sween, Contributor
Vanessa Rodriguez, Contributor
Mark Nagasawa
Cristina Medellin-Paz
Helen Frazier, Contributor
Virginia Dearani, Contributor
Charis-Ann Sole, Contributor
M. Nalani Mattox-Primacio, Contributor
Shin Ae Han, Contributor
Soyoung Park, Contributor
Sunmin Lee, Contributor
Nnenna Odim, Contributor
Jennifer Keys Adair, Contributor
Angie Zapata, Contributor
Mary Adu-Gyamfi, Contributor
Adrianna González Ybarra, Contributor
Seung Eun McDevitt, Contributor
Louella Sween, Contributor
Vanessa Rodriguez, Contributor
Bank Street College of Education
Source :
Bank Street College of Education. 2024.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Issue 51 of the Bank Street Occasional Papers Series "Reconceptualizing Quality Early Care and Education with Equity at the Center" is a response to Gunilla Dahlberg, Peter Moss, and Alan Pence's 25-year interrogation of the concept of quality in early childhood education (ECE) (Dahlberg et al., 1999, 2013, 2023). Their groundbreaking work has called early childhood educators to question deeply held assumptions about the universality of childhood and how these shape the standardization of practices in early childhood settings around the world. While quality is typically conceived of as existing primarily in classrooms, the authors in Issue 51 remind readers that the small world of ECE exists within oppressive systems imbued with intersecting racism, classism, sexism, and ableism, and that, therefore, a beyond quality praxis requires nurturing and supporting educators through partnerships (recognizing that resilience is social), developing political commitments and orientations through relationships, and mobilizing these relationships for collective action towards liberatory alternatives. The idea for this issue, which is a part of a broader project to identify and analyze promising, equity-committed early childhood policies and practices, emerged over the past few years.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
ERIC
Journal :
Reconceptualizing Quality Early Care and Education with Equity at the Center. Occasional Paper Series 51
Publication Type :
Book
Accession number :
ED655928
Document Type :
Collected Works - General