Tuesday, November 12, 2013

The Value of Children



Politicians all over the world are plagued with the issue of children, their health and education, and have to respond to questions about what is best for our children because those children are our future.  The health and well-being of children has become a family, community, state, national, and global problem proving that people of the world recognize the importance of children but do not always have the resources to find answers to solve problems.  By increasing the availability of life saving vaccines to children to 90 percent in disadvantaged countries could possibly save 6.4 million children between 2011 – 2020 (Ozawa, et al., 2011).  The healthier the child is the better learner they can be (Morrison, 2007).  The more children who grow up to be a happy and healthy adult will create a stronger future because of those healthy, educated adults. 
            Our children are the only assurance of a future and yet there is more generosity and willingness to send aid for a population affected by a natural disaster than to help take care of the children of the world and give those children a chance at life.  Twice as many children die every year from preventable causes than people with HIV/AIDS, malaria and tuberculosis combined (Stoltenburg, 2006).  Many people agree that children are more important than most anything however excuses flow freely for why support and donations are not given to the children of the world however money is sent in droves to help the families affected by a hurricane, or tornados, or earthquakes. The United Nations came together in 2001 and agreed on the importance of the children of the world by developing eight Millennium Development Goals (MDGS) to help every country strive to have healthy, educated children within their countries (Stoltenburg, 2006).  MDG-4 focused on neo-natal health and child mortality and it was agreed to reduce child-mortality by two-thirds by 2015 however despite the available resources and solutions to the problems, enough progress has not been made to achieve this goal (Stoltenburg, 2006).  Children’s health is a political issue for politicians and society as a whole.  While politicians and the media focus on the health problems of the world’s youth, many causes for those problems are essentially entwined with societal values, social norms and myths (Emerson, 2010).  As the problem was realized, addressed, and solutions offered, possible answers continue to be ignored and pushed away because it is too difficult to manage and facilitate.  Excuses are created to explain why the recommendations are not being followed through, however it only hurts the children and the trend continues on, and to help solve some of these issues and create a child better ready to learning and be productive in school, there can be no excuse good enough to not follow research recommendations and support the young minds of today. 
            Understanding the world is just as vital as a child’s health.  If children do not understand their place, their impact, or their involvement on the world around them, the future world may not exist as it does today.  Children not only need to be healthy, ready to learn in school, and successful in their educations, but also an integral part of the political and decision making processes involved in a country.  There is an international consensus for the need to increase citizenship education in schools and make the subject more participatory, collaborative, and issue based; however there has been little action on changing the current standards (Howe & Covell, 2009).  Some writers have expressed the importance of citizenship education and the need to emphasize the subject within schools across the world and signify the legacy to be able to move forward (Howe & Covell, 2009).  Children need to be taught about the greater good and what citizenship means because if the pursuit of individual wants and needs over comes the greater good, democratic society will deteriorate and fall apart creating a void within people being filled with more anxiety and in turn creating more health problems for adults (Howe & Covell, 2009).  Although new initiatives have been introduced they have not yet yielded any progress in creating a greater sense of citizenship within the youth of the United States (Howe & Covell, 2009). 
Education administrators at the school district level and higher are always concerned about curriculum and how and what children are learning within the schools along with how to access proof of children’s learning through assessment.  The United States board of education had finally gotten together and expressed the absolute need to have standards that are the same across the board, and state. Over the next few years all states will be adjusting their standards for k-12 language arts and math, and moving to the National Common Core standards, ensuring every school district in every county, in every state, across the United States are working for the same goals for each grade level.  The No Child Left Behind Act of 2001 was intended to help improve and reform elementary through high school education (Morrison, 2007).  The act has changed teaching for many years to come and has also affected pre-K education because of the large importance being put on getting children ready to learn and ready to be in school (Morrison, 2007).  While there is an understanding within political and educator circles that every child needs to be given every chance to succeed to their highest potential and be given every opportunity to become a meaningful part of society, how to reach that goal causes friction.  Not every child can be taught in the same manner or with the same tools; not every child comes to school equipped with the skills to learn, and not every child has a stable home life that satisfies their basic needs;  all of these factors affect how a child learns and absorbs information. 
