Understanding Early Years Inequality

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A01=Alice Bradbury
Alice Bradbury
assessment
assessment policy impact on children
Author_Alice Bradbury
Category=JNLA
Children's Learner Identities
classroom power dynamics
critical pedagogy
CRT Scholar
CRT Technique
Cynical Compliance
Dame Clare Tickell
Difficult Intake
EAL Child
early years
early years foundation stage
education policy
Education System
EFYS
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
EYFS Framework
EYFS Profile
EYFS Profile Result
FSM Pupil
FSM Status
inclusion
inequality
Intelligible Space
learner identity formation
Lynn's Comments
Main Class Teachers
Minoritised Children
NVivo Qualitative Data Analysis Program
Positive Learner Identities
qualitative classroom research
race class gender schooling
Reception Classrooms
SEN
Sen Pupil
social stratification education
sociology of education
special educational needs
Subjective Assessor
UK Coalition Government
White Middle Class Pupils
White Working Class Girls

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415639767
  • Weight: 530g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 18 Mar 2013
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Understanding Early Years Inequality uses critical sociological perspectives to examine the impact of changing assessment policy on primary school classrooms, with a particular focus on issues of inequality. Drawing on accounts of life in early years classrooms, Alice Bradbury suggests that a specific model of the ‘good learner’ operates, and that this model works to exclude some groups of students from positions of educational success.

Key themes examined throughout this book relate to:

    • The relationship between assessment policy and children’s identities as learners;
      • The complexity of classroom life;
        • The power of assessment to shape definitions of ‘learning’ and ‘learners’;
          • The impact of discourses of class, race, religion and the ‘inner city’ on how children are assessed, and how assumptions about inner city schools and low attainment can put pressure on teachers to assess children in particular ways.

            In this important text, the author argues that assessment policies can have a huge impact on classrooms and teachers, as well as having potentially damaging effects for young children, particularly those from minoritised and economically disadvantaged backgrounds. The book explores in detail the complex interaction of education policies with discourses of attainment and expectation, and the resulting reproduction of patterns of inequality. Understanding Early Years Inequality will have an immediate impact on current debates about educational policy and practice in Early Years education, and will be of particular interest to academics and students in educational studies, sociology of education, and early childhood studies.

            Alice Bradbury is Lecturer at the Institute of Education, University of London, UK.

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