Mapping the Contours of Caribbean Early Childhood Education

Regional scholars in the Caribbean context have long advocated for quality early childhood education. The majority of their contributions however, focus primarily on curriculum, policy, and to a lesser extent, teaching practices. In this article, we broaden the scope of extant literature by conceptu...

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Main Authors: Kerry-Ann Escayg, Zoyah Kinkead-Clark
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Mercy College 2018-12-01
Series:Global Education Review
Subjects:
Online Access:http://ger.mercy.edu/index.php/ger/article/view/475
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spelling doaj-f0ac61f69f16446a88059c52409480ee2020-11-25T01:26:03ZengMercy CollegeGlobal Education Review2325-663X2018-12-0154236253Mapping the Contours of Caribbean Early Childhood EducationKerry-Ann Escayg0Zoyah Kinkead-Clark1University of Nebraska-OmahaThe University of the West Indies, MonaRegional scholars in the Caribbean context have long advocated for quality early childhood education. The majority of their contributions however, focus primarily on curriculum, policy, and to a lesser extent, teaching practices. In this article, we broaden the scope of extant literature by conceptualizing a model for Caribbean early childhood education, one which draws on and supports an anti-colonial and decolonizing perspective. Specifically, we interrogate the enduring legacy of colonialism on teaching and learning practices—and illustrate how these manifest in contemporary schooling processes. Equally significant, we examine and critique underlying epistemologies that frame current regional approaches, and offer an alternative framework that accents cultural knowledges in curriculum, pedagogy and teacher education. In response, we foreground childhood decolonization as integral to the development of positive racial and cultural identity, and in such vein, offer curricula, pedagogical and institutional (i.e., teacher education) suggestions consonant with an anti-colonial and decolonizing approach to early childhood education in the English-speaking Caribbean.http://ger.mercy.edu/index.php/ger/article/view/475anti-colonialCaribbeanearly childhood educationdecolonizationcurriculum policycultural identity
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Kerry-Ann Escayg
Zoyah Kinkead-Clark
spellingShingle Kerry-Ann Escayg
Zoyah Kinkead-Clark
Mapping the Contours of Caribbean Early Childhood Education
Global Education Review
anti-colonial
Caribbean
early childhood education
decolonization
curriculum policy
cultural identity
author_facet Kerry-Ann Escayg
Zoyah Kinkead-Clark
author_sort Kerry-Ann Escayg
title Mapping the Contours of Caribbean Early Childhood Education
title_short Mapping the Contours of Caribbean Early Childhood Education
title_full Mapping the Contours of Caribbean Early Childhood Education
title_fullStr Mapping the Contours of Caribbean Early Childhood Education
title_full_unstemmed Mapping the Contours of Caribbean Early Childhood Education
title_sort mapping the contours of caribbean early childhood education
publisher Mercy College
series Global Education Review
issn 2325-663X
publishDate 2018-12-01
description Regional scholars in the Caribbean context have long advocated for quality early childhood education. The majority of their contributions however, focus primarily on curriculum, policy, and to a lesser extent, teaching practices. In this article, we broaden the scope of extant literature by conceptualizing a model for Caribbean early childhood education, one which draws on and supports an anti-colonial and decolonizing perspective. Specifically, we interrogate the enduring legacy of colonialism on teaching and learning practices—and illustrate how these manifest in contemporary schooling processes. Equally significant, we examine and critique underlying epistemologies that frame current regional approaches, and offer an alternative framework that accents cultural knowledges in curriculum, pedagogy and teacher education. In response, we foreground childhood decolonization as integral to the development of positive racial and cultural identity, and in such vein, offer curricula, pedagogical and institutional (i.e., teacher education) suggestions consonant with an anti-colonial and decolonizing approach to early childhood education in the English-speaking Caribbean.
topic anti-colonial
Caribbean
early childhood education
decolonization
curriculum policy
cultural identity
url http://ger.mercy.edu/index.php/ger/article/view/475
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