The role of cultural tools and motive objects in early childhood teachers’ curriculum decision-making about digital and popular culture play
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journal contribution
posted on 2024-06-13, 13:11authored byJ Nuttall, S Edwards, S Grieshaber, E Wood, A Mantilla Benitez, TC Katiba, J Bartlett
Cultural–historical perspectives on human activity argue that changes in cultural practices, such as teaching in early childhood education, can be fostered by introducing new conceptual resources, a process known as re-mediation. We report from an ongoing study that aims to change early childhood teachers’ curricular practices in response to children’s everyday experiences of the convergence between popular culture and digital play. To date, convergence has only marginally influenced contemporary early childhood curriculum. Seventeen teachers were interviewed after implementing a new cultural tool called ‘web-mapping’ that mobilises the concept of convergence to foster digital and popular culture play in preschools. This paper theorises the re-mediation of teachers’ curriculum decision-making by examining the dynamic relationship between cultural tools and the object motives identified in interviews with the teachers. It concludes by reflecting on the implications for future professional development initiatives that aim to change curricular practices in early childhood education through the introduction of new cultural tools.
History
Journal
Professional development in education
Volume
45
Pagination
790-800
Location
Abingdon, Eng.
ISSN
1941-5257
eISSN
1941-5265
Language
eng
Publication classification
C1 Refereed article in a scholarly journal
Copyright notice
2018, International Professional Development Association (IPDA)