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Time for Advocacy and Activist-Scholarship Movements in Early Childhood Education and Care: why it matters now

Albin-Clark, J, Archer, N, Lynette, Morris and Ovington, J A (2022) Time for Advocacy and Activist-Scholarship Movements in Early Childhood Education and Care: why it matters now. In: BERA Annual Conference, 06.09.22 - 08.09.22, Liverpool University.

Item Type: Conference or Workshop Item (Paper)

Abstract

Our hot topic session brings focus to the growing urgency for advocacy work amidst national and international policy intensification of early childhood education and (ECEC). In 2022, the Department for Education in England further intensified government intervention in initial teacher education through its creation of a National Institute of Teaching. Such a school-led model further troubles the role of universities in accreditation, where England remains an outlier within international systems. Our fear is that the need for autonomous, critical and theoretically rich thinking centred on research scholarship are further sidelined in this move, replaced with technicist, prescriptive, short term ‘one size fits all’ approaches. Because of this, we reposition advocacy work as an urgent concern. Advocacy work involves attending to barriers that inhibit young children’s learning experiences (Mevawalla and Archer, 2022). Advocacy, activism and resistance are a growing field in ECE that look beyond developmentalist and standardisation practices (Archer, 2021, Albin-Clark, 2018, Albin-Clark and Archer, 2021; Hollingsworth et al, 2016; Guddemi et al, 2021; Rood, 2022). The work of activist scholarship has the potential to illuminate nuance to discussion of child and practitioner agency for social change (Cannella et al., 2016). Building on reconceptualist movements that challenge standardisation, we heed the call for increased advocacy in practice (Bloch et al. 2018) and how far research practices can build awareness of advocacy as acts of activist-scholarship (Yelland and Bently, 2018). We position the motivations for building advocacy work as an urgent concern, as it offers a prism for counter narratives in the contested ECEC curriculum space (Fairchild and Kay, 2020).

A focus for our advocacy work is illuminating the risks of sidelining the autonomous, relational and playful professional identity of educators through standardisation agendas. This is all the more pressing in light of COVID-19 lockdowns, and how far current practice attends to the lasting social and emotional fallout for our youngest children. The effects on children’s right to play appear are, as yet, unclear (Doek 2022). The rise of advocacy work mirrors a deep unease at the state of ECEC that has ‘deeply problematic consequences [as a result] of the English government’s tightly controlled and managerial approach’ (Robert-Holmes 2020: 179). At its heart, our advocacy work brings focus to how ECEC educators are providing ‘potential opportunities to construct themselves as worthy, insightful, autonomous professionals’ (Osgood, 2012: 14) and challenge an hegemonic discourse of professionalism as the attainment of higher qualifications and relaxation of statutory adult–child ratios.

As four ECEC scholars working in practitioner and teacher university education, we draw from our recent empirical research with post-structural and posthuman theories to illuminate and exemplify advocacy in motion (Albin-Clark, 2021, 2022; Archer, 2021; Ovington, 2020; Morris, 2021). We propose two strands to our conceptualisations of advocacy. Firstly, we frame advocacy practices as explicit and implicit movements. Advocacy doings are materialised with and through documentation practices and put to work explicitly to foreground playful learning (Albin-Clark, 2021). Advocacy in motion in terms of professional identity can also be more nuanced, and positioned implicitly as c/overt, local and hidden (Archer 2021). Our second strand to advocacy foreground the relational and ethical. Advocacy in this iteration is bound with care pedagogies and manifested through ethical risk and rule-bending (Morris, 2021). Advocacy and ethics are also entangled with multiple (re)presentations of child voice as a reciprocal development (Ovington, 2020).

From those differing viewpoints we illuminate how advocacy has shifted from the periphery into the foreground of our research enquiries in forms of activist-scholarship (Yelland and Bently, 2018). Through these movements we argue that advocacy work takes different visual, material and temporal forms. Such work varies between often short-lived, but highly visible acts, to slower practices hidden from view. From there we problematise how much activist-scholarship mobilises advocacy, against an uneasy backdrop of the haste and normalisation of schoolification within ECEC.

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More Information

Related URLs:
Depositing User: Julie Ovington

Identifiers

Item ID: 15095
URI: http://sure.sunderland.ac.uk/id/eprint/15095

Users with ORCIDS

ORCID for J Albin-Clark: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-6247-8363
ORCID for N Archer: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-4365-4349
ORCID for Morris Lynette: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0003-0603-9048
ORCID for J A Ovington: ORCID iD orcid.org/0000-0002-3734-8364

Catalogue record

Date Deposited: 21 Sep 2022 08:51
Last Modified: 21 Sep 2022 08:51

Contributors

Author: J Albin-Clark ORCID iD
Author: N Archer ORCID iD
Author: Morris Lynette ORCID iD
Author: J A Ovington ORCID iD

University Divisions

Faculty of Education and Society

Subjects

Education > Childhood Studies
Education > Early Childhood Studies
Education > Educational Research
Education

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