Role of Subject Knowledge in the Early Years of Schooling

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Animal Kingdom
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Cat 2e
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Children's Drawing
Children's Motor Learning
children's understanding
Children’s Drawing
Children’s Motor Learning
classroom subject integration
cognitive development theory
construction of knowledge
constructivist teaching methods
curriculum design strategies
Dog Street
Dramatic Context
Drawing Episode
early childhood pedagogy
Early Mathematical Competence
early years education
early years ideology
Environmental Issues
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Frame Songs
Hairy Monster
information-processing
Kingman Report
knowledge acquisition in young learners
Language Awareness
Mathematical Subject Knowledge
Metalinguistic Awareness
Metalinguistic Development
Mulberry Bush
National Curriculum
Pedagogical Subject Knowledge
School Text Books
Subject Knowledge
subject knowledge in teaching
Subtraction Word Problems
teacher professional development
Teacher's Subject Knowledge
Teacher’s Subject Knowledge
Teddy Bear
Vice Versa

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032344614
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 21 Nov 2022
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Originally published in 1994, the aim of the authors was to provide a comprehensive introduction to recent advances in research which had been made in learning and teaching in the early years of schooling at the time. Emphasis is placed on how subject knowledge is constructed or acquired, and the organization of teaching to promote the learner’s active construction of meaning through the integration of new knowledge with existing understanding. The National Curriculum is founded in subject knowledge, though little examination appears to have been made of this in terms of how subject matter is transformed into the content of teaching that young children can understand. It this remains for the teacher to develop instruction through the creation of a curriculum content and sequence which both reflects and advances the structure of existing forms of representation, problem-solving and knowledge which the child brings to the school. The whole thrust of the book challenges the conventional early years ideology with its emphasis on child-centred, concrete and empirical approaches to learning, with a view of teaching which is concerned with making sense of children’s understanding, and allowing their active construction of knowledge and information-processing to develop expertise in context.