5 research outputs found

    Demokratiuppdrag i förskolan

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    The aim of the study was to explore the democratic mission of the preschool as expressed in the preschool teachers’ talk and practical work and also through the children’s actions. The goal was to acquire new knowledge about how the democratic mission is carried out in preschool practice and what democratic subjects are supported and developed by the preschool teachers. Field studies were carried out between 2008 and 2010, with a concentration in spring 2009. The study included 5 preschool teachers and 20 children aged 3-6. Observations were made during the teachers’ planning meetings, when they worked with the children and when the children were playing or acting on their own. Two focus group interviews with the preschool teachers were also carried out, and local documents, for example work plans and evaluations, were analyzed. The results indicate that there has been a shift in view from group orientation in the preschool to greater focus on the individual child. In the analysis of the democratic subjects it was clear that much of what happens in the preschool is focused on individual children rather than the children as a group. In summary, preschool teachers speak of the democratic mandate as important but difficult to implement in their daily work. Children’s influence and participation are set up as goals in the work plan, but the preschool teachers do not feel they come to fruition in the pedagogical practice. Still, they define and condition children’s influence and they do work at the task, seemingly unconsciously, in practice. For their part, the children often seize opportunities when they arise but they also create their own. They take initiative and present ideas about what they want to do in preschool. It even turned out they had influence far beyond the preschool walls.Förskolans demokratiuppdrag beskrivs som centralt och viktigt men hur omsĂ€tts det i praktiken? Hur ser förskollĂ€rarna pĂ„ det de förvĂ€ntas göra, hur arbetar de med detta i förskolans vardag och hur gĂ„r det att förstĂ„ ur ett barnperspektiv? Observationer har genomförts pĂ„ en förskoleavdelning med barn i Ă„ldern 3-5 Ă„r. FörskollĂ€rarna har intervjuats och förskolans olika dokument har analyserats. Syftet var att undersöka förskolans demokratiuppdrag sĂ„ som det kommer till uttryck genom förskollĂ€rares tal och handlingar och genom barns agerande i förskolans verksamhet. Resultaten visar att förskollĂ€rarna framförallt förstĂ„r demokratiuppdrag i förskolan som en frĂ„ga om barns möjligheter till inflytande- ett villkorat inflytande. Barnen tar, inom ramen för de villkor som stĂ€lls upp, vara pĂ„ de möjligheter till inflytande som ges. Bland annat genom att ta egna initiativ, göra motstĂ„nd under planerade aktiviteter och utmana de regler som finns pĂ„ förskolan. Analysen visar ocksĂ„ att förskollĂ€rarna har en komplex syn pĂ„ det demokratiska subjekt som efterstrĂ€vas. Det ses som individualistiskt ur vissa aspekter, barnen ska kunna stĂ„ för sina egna Ă„sikter, det ses som socialt, barnen ska lĂ€ra sig att lyssna pĂ„ andra, och det ses ocksĂ„ som politiskt, barnen ska kunna vara med och pĂ„verka verksamheten genom att sjĂ€lva handla. Som ett didaktiskt bidrag presenteras en ny analysmodell; Institutionella demokratihĂ€ndelser

    Teacher educators’ perspectives on shaping a preschool teacher education while dealing with internal and external demands.

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    Being a teacher educator (TE) of today is often described as a complex task. TEs have to deal with internal demands from students, colleagues and leaders and with external demands from state authorities when shaping the education programme in which they teach. The present article focuses on TEs in Swedish preschool teacher education and aims to explore how commitment to and demands, inside and outside the higher education system, are handled and reflected upon, specifically the demands on considering student-centred learning. Results from interviews with 10 TEs show a perceived lack of support from the faculty board and its office and how colleagues contribute to tensions but also are perceived as supportive colleagues to learn from. Results also show the TEs’ efforts to overcome less desirable traditions. The combined results show how TEs are part of webs of commitments regarded as related fields and threads dependent on each other rather than separate parts, making the web/teacher education programme fragile. If any part breaks, the whole programme will be damaged. The discussion relates to how to overcome traditions and making actors in the programme shape a future-directed good education togetherPilot-Ste

    “Everybody has to get a Chance to Learn” : Democratic Aspects of Digitalisation in Preschool

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    The aim of this article is to examine the ways in which curriculum goals on digitalisation are viewed in relation to the over- arching democratic mission of Swedish preschools. Groups of preschool staff from three preschools located in different areas were interviewed with the focus on how they discuss democracy and the democratic aspects of digital tools and children’s digital competence, which are concepts used in the curriculum. Collective mind maps – constructed by the participants – were used as focal points in the interviews. The analysis centres on the content of these discussions, but also touches on the ways in which the groups communicated. The findings show that the groups from the three preschools expressed very different views on using digital tools and developing preschoolers’ digital competence, and that these views corresponded with their general views on democracy. The ways in which the groups expressed their views of democracy are also reflected in their discussions with each other. Preschool teachers’ and childcare workers’ own lack of digital competence is mentioned briefly as a reason for not using digital devices by the group using them the least, but this does not seem to be the main reason for their infrequent use of digital media with the children

    Teaching as a new mission : Swedish preschool teachers' collegial discussions

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    This article explores how preschool teachers, over time, collectively manage teaching as a new part of their mission. The study’s empirical data consist of two related but temporally separated sets of data containing collegial discussions among preschool teachers; talks during a development process and group interviews with the same preschool teachers six months later. Through a theorydriven analysis, using the theoretical concept of teacher agency, different ways of achieving teacher agency are brought into light. When tensions appear, the preschool teachers achieve teacher agency by using professional core values in order to make adjustments, additions or changes to school policy. These professional core values consist of for example, sensitivity to the interests and needs of children, the ambition to perform a pedagogical practice for the greater good of children and the professional tradition of preschool teachers and child minders working together in teams

    Student teachers' professional development : early practice and horizontal networks as ways to bridge the theory-practice gap

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    This article focuses on student teachers' professional development and explores how the students connect theory and practice in these processes. Data consist of 17 talks during weekly seminars with 15 preschool student teachers and a group of researchers both at campus and at the practicum placements during their first term. Initially, the researchers introduced discussions with an aim to challenge the students' views on general societal issues as well as specific issues related to the preschool practice. Eventually, the seminars changed toward student and researchers being more equal interlocutors. Experiences were discussed and relations between theory and practice were elaborated. Analyses from an ecological perspective of teacher agency show that the student teachers' agency develops from a naive to a proactive understanding of the profession. The early practicum period in combination with regular seminars was important for the student teachers' developing profession. The practicum period provides practical challenges, and the seminar discussions with researchers provides theoretical challenges. Implications for teacher education are discussed, such as offering horizontal teacher networks where students get support to be able to develop their professional agency
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