Play-Responsive Teaching in Early Childhood Education.

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Bibliographic Details
Superior document:International Perspectives on Early Childhood Education and Development Series ; v.26
:
TeilnehmendeR:
Place / Publishing House:Cham : : Springer International Publishing AG,, 2019.
©2019.
Year of Publication:2019
Edition:1st ed.
Language:English
Series:International Perspectives on Early Childhood Education and Development Series
Online Access:
Physical Description:1 online resource (188 pages)
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Table of Contents:
  • Intro
  • Foreword
  • References
  • Preface
  • Contents
  • Part I: Theoretical Premises and Research on Playing and Learning
  • Chapter 1: Developing Play-responsive Didaktik - Mission Impossible?
  • Teaching and Learning in ECEC
  • Different Voices, Arguments and Standpoints
  • Early Childhood Education Didaktik
  • Theoretical and Empirical Continuity and Discontinuity
  • Guidance for Readers
  • References
  • Chapter 2: Learning, Teaching, and Didaktik
  • The Processes and Products of Learning and Development
  • Teaching and Its Phylogenetic Grounding and Ontogenetic Development
  • The Concept of Embedded Teaching
  • The 'What' of Learning and Didaktik
  • Context and Contextualizing
  • Summary
  • References
  • Chapter 3: Playing, Playworlds, and Early Childhood Education
  • A Brief Note on Play Theories
  • The Development of Play: Actions, Objects, and Meaning
  • Key-References in Research on Play
  • Developmental Education/Basic Education
  • The Diversity of Beliefs about and Practices of Play
  • The Sociogenesis of Forms of Play and Its Implication for ECEC
  • Engaging the Youngest Children in Teaching Activities as Is and as If
  • Summary
  • References
  • Chapter 4: A Combined Research and Development Project
  • Empirical Data, Transcription and Analytical Procedure
  • Intersubjectivity and Alterity
  • Language as Constitutive and Perspectivizing
  • The Freedom of Play and Open-Endedness
  • As If and as Is and Learning from Fiction
  • Engaging with the World as Is Through as If It Were Across the Lifespan
  • Summary
  • References
  • Part II: Empirical Studies
  • Chapter 5: The Lava-Shark: Teachers Attempting to Enter Children's Play
  • How Teachers Attempt to Enter Children's Ongoing Play
  • Discussion
  • References
  • Chapter 6: The Lion and the Mouse: How and Why Teachers Succeed in Becoming Participants in Children's Ongoing Play.
  • Responding to Alterity
  • Negotiating Possible Roles
  • Negotiating Possible Directions
  • Coordinating as If and as Is
  • Discussion
  • References
  • Chapter 7: Goldilocks and Her Motorcycle: Establishing Narrative Frames
  • Narratives in Children's Play
  • Empirical Examples of Narrative Folktale Frames
  • The Teacher Directing
  • The Teacher Taking a Role
  • The Teacher Triggering Play through Engaging Children in a Playful Dialogue
  • The Teacher Engaging as a Guiding Participant
  • Discussion
  • References
  • Chapter 8: The Triangle-Lady and Billy Goats Gruff: Constituting Contents for Learning in Play
  • External Content for Learning Introduced into Play
  • Isolated Content of Learning
  • Learning Content Necessary for Play
  • Learning Contents Emerging in Play
  • Learning the Framework of the Play
  • Learning How to Play
  • Developing Concepts as Part of the Play
  • Discussion
  • References
  • Chapter 9: When Kroko-the-Crocodile Got Sick
  • Reading Icons and Graphical Symbols as a Prerequisite to Play
  • Teaching Everyday Routines in Play
  • Discussion
  • References
  • Chapter 10: The Magical Fruits: Establishing a Narrative Play Frame for Mutual Problem Solving
  • Discussion
  • References
  • Chapter 11: The Letter Thief: From Playing to Teaching to Learning to Playing
  • The Letter Thief
  • Processes of Participants Orienting Toward Temporarily Sufficient Intersubjectivity
  • Establishing a Shared Play Activity
  • Establishing Intersubjectivity About a Content of Learning
  • Maria's Changed Participation During the Activity
  • The Extended Content of Learning and Reestablishing Intersubjectivity
  • Discussion
  • References
  • Part III: Conclusions and Theoretical Elaboration
  • Chapter 12: A Play-responsive Early Childhood Education didaktik
  • Some Important Empirical Findings
  • A Note on Agency.
  • Teaching in a Play-responsive Way in the Dynamic Space Between Alterity and Intersubjectivity
  • The Concepts of Triggering and Alterity
  • A Note on Scaffolding and Triggering
  • Reconceptualizing Teaching and Early Childhood didaktik
  • Teaching Is Not Instructing
  • Teaching as Responsive and Directed Coordination
  • Continuity and Discontinuity with Children's Experience
  • Education as a Meta-narrative
  • Concluding Note
  • References.