With the increase in the necessity of helping children become ready to learn before they begin school, the United States federal government has created programs, such as, Head Start and Early Head Start, to help disadvantaged children become more prepared to learn and succeed in school.  While the idea of the head start program offers solutions to help at-risk children become ready to learn as they begin school, not every program is effective at helping children become less at-risk.  Head start primarily aims for children from low income, single parent, disadvantaged homes, on the other hand there is unfortunately still a group of children who are not disadvantaged enough to openly qualify for services though still need the chance at extra support or opportunities given by the Head Start program.  Not all families are poor enough or struggle enough to be obviously pinpointed as needing help, and yet these groups of lower middle class families still lack the resources to pay for a preschool program to assist their child in getting the helping hand offered by a preschool program and many of those children can fall through the cracks and end up further behind than they would have been with the support form a preschool.
            As much as early childhood education has become a priority for the education system, some effort has been made to support children even earlier than that.  Early head start is a program to help pregnant women stay healthy and provide healthy family functioning (Morrison, 2007).  While these programs look like the problem solver on paper there are always children who are not reached that should be and need to be.  A Head Start program that feeds in the elementary school I have been teaching kindergarten in for five years has not yielded many results in helping these children enter school ready to learn or even understand their role in the school itself and the classroom.  Many administrators, politicians, and policy makers make decisions by thinking to throw a little extra money at helping the at-risk children catch up and that will fix all the problems, except to gain that extra money funding gets cut in other areas, such as class size, or support help, or basic supply money, affecting more children’s learning and possibly causing more children to fall behind.  Class size has been studied and has shown to affect children’s learning; it’s not just the teacher but the environment those children are being exposed to.  A classroom with 15-20 students can function much better than a classroom with 25-30 students.  With a classroom of 15-20 students the teacher is not stalled by as many children trying to gain attention and while working with small groups of children.  With a smaller class size the teacher can spend more quality time with each child and not feel the pressures to move on because the next student needs help also; while at the same time making sure every child is on task and handling any children who are not.
As a school teacher for almost twelve years, I have experienced decisions made by administrators and politicians with regards to the choices being made for children, however from the classroom point of view many of the positive choices, changes or suggestions are lost before actually entering the classroom.  Outcomes for children, their education and futures are lost on business decisions and the bottom line; money.  Education is not a business, in the respect that there are good and services.  Children cannot be treated like a box of cereal on the shelf, or a can of beans or corn, just waiting for someone to come and buy, human emotions and life situations play too much of a factor in the product being put out by the education system therefore the decisions being made about children cannot forget the human factor.  If children are not a foremost priority for any country, the country will have little hope for a future.  No one lives forever, so naturally children are the future for everything, and without them there will be no one to continue on and to pass on the heirloom of experience from a countries’ history.  Investing in children ensures the legacy for future politicians (Stoltenburg, 2006).  Knowing that children are the most important form of insurance for a future, children should be held with the utmost importance and respect above all else.  “Protecting our children is a moral and political imperative (Stoltenburg, 2006).” 


