Toddlers as social actors in early education

This article focuses on the interaction among young toddlers during their second year of life in a Swedish preschool, with the view of toddlers as social actors. The overall aim is to explore interaction, communication, and the creation of friendship between young children during self-initiated play...

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Main Author: Ingrid Maria Engdahl
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Universidad de la República 2021-05-01
Series:Psicología, Conocimiento y Sociedad
Subjects:
Online Access:https://revista.psico.edu.uy/index.php/revpsicologia/article/view/789/454
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spelling doaj-fa78dd1bda6b4e688aeb5c14201454f42021-06-23T14:53:31ZengUniversidad de la RepúblicaPsicología, Conocimiento y Sociedad1688-70262021-05-01111103128http://dx.doi.org/10.26864/PCS.v11.n1.5Toddlers as social actors in early educationIngrid Maria Engdahl0Stockholm University, SueciaThis article focuses on the interaction among young toddlers during their second year of life in a Swedish preschool, with the view of toddlers as social actors. The overall aim is to explore interaction, communication, and the creation of friendship between young children during self-initiated play activities. Play is looked upon as a rich arena for observing toddler interaction. The theoretical framework for the study is phenomenology, the view of the child as a social person and a child-oriented perspective. This article will also address the important concepts of methodology and research ethics, in relation to an ethnographic early childhood study, intended to investigate toddler’s life worlds. A close analysis of their worlds may reveal what was not visible before – like a kaleidoscope. Six one-year-old girls and boys in a setting, in a total of 15 children, were the focus of this study’s observations for nine months. Participatory methods, photos, field notes and video-recordings, were used for the data collection. The findings of the ethnographic study recognise theoretically the competence of the toddler as a social actor, the child as an active participant, and the strategic nonverbal and verbal actions of children to initiate friendship. Mutual awareness, joint attention, shared smiles, coordinated movements, as well as other types of synchronized actions are understood as parts of nonverbal elements in emerging friendship. The competencies of attunement, taking others’ perspectives and turn-taking were found in play among the young toddlers.https://revista.psico.edu.uy/index.php/revpsicologia/article/view/789/454early childhood education and caretoddlerscompetenciessocial persons
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Ingrid Maria Engdahl
spellingShingle Ingrid Maria Engdahl
Toddlers as social actors in early education
Psicología, Conocimiento y Sociedad
early childhood education and care
toddlers
competencies
social persons
author_facet Ingrid Maria Engdahl
author_sort Ingrid Maria Engdahl
title Toddlers as social actors in early education
title_short Toddlers as social actors in early education
title_full Toddlers as social actors in early education
title_fullStr Toddlers as social actors in early education
title_full_unstemmed Toddlers as social actors in early education
title_sort toddlers as social actors in early education
publisher Universidad de la República
series Psicología, Conocimiento y Sociedad
issn 1688-7026
publishDate 2021-05-01
description This article focuses on the interaction among young toddlers during their second year of life in a Swedish preschool, with the view of toddlers as social actors. The overall aim is to explore interaction, communication, and the creation of friendship between young children during self-initiated play activities. Play is looked upon as a rich arena for observing toddler interaction. The theoretical framework for the study is phenomenology, the view of the child as a social person and a child-oriented perspective. This article will also address the important concepts of methodology and research ethics, in relation to an ethnographic early childhood study, intended to investigate toddler’s life worlds. A close analysis of their worlds may reveal what was not visible before – like a kaleidoscope. Six one-year-old girls and boys in a setting, in a total of 15 children, were the focus of this study’s observations for nine months. Participatory methods, photos, field notes and video-recordings, were used for the data collection. The findings of the ethnographic study recognise theoretically the competence of the toddler as a social actor, the child as an active participant, and the strategic nonverbal and verbal actions of children to initiate friendship. Mutual awareness, joint attention, shared smiles, coordinated movements, as well as other types of synchronized actions are understood as parts of nonverbal elements in emerging friendship. The competencies of attunement, taking others’ perspectives and turn-taking were found in play among the young toddlers.
topic early childhood education and care
toddlers
competencies
social persons
url https://revista.psico.edu.uy/index.php/revpsicologia/article/view/789/454
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