2 research outputs found

    Philosophy with children : facilitating children's voices on childhood

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    Increasingly there is a search for participatory research methods that work to ensure childrenā€™s authentic voices are heard. In this presentation we will propose that Philosophy with Children might be employed as a research method that facilitates childrenā€™s participation and voice in research. Further, it may also impact positively in childrenā€™s wider participation and engagement in recognising childrenā€™s agency and conceptual autonomy. We will discuss the advantages of using philosophical dialogue as a method for collecting data and will also consider challenges that arise from using Philosophy with Children as a research tool. In discussing the challenges and opportunities afforded by such a method, the presentation will draw on two studies to exemplify the approach. One study explored what kind of society children want to live in, and the second is an on-going international study that aims to explore childrenā€™s conceptions of child/childhood. We will also suggest that using Philosophy with Children might be considered as addressing the need for rights-based approaches to research as in affording children ownership of the dialogue it does not assume children as deficient in their capacities and it recognises childrenā€™s particular perspectives on the world. In addition, we will suggest that using a philosophical approach to gathering childrenā€™s views might offer a deeper insight into their thinking of and understanding about the world. Elements of the approaches used in the study will be discussed in order to gauge the strengths and limitations of using practical philosophy as a means of gathering data in subsequent analysis. In juxtaposition to the Philosophy with Children approach discussed, we will comment briefly on the use of an alternative research method, Nominal Group Technique, which was also used in the first project. In comparing the two approaches we aim to show where Philosophy with Children may provide richer and deeper evidence when seeking childrenā€™s views. While the presentation will not share the findings of either of the projects mentioned above, the approach taken in using Philosophy with Children as a research method, relates strongly to the findings of the initial project and the goals of the Childrenā€™s Voices on Childhood project. In using Philosophy with Children, it will be proposed that, while there may be some limitations in using the approach, it takes account of childrenā€™s voices in research; it affords opportunities to explore childrenā€™s conceptual thinking and the application to ā€˜real lifeā€™; it allows children to have ownership of the topic under consideration; and it potentially leads to addressing childrenā€™s status in wider society

    Being children : children's voices on childhood

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    Situated in the context of the childrenā€™s rights, this article reports on a study involving children from eleven countries and five continents in philosophical discussions about child and childhood. Here we focus on five of those countries. In a previous study, two of the authors explored in what kind of society children would like to live. The present study addresses directly one of the issues arising from that study: to investigate what children think childhood is and their place in society. The study raises issues around childrenā€™s participation related to their conceptions of child and childhood
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