Pre-school Learning in the Community

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A01=G. A. Poulton
A01=Terry James
Adult Education Facilities
Adverse Environmental Circumstances
areas
Author_G. A. Poulton
Author_Terry James
Average Pre-test Scores
Bristol Social Adjustment Guide
Category=JNA
Category=JNLA
Child's Reading Attainment
community-based early years education strategies
discrimination
early
early childhood intervention
Early Education Programmes
education
Education System
educational
educational priority areas
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
family engagement education
G.A. Poulton
group
home-start programme evaluation
house
Informal Agency
Large Families
NUM Representative
Nursery Assistants
Peabody Language Development Kit
playgroup movement analysis
positive
Pre-school Groups
Pre-school Playgroups Association
Prior Longitudinal Study
priority
Professional Interventionists
red
Red House
socialisation processes children
Terry James
Unfair Perceptions
Vice Versa
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138488168
  • Weight: 420g
  • Dimensions: 138 x 216mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Jan 2018
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Much of current educational theory and research at the time was concerned with the effect that pre-school education should have in accelerating development throughout the years of compulsory schooling. This book, originally published in 1975, is an important contribution to the debate since it shows how the stages of pre-schooling affect the child, the family and the neighbourhood community.

The authors point out that pre-school stands at the intersection between the informal socialisation of the home and the more disciplined learning which takes place at school. Much research appears to show that poor progress in primary school results partly from adverse family circumstances; but it reveals just as plausibly that the formal measures of progress used by both the research and our schools are reflecting a limited view of progress and one which does least justice to the norms and values of families which do not share established academic goals. For this reason a cultural shock is experienced by many children on joining school. The authors argue that pre-school, as a transitional phase, could do much to reduce the shock, but that many of the efforts made for the under-fives simply expose them earlier to the contrast between home and school learning situations. They recognise that parents are educators and play a prominent part in the intellectual and social development of their children. They also stress that the effect of pre-school children on the social or psychological well-being of parents and children will be limited unless it takes account of and reaches out to the community to which they belong. The authors offer several alternative approaches to pre-school organisation and content of the time and examine some specific examples, such as the Pre-school Playgroup movement and the Leicester Home-Start scheme.

The book arose out of the authors’ participation in several educational projects, including the Educational Priority Area Project which ran for three years during 1969-71. In particular it draws on their working experience which was based at the Red House Education Centre in a South Yorkshire mining community near Doncaster.

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