References

Emerson, L. (2010). The good life for children: Do we really care about the trends? Australian Journal of Social Issues, 101-115.

Howe, R. B., & Covell, K. (2009). Engaging children in citizenship education: A children's rights perspective. The Journal of Educational Thought, 21-44.

Morrison, G. S. (2007). Early childhood education today. Upper Saddle River, New Jersey: Pearson Merrill Prentice Hall.

Ozawa, S., Stack, M. L., Bishai, D. M., Mirelman, A., Friberg, I. K., Niessen, L., et al. (2011). During the 'decade of vaccines,' the lives of 6.4 million children valued at $231 billion counld be saved. Health Affairs, 1010 - 1020.

Stoltenburg, J. (2006, September 18). Our children: The key to our common future. Retrieved December 3, 2011, from The Lancet: www.thelancet.com

What would they say now?



Jean Piaget, Howard Gardner, and Maria Montessori would be interesting dinner guests and could create an enlightening evening full of ideas and differing opinions with possible new solutions to current problems plaguing early childhood education.  Maria Montessori and Jean Piaget are very similar in their ideas that children develop in a sequential way, however they disagree on the timing of those stages.  Howard Gardner believes all children learn in their own ways and use seven different learning intelligences to increase their knowledge.  There are many issues plaguing early childhood education today, and it would be great to get the input from foundation experts on those issues and maybe develop solutions to help the children, parents, and educators of the United States. 
Three questions came to mind immediately when thinking about these experts and some of the problems plaguing our early childhood education system, and they are:
Do you believe a child’s development is changed because of the disintegration of the family unit and lack of family stability? 
Jean:    Learning and development are two different things.  Development is a physiological process that biology controls and learning is something that is provoked by external situations (Gauvin & Cole, 1997).  A child will continue to progress through developmental stages regardless of the adults in their life; however a child’s schemas and deferred imitation will be different (Morrison, 2007) from those children who come from a supportive, intact, loving home creating differing experiences to grow up with and influence future decisions.  A child’s idea of a father may be the man in their mothers’ life, not always knowing if that person will change and another child may view a father as the man who helps to raise them, love them, and stay with them no matter what.  The same could be said about a child’s ideas on education, maybe it only means graduating high school and maybe it means going on to college and getting a degree.  Some children’s’ deferred imitation will imitate poor choices that parents make, and other children imitate parents who make good choices; however gains can be made to make up for any lack of support from the home when the child enters the school setting.  A school/teacher/educator can help children who lack experience by exposing them to those experiences they have not come across in their home life.  By exposing children to the ‘missing’ experiences needed to create a better understanding of the world around them, gaps can be bridged that may have been created by the lack of family support.

Maria:  A child that is not exposed to as many experiences as a young child because of the lack of support from home or any other reason can make up those differences when they begin school as long as the teacher creates an environment to allow that child to experience and explore things they have not come across within their own home lives.  In a school setting, educators can give children the opportunity to explore things they would not normally be privy to at home which in turn helps the child broaden their knowledge base by becoming more aware of the world and how things may work outside of their home and family experiences.  Classrooms should be filled with children of multiple ages and learning abilities to provide the widest range of tools and hands on activities available for all children instead of only addressing the average need of most children (Morrison, 2007). 

Howard:  A child will not encounter the same kind of learning experiences as their peers causing distress for children trying to fit into just one learning style; as their life itself is ever changing, their learning styles can change.  As long as a child’s teacher offers a variety of ways for the child to attain and absorb knowledge being introduced to them, no matter their home life, the child will be given the opportunity to compensate for any voids in their knowledge base by being exposed to new experiences around other children and adults from differing backgrounds.   

Do you think the current increases in educational standards are developmentally appropriate?

Jean:    If children have not progressed far enough through their developmental stages, the outside influences will have little effect on the child until they are ready to absorb that information.  Children should not be pushed to reach learning goals before they are ready.  As young children they are only capable of learning to a certain level, until they have assimilated enough time and knowledge to move to the next level.  By increasing the amount of information a child is responsible for learning at earlier and earlier ages, children are becoming too stressed because of their inability to attain the level of knowledge being put in front of them, creating children who can possibly fall further and further behind in their learning and become distressed and dislike learning all together due to the frustration is causes.

Maria: Children should be exposed to all subjects and experiences as early in their lives as possible.  The more experiences and tools children are given to explore their world with the faster and better understanding they will have of the world around them and how things work.  The child will express their need for further education when they are ready, and the teacher needs to be waiting to be ready to introduce more information when the child is ready.  As children learn and grow, they should be allowed to move at their own pace and be given the time to thoroughly explore the information in front of them before being forced to move forward (Morrison, 2007).  A child should achieve deep understanding of what they are working with before being encouraged to move forward.  Young children should be given concrete tasks allowing them to manipulate their own discovery (Morrison, 2007), and not be expected to think outside of the box until they have mastered the box and its contents.  Children should be exposed to new experiences and concrete activities to further their education when they express the need for it and not just because of the chronological age (Morrison, 2007).  

Howard:  Developmentally appropriate is different for every child.  Young children learn in many ways which can change from day to day or task to task; the job of the teacher is to assure the availability for children to have multiple opportunities to foster and encourage their learning styles to develop while continuing to explore other learning styles (Morrison, 2007).  When the emphasis is on the amount of information a child should acquire or master by a specific time, children are not being allowed the freedom to use their own intelligence to increase their knowledge, but expected to learn as the rest of the students using one or two ways.  Children also need to be allowed to learn how to interact with other children and adults they will come into contact with by helping children to develop and strengthen their personal intelligences (Morrison, 2007), which may not be able to or encouraged to be developed in the home.  Children must be allowed to understand that just because they learn something a different way that their friend does not make it wrong, just different. 

Do you think the amount of standardized testing given to children provides educators with the best picture of their students’ learning?

