Child-centered teaching, redemption, and educational identities: A history of the present


Autoria(s): Baker, Bernadette
Data(s)

1998

Resumo

Child-centeredness runs a familiar route in educational narratives. From Rousseau to Pestalozzi to Froebel to present day systems of childcare and schooling, childcenteredness is thought to have shifted the treatment of children into closer harmony with their true nature and hence into more sensitive and civilized forms of rearing. The celebratory air surrounding its deployment in education has been pervasive and difficult to contest partly because of the emotive alliances that have been drawn between child-centeredness and progressivism. That is, child-centeredness has been positioned as superseding a harsh, medieval ignorance of children while preventing present-day authoritarian strategies of domination. Child-centeredness is thus presently constituted as a soft space, as a deeply sensitive middle ground, between ignoring children and dominating them completely.

Identificador

http://eprints.qut.edu.au/89876/

Publicador

John Wiley & Sons Inc

Relação

http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/doi/10.1111/j.1741-5446.1998.00155.x/pdf

Baker, Bernadette (1998) Child-centered teaching, redemption, and educational identities: A history of the present. Educational Theory, 48(2), pp. 155-174.

Direitos

Copyright 1998 Board of Trustees / Univcrsity of Illinois

The definitive version is available at: http://www3.interscience.wiley.com

Fonte

Faculty of Education

Tipo

Journal Article