“Who’s got the power?”: A critical examination of the anti-bias curriculum

Abstract Ample research data indicate that young children recognize racial characteristics and subsequently exhibit both positive and negative racial attitudes toward their own and other racial groups. In the early childhood field, educators commonly adopt an anti-bias/multicultural curriculum to ad...

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Main Author: Kerry-Ann Escayg
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2019-09-01
Series:International Journal of Child Care and Education Policy
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40723-019-0062-9
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spelling doaj-555410ca763541c8a92eb276d91076ad2020-11-25T03:23:49ZengSpringerOpenInternational Journal of Child Care and Education Policy2288-67292019-09-0113111810.1186/s40723-019-0062-9“Who’s got the power?”: A critical examination of the anti-bias curriculumKerry-Ann Escayg0Department of Teacher Education, College of Education, University of Nebraska-OmahaAbstract Ample research data indicate that young children recognize racial characteristics and subsequently exhibit both positive and negative racial attitudes toward their own and other racial groups. In the early childhood field, educators commonly adopt an anti-bias/multicultural curriculum to address such issues with young children and—with rare exceptions—such methods are subject to ongoing endorsement in the scholarly literature. This article, however, offers a more comprehensive critique of the anti-bias curriculum, including an analysis of the conceptual frameworks underpinning several of the associated teaching strategies. In addition, the present article illustrates how the anti-bias curriculum, though presented as congruent with the empirical evidence with respect to the education of young children and race, departs considerably from these data. Furthermore, the curricula under scrutiny fail to engage young children in critical discussions and classroom practices centering on: (i) power relations; (ii) racism; (iii) whiteness; and (iv) white privilege. This critique concludes with a preliminary conceptualization of anti-racism in early childhood education.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40723-019-0062-9Anti-biasAnti-racismYoung childrenRacial awarenessRacial attitudes
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kerry-Ann Escayg
spellingShingle Kerry-Ann Escayg
“Who’s got the power?”: A critical examination of the anti-bias curriculum
International Journal of Child Care and Education Policy
Anti-bias
Anti-racism
Young children
Racial awareness
Racial attitudes
author_facet Kerry-Ann Escayg
author_sort Kerry-Ann Escayg
title “Who’s got the power?”: A critical examination of the anti-bias curriculum
title_short “Who’s got the power?”: A critical examination of the anti-bias curriculum
title_full “Who’s got the power?”: A critical examination of the anti-bias curriculum
title_fullStr “Who’s got the power?”: A critical examination of the anti-bias curriculum
title_full_unstemmed “Who’s got the power?”: A critical examination of the anti-bias curriculum
title_sort “who’s got the power?”: a critical examination of the anti-bias curriculum
publisher SpringerOpen
series International Journal of Child Care and Education Policy
issn 2288-6729
publishDate 2019-09-01
description Abstract Ample research data indicate that young children recognize racial characteristics and subsequently exhibit both positive and negative racial attitudes toward their own and other racial groups. In the early childhood field, educators commonly adopt an anti-bias/multicultural curriculum to address such issues with young children and—with rare exceptions—such methods are subject to ongoing endorsement in the scholarly literature. This article, however, offers a more comprehensive critique of the anti-bias curriculum, including an analysis of the conceptual frameworks underpinning several of the associated teaching strategies. In addition, the present article illustrates how the anti-bias curriculum, though presented as congruent with the empirical evidence with respect to the education of young children and race, departs considerably from these data. Furthermore, the curricula under scrutiny fail to engage young children in critical discussions and classroom practices centering on: (i) power relations; (ii) racism; (iii) whiteness; and (iv) white privilege. This critique concludes with a preliminary conceptualization of anti-racism in early childhood education.
topic Anti-bias
Anti-racism
Young children
Racial awareness
Racial attitudes
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40723-019-0062-9
work_keys_str_mv AT kerryannescayg whosgotthepoweracriticalexaminationoftheantibiascurriculum
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