Jean:    My whole theory is based on children’s observations of children and not forcing children to do things they do not naturally want to or know how to do.  The problem with standardized testing is the fact that it does not allow for explanation and reasoning behind the given answer.  Many times children come to a conclusion on an answer because of their experiences and knowledge base and with their justification the answer makes sense.  If a child is asked a question that is answered with an unconventional response, standardized testing would consider the answer wrong no matter if the child can defend their answer.  Children do not learn in black and white, they learn in all different methods and spaces of time.  Children cannot be expected to perform as their peers in all subjects and in the same amount of time (Fox & Roconscente, 2008).

Maria:  Children are best monitored by observing and analyzing their behavior for signs of understanding and further exploration (Morrison, 2007).  A standardized test will not allow children to be actively involved in their learning process but force them to learn something just for the test without making a connection or real meaning to their world around them.  Educators today will get more information from observing children’s experiences, and behaviors than sitting them down and asking questions expecting to hear one answer.  No two children are alike and no two children will learn and absorb their world in the same way, therefore a standardized test is not a fair judgment of their learning.  Children learning using their senses (Saracho & Spodek, 2009) and no two children’s senses work the same, so how can we expect children to be able to learn and be assessed in the same way and have reliable evidence of their learning progress?

Howard:  Standardized tests that require only short answers present a situation that does not exist outside Of school; life does not present itself in multiple-choice formats (Gardner, 1994).”  Portfolio assessment gives an educator a much better picture of the learning achievements over time of a specific student.  Being able to show specific examples of how a child is learning or the pace a child is learning is more valuable than if the child can chose the correct letter to correspond to the answer they think the teacher is looking for.  Children should be able to demonstrate their use of knowledge in multiple ways (Gardner, 1994) and not just be able to recite back information they have been given.    Teachers need to give feedback to their students to allow them to better understand and more opportunities to learn and expand their knowledge (Gardner, 1994).

When thinking of three early childhood foundation experts to invite to a dinner party I thought of three people from differing time periods, thinking there would be more disagreements about education today; however in the end all three of these experts agree overall on the same topics.  Each theorist has their own differences in the small parts of early childhood development, but the overall feelings seem to make the same points.  Being able to explore and spend time with these experts and many more in the same party would be very exciting and I would not want the evening to end wanting to continue to pick their brains and work together to come up with possible solutions for the education crisis we are in here in the United Sates alone.  The policy makers in this country need to go back to the beginning and explore the knowledge of these experts and apply these theories in whole or part to help the children of this country and in turn the world.  The children of the United States are increasingly falling behind their peers in other countries and if the problems are not addressed and fixed the United States will no longer be able to compete in the global market putting our country at risk.
 
References


Fox, E., & Roconscente, M. (2008). Metacognitions, and self-regulation in James, Piaget, and Vygotsky. Education Psychology Review, 373-389.

Gardner, H. (1994, March). Interview with Howard Gardner: Educating for understanding. (J. Siegel, & M. F. Shaughnessy, Interviewers)

Gauvin, M., & Cole, M. (1997). Readings on the development of children. New York: W.H. Freeman and Company.

Morrison, G. S. (2007). Early childhood education today. Upper Saddle River, New Jersey: Pearson Merrill Prentice Hall.

Saracho, O. N., & Spodek, B. (2009). Educating the young mathematician: The twentieth century and beyond. Early Childhood Edcuation, 305-312.







Evolvement of the Profession



When I began teaching almost 12 years ago there has been an increase in academic requirements which has led to a decrease in play and exploratory learning.  With more broken homes and parents in the workforce, there is a great need for early childhood education outside of the home.  In the past an early childhood educator was able to provide children with activities to engage them and allow the child to direct their own learning (Childcare Education Institute, 2009).  Now an early childhood professional must embrace and understand their always changing role including being a strong communicator, a coach, a keeper of the watch, a storyteller, and a researcher (Miels, 2007), a disciplinary, a friend, a teacher, an emotional supporter, a role model, and an advocate all while meeting the needs of their students that can change from day to day.  I currently teach kindergarten and standards have changed so much that I am unable to do fun playful activities because they do not always fulfill a standard needing to be met.  My daughter attends a preschool program that has a set curriculum including being responsible for teaching letters and sounds which in the past had been something achieved in kindergarten.  If the people who are making these decisions about education do not stop to allow children to be children, we will continue to create children who have anxiety over not being expectations and teachers frustrated by the increasing work load with less time and children less ready.
References

