Early childhood teachers’ relationship with the official curriculum: the mediating role of professional and policy contexts

In this paper, we explore how professional and policy contexts can mediate early childhood teachers’ relationship with the official curriculum. Using their assessment practices as an impetus for discussion, we probed 28 Greek kindergarten teachers to talk about their engagement with the prescribed c...

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Main Authors: Maria Birbili, Alexandra Myrovali
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2020-04-01
Series:Education Inquiry
Subjects:
Online Access:http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/20004508.2019.1687080
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spelling doaj-00949e2c9e534e5cb3dc3c2728f4baea2020-11-25T02:09:33ZengTaylor & Francis GroupEducation Inquiry2000-45082020-04-0111211012510.1080/20004508.2019.16870801687080Early childhood teachers’ relationship with the official curriculum: the mediating role of professional and policy contextsMaria Birbili0Alexandra Myrovali1Aristotle University of ThessalonikiAristotle University of ThessalonikiIn this paper, we explore how professional and policy contexts can mediate early childhood teachers’ relationship with the official curriculum. Using their assessment practices as an impetus for discussion, we probed 28 Greek kindergarten teachers to talk about their engagement with the prescribed curriculum and explain how they construct its guidelines at the enactment level. As teachers discussed how they negotiated and adapted to curriculum guidelines on assessment, it emerged that their experiences can be better understood in the contexts within which they occurred. Three themes emerged regarding teachers’ contexts: the way the curriculum change was introduced back in 2003, the role teachers’ professional contexts played in teachers’ effort to make sense of the new curriculum and the permissive policy context Greek kindergarten teachers operate in. The findings provide insight for policymakers, teacher professional development and research.http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/20004508.2019.1687080early childhood educationcurriculum enactmentportfolio assessmentprofessional contexts
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Maria Birbili
Alexandra Myrovali
spellingShingle Maria Birbili
Alexandra Myrovali
Early childhood teachers’ relationship with the official curriculum: the mediating role of professional and policy contexts
Education Inquiry
early childhood education
curriculum enactment
portfolio assessment
professional contexts
author_facet Maria Birbili
Alexandra Myrovali
author_sort Maria Birbili
title Early childhood teachers’ relationship with the official curriculum: the mediating role of professional and policy contexts
title_short Early childhood teachers’ relationship with the official curriculum: the mediating role of professional and policy contexts
title_full Early childhood teachers’ relationship with the official curriculum: the mediating role of professional and policy contexts
title_fullStr Early childhood teachers’ relationship with the official curriculum: the mediating role of professional and policy contexts
title_full_unstemmed Early childhood teachers’ relationship with the official curriculum: the mediating role of professional and policy contexts
title_sort early childhood teachers’ relationship with the official curriculum: the mediating role of professional and policy contexts
publisher Taylor & Francis Group
series Education Inquiry
issn 2000-4508
publishDate 2020-04-01
description In this paper, we explore how professional and policy contexts can mediate early childhood teachers’ relationship with the official curriculum. Using their assessment practices as an impetus for discussion, we probed 28 Greek kindergarten teachers to talk about their engagement with the prescribed curriculum and explain how they construct its guidelines at the enactment level. As teachers discussed how they negotiated and adapted to curriculum guidelines on assessment, it emerged that their experiences can be better understood in the contexts within which they occurred. Three themes emerged regarding teachers’ contexts: the way the curriculum change was introduced back in 2003, the role teachers’ professional contexts played in teachers’ effort to make sense of the new curriculum and the permissive policy context Greek kindergarten teachers operate in. The findings provide insight for policymakers, teacher professional development and research.
topic early childhood education
curriculum enactment
portfolio assessment
professional contexts
url http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/20004508.2019.1687080
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