You are here
Home › TLRI research › Research completed › ECE sector › Pedagogical intersubjectivity: Teaching and learning conversations between children and teachersPedagogical intersubjectivity: Teaching and learning conversations between children and teachers
Project Description
This project builds on prior national TLRI research investigating teaching and learning episodes between teachers and child during their everyday interactions (Carr, et al., 2008; Davis & Peters, 2008). These prior studies indicated that teachers sometimes found it difficult to:
- choose which of the children’s interactions they should involve themselves in to develop opportunities for children’s learning (Carr, 2007; Davis & Peters, 2008)
- interact with children in ways that avoid “hijacking” their developing working theories (Davis & Peters, 2008).
International studies exploring early childhood education practices were also considered in the planning of this project. Specifically, the “Effective Provision of Pre-school Education” (EPPE) study (Sylva, Melhuish, Sammons, Siraj-Blatchford, & Taggart, 2010) and the “Researching Effective Pedagogy in the Early Years” (REPEY) study (Siraj-Blatchford, Sylva, Muttock, Gilden, & Bell, 2002; Sylva, Taggart, Sammons, Melhuish, & Elliot, 2003) in the United Kingdom were significant. These international studies suggest that effective teaching and learning lies within the co-construction of reciprocal conversations between teachers and children where sustained shared thinking and adults’ use of open-ended questions were imperative.
With these prior studies as a foundation, the current project aimed to investigate teacher–child interactions with a specific focus on analysing everyday verbal and non-verbal communications between teachers and children. As the New Zealand early childhood curriculum is of international repute (Waller, 2005), a closer investigation into how it is implemented in an everyday context is essential for teacher training and early childhood education research both nationally and internationally. The main aim of this project was to reveal how everyday moments of teaching and learning were co-produced by teachers and children.
Project Contact
Dr Amanda Bateman
Wilf Malcolm Institute of Educational Research
Faculty of Education
University of Waikato
email: abateman@waikato.ac.nz
Project Outputs
Publications
Bateman, A. (in press, Sept 2015) Conversation Analysis and Early Childhood Education: The co-production of knowledge and relationships. Hampshire: Ashgate.
Bateman, A., Hohepa, M. and Bennett, T. (forthcoming, 2016). ‘Indigenising outdoor play with young children in New Zealand’ in T. Waller (ed.) Outdoor environments and learning in early childhood. Sage Handbook
Bateman, A. and Waters, J. (2013) Asymmetries of knowledge between children and teachers on a New Zealand bush walk, Australian Journal of Communication - Special Issue: Asymmetries of Knowledge, 40(2), pp 19-32
Bateman, A., Bennett, T., Cairo, S. and MacMillan, N. (2013). Dispositional teaching in early childhood education, Early Childhood Folio, 17(1), pp12-18.
Bateman, A. (2013). Responding to children's answers: questions embedded in the social context of early childhood education, Early Years: An International Research Journal, 33(2), pp 275-289.
Presentations, conferences and workshops
Bateman, A. (2013). Morality on an early childhood education bush trip in New Zealand. Paper presented at NZDC conference, AUT, Auckland, New Zealand; December 2nd - 4th 2013.
Waters, J. and Bateman, A. (2013). Scaffolded and co-constructed interactions in outdoor experiences in Wales and NZ. Paper presented at EECERA conference, Tallin, Estonia; August 28th – 31st 2013.
Bateman, A., Bennett, T., Caeiro, S., Macmillan, N. Doing early childhood teaching and learning in New Zealand; preliminary TLRI findings. New Zealand Association for Research in Education Conference and Annual Meeting. Hamilton, New Zealand; 28-30 November 2012.
Bateman, A., Waters, J. Follow the learner: Sharing knowledge with children in the NZ bush. AIEMCA 2012 Biennial Conference. Brisbane, Australia; 29-30 November 2012.
Waters, J. and Bateman, A. (2012) Revealing the interactional features of learning and teaching moments in outdoor activity. Paper presented at EECERA conference, Porto, Portugal; August 29th ”“ September 1st 2012.
Bateman, A. (2012) Investigating Early Childhood Pedagogy in New Zealand. Paper presented at EECERA conference, Porto, Portugal; August 29th ”“ September 1st 2012.
Bateman, A (2012). The use of questions in toddler teaching and learning. Paper presented at the Transcription Analysis Group (TAG) Symposium, Queensland University of Technology, Queensland, Australia; 18th May 2012.
TLRI research
Recently published reports
Pepe meamea in the spirit of the collective: Embedding Samoan indigenous philosophy in ECE for Samoan children under two
Jacoba MatapoOn2Science - Multiple affordances for learning through participation in online citizen science
Dr Cathal Doyle and Dr Cathy BunttingLearning From Each Other: Enhancing Pacific Education through People, Concept and Culture-focused Inquiry
Dr Cherie Chu-Fuluifaga and Dr Martyn ReynoldsMore projects like this
- Learning to become 'assessment capable' teachers
- Inquiring minds, meaningful responses: Children’s interests, inquiries and working theories
- Titiro Whakamuri, Hoki Whakamua. We are the future, the present and the past: Caring for self, others and the environment in early years’ teaching and learning