Childcare Education Institute. (2009, April 22). Teacher roles and responsibilities. Retrieved November 9, 2011, from Articlesbase: http://www.articlesbase.com/childhood-education-articles/teacher-roles-and-responsibilities

Miels, J. (2007). The seven faces of the early childhood educator. Retrieved November 9, 2011, from Earlychildhood NEWS: http://www.earlychildhoodnews.com/earlychildhood/article_print.aspx?ArticleId=171

Observing the Classroom



An early childhood educator needs to be a caretaker, an encourager, a motivator, a facilitator, an authoritarian, a role model, and everything in between.  Many early childhood theorists agree that the teacher needs to help guide children in learning their skills and promoting the use of the skills.  Maria Montessori looked at the teacher as an adult available to provide tools and experiences to help the child learn, while including their own interests and needs (Morrison, 2007).  Reggio Emilia looked for teachers to collaborate with other professionals while creating environments with rich possibilities while keeping records on the progress of students skills and helping them to revisit those skills to help make them more concrete (Morrison, 2007).  The Waldorf theory expects teacher to be role models providing small classrooms rich in themes handling topics about caring for the community or the natural and living world (Morrison, 2007).  John Dewey looked to teachers to be role models for proper behavior and someone children can learn from about behavior in society and what is appropriate and not, and where and when certain behaviors are acceptable (Platz & Arellano, 2011).    
                While observing in a Great Start Readiness Program this week for four year old children at risk, I was able to watch the role the teacher played in that classroom.  This classroom has 18 students, one teacher and one para-professional, and the students attend school all day, four days a week.  This teacher was a great facilitator of information for her students.  She helped the students to try and find answers to questions they had on their own by directing them in the right direction, but still allowing the student to discover the answer.  All the children knew their place in the classroom and knew what was expected of them while in the different parts of the classroom.  This teacher did a very good job of teaching these young children the rules, and the expectations at the beginning of the year because she did not have to remind many students of those rules or expectations throughout the day.  As an effective early childhood educator Mrs. Landschoot was very good at introducing activities to students without making them do something they did not want to.  Being a good guide for students, as Reggio Emilia and Vygotsky would support as an effective and positive educator (Mercilliott Hewett, 2001)is something that seemed to come easily to Mrs. Landschoot. 
                Mrs. Landschoot had a student leader who was in charge of filling in the calendar and pointing to the numbers on the calendar as the rest of the students counted, and dressing the weather bear with appropriate clothes for the kind of weather of the day.  The student leader also picked a song for the entire class to dance to.  By allowing the students to take the place of leader or teacher in the classroom students are more engaged and active.  The teacher should be a collaborator and co-learner allowing students to take ownership of their learning, making it more valuable helping to create a life-long learner (Mercilliott Hewett, 2001).    
                Mrs. Landschoot was very good at encouraging students to do more on their activities instead of accepting just enough.  Some children wanted to rush through a center or project just to get to the next thing.  Mrs. Landshoot was very good at getting students to finish something completely before moving on to the next activity.  Mrs. Landshoot understands that young children like to mimic the adults in their lives and she is a good role model for the students by showing them how they should be working, sitting, listening, or anything else in the classroom. 
Mrs. Landschoot understands that young children are very attached to what they know and their family is most important to them.  She takes on a role as caregiver and fulfills the job very well.  She knows the more comfortable children are the better they will learn so she does many activities that bring the family topic into the activity or discussion especially by allowing students to share stories about their families and then tell stories after doing something with the family which helps children to feel more connected to their loved ones.   
                The day I visited the class was on day three of a farm theme.  The class had a barn set up in the classroom made of cardboard.  Students’ role played during free choice centers by going in and out of the barn as the farmer and animals.  Some of the students even recreated a story they had heard earlier in the week.  The students had the choice of playing in the barn, reading books, playing with puzzles, playing in the house area, Legos, blocks, felt board (farm scene), play-do, or an art center.  All centers had some kind of farm or animal connection allowing the children to be immersed in the theme of the week fully and experiencing it in multiple ways.  Dewey felt young children need to be active and moving to help increase learning (Platz & Arellano, 2011), and Mrs. Landschoot is very good at keeping students up and moving around with multiple ways to explore a topic or theme.  There was a student that chose not to do a project at one of their centers was not made a big deal, however Mrs. Landschoot and the student decided together an activity that would replace the project. 
