This vital text encourages rethinking how narratives of equity and inclusion are constructed and what this means for young children and their families in Ontario, as well as throughout Canada. This is an essential resource for students in early childhood education and care, early childhood studies, and education programs.
FEATURES:
- Includes perspectives from multiple positionalities in the field to provide a critical and interdisciplinary approach
- Draws on a reconceptualist lens to present a critique of developmentalist approaches
- Encourages readers to engage with the content by practising critical self-examination and considering social factors and forces that inform their own concepts
- Foreword - Judith K. Bernhard
- Introduction: Healing and Hoping in Community and Love as a Tool for Advancing Equity as Praxis - Zuhra Abawi, Ardavan Eizadirad, and Rachel Berman
- Chapter 1: State of Emergency: Mapping Inequities in Early Childhood Education and Care in Canada - Ardavan Eizadirad and Zuhra Abawi
- Chapter 2: Low-Income Racialized Children and Access to Quality ECEC in Ontario - Alana Butler
- Chapter 3: Troubling Dominant Discourses and Stories that Shape Our Understanding of the Child Refugee - Nidhi Menon
- Chapter 4: Equity Enacted: Possibilities for Difference in ECEC through a Critical Ethics of Care Approach - Alana Powell, Lisa Johnston, and Rachel Langford
- Chapter 5: Planning Time for Equity: A (Re)Examination of a Study of ECEs' Perspectives on Planning Time in Southern Ontario - Lisa Johnston
- Chapter 6: Using Femme Theory to Foster a Feminine-Inclusive Early Childhood Education and Care Practice - Adam Davies and Rhea Ashley Hoskin
- Chapter 7: Making Space for Indigenous Knowledge in an Urban Child-Care Centre - Maya-Rose Simon
- Chapter 8: Failure and Loss as a Methodological, Relational, and Ethical Necessity in Teaching and Learning in the Early Years - Maria Karmiris
- Chapter 9: Reflect, Enact, and Transform: A Preliminary Anti-Racism Guide for Early Childhood Educators - Kerry-Ann Escayg
- Conclusion: Some Concluding Thoughts on Equity as Praxis - Rachel Berman
- Contributor Biographies
Produktdetaljer
Om bidragsyterne
Zuhra Abawi is an Assistant Professor of Teacher Education at Niagara University and an Elementary Teacher with the Peel District School Board and has worked across all sectors of the education system from the early years, K–12, and higher education.Ardavan Eizadirad is an Assistant Professor in the Faculty of Education at Wilfrid Laurier University and an instructor in the School of Early Childhood Studies at Ryerson University and in the Master of Teaching and Bachelor of Education programs at OISE, University of Toronto.
Rachel Berman is the Graduate Program Director and an Associate Professor at the School of Early Childhood Studies at Ryerson University and an adjunct member to the graduate program in Gender, Feminist and Women's Studies at York University.