Students also had a more project driven time of the day where they would travel from table to table to complete a project that required them to practice a skill.  One of the projects was working on writing letters.  Students created letters using straight and curved wooden pieces with tactile paper in the center.  Students then traced the letter with their fingers feeling a different texture on their fingers to help them get the feeling of the letter form.  The program this class uses for handwriting is called Handwriting without Tears.   At another table students were patterning using farm animals, while at another table students were using the farm animals to measure common items in the classroom like their tables, blocks, chairs, calendar, and each other.  While these centers were more teacher or adult directed, students enjoyed using the animals in multiple ways and many students enjoyed the handwriting and exploring with the different textures of letters they could create.
Many students in this school area are familiar with farming and the equipment found on a farm since many students live on or near a farm.  Students were able to share their knowledge on tractors, and how to take care of certain farm animals with others who are not familiar with the topic.  Maria Montessori would agree with the amount exploration during free choice centers.  Children are encouraged to explore and learn on their own and decide how or what they want to spend more time with which is a key component to Maria Montessori’s theory base (Morrison, 2007).  Along with the self-exploration, Mrs. Landschoot incorporates another main feature of Montessori’s theory by giving many choices for sensory experiences and materials to promote learning (Morrison, 2007).  Students were given the option to play with play-do, draw with crayons, pencils, markers or even paint on paper.  Students were able to explore finding toy animals in a table full of corn instead of sand which helped students to actually see some food found in a farm and possibly used to feed some of the animals. 
Allowing the students the freedom to make choices for themselves helps to develop organizational and conduct skills that contribute to a child’s positive mental health (Brendtro, 1999).  Allowing students to make free choices in their learning at a younger age is the key to helping them make better choices in their future.  Chaos would occur if children are not given free choices at a young age but are introduced to them later in childhood (Brendtro, 1999).  Children must learn what happens when their make their own choice and from those choices decide what was a good idea and what did not work arming them with the knowledge to help in future decisions.  Mrs. Landschoot is very good at directing students to a center and giving them ideas of possible choices or ideas for how to play with things in the classroom, but never making the choice for the child.  Offering choices to students who have a difficult time making a decision helps children way their options and later in life they will have practice to rely on for help in making larger decisions. 
This class and all the activities I witnessed would be great examples of developmentally appropriate classroom for young children.  Many activities being done in this classroom help children to learn skills they will need to succeed in later school years and through their lives.  Many early childhood theories are evident in the activities, actions, and make-up of the classroom.  The only thing I could recommend would be trying to bring more of the real world to the students or the students to the real world.  If some of the students live on a farm, a field trip to the farm to see some of these things first hand would be very valuable to connect their new knowledge to the real world.  Another idea would be to bring in a farmer to talk to the class and maybe bring in small chore items to the classroom so children can see, touch and discuss the items.  If students had real objects from the farm to put their hands on and see the difference between the real object and the toy object children could put more meaning to it.  By introducing more real world items and activities to students, John Dewey’s ideas are integrated more creating more experiences which he believed students learned best with (Platz & Arellano, 2011).
I enjoyed being able to spend a day in this classroom and would love to be a part of a program that allows children to learn with their own choices, but still providing some structure to help the transition to later grades easier than a child that does not have experience or practice in the rules of school.  The number of early childhood theories that I could connect activities with in the classroom was a positive attribute for this teacher because it showed great variance in learning styles allowing the best possible learning environment for all students.  Mrs. Landschoot has a large amount of experience and knowledge about early childhood education.  She shared with me the fact that she has worked with other teachers of young 4’s and kindergarten who do not have the same background and they struggle.  There is a great deal of stress put on an early childhood educator and it is more than just showing up and giving students fun projects to cut, color, and paste together, there is so much more, including knowing why those skills are important and how to reinforce them. 

References
Brendtro, L. K. (1999). Maria Montessori: Teacher of unteachable children. Reclaiming Children and Youth, 201-211.
Mercilliott Hewett, V. (2001). Examining the Reggio Emilia approach to early childhood education. Early Childhood Education Journal, 95-100.
Morrison, G. S. (2007). Early childhood education today. Upper Saddle River, New Jersey: Pearson Merrill Prentice Hall.
Platz, D., & Arellano, J. (2011). Time tested early childhood theories and practices. Education, 54-63.