国产视频

Prelude: Moving Beyond False Choices May Be Within Our Reach

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Prelude by Stacie G. Goffin, series editor

Moving Beyond False Choices for Early Childhood Educators鈥擜 Compendium is the culmination of an 18-month blog series that engaged diverse viewpoints about disentangling early childhood education鈥檚 (ECE) long-standing thorny knot which is comprised of three of its most challenging issues: preparation and education, compensation and status, and diversity and inclusivity.

Launched in January 2018, the 32 pieces in the series spotlighted the ECE field鈥檚 diverse perspectives regarding the entwined relationships among the knot鈥檚 three strands. Laura Bornfreund and I strove to incorporate a range of perspectives and voices, including those too often not at the table. We sought to invite new possibilities for unraveling a knot increasingly resistant to being loosened so new options could emerge.

The series was well received, and as it drew to a close, it became evident that the exploration of ECE鈥檚 thorny knot had yet to run its course. The conversation kindled by the series clearly warranted further encouragement. As a result, the compendium鈥檚 format and its new content is intended to foster continuing discussion, deepen understanding of the knot鈥檚 underpinnings, lift up unexamined presumptions, and cultivate the level of consensus necessary for formulating next steps to move the field beyond false choices for early childhood educators.

The Compendium鈥檚 Organization

The blog series succeeded in presenting co-existing perspectives and accruing new insights, but revelations of new ways to respond to the challenge of untangling the knot were less evident. The new content prepared for this compendium broke through this impasse. First, by identifying five overarching themes from the series, each associated with a set of related pieces, the series鈥 seemingly diverging views coalesced around several common topics. Second, by attaching a field-defining question to each theme, a sharper, higher-level examination of ECE鈥檚 thorny knot was catalyzed. And third, the request made of new authors to offer questions warranting further exploration and recommend next steps created an action orientation missing from the blog series.

Below are the five themes and their defining questions:

  1. Degrees and Education: Do degrees and education matter for early childhood educators? Why or why not?
  2. Higher Education: What does higher education need to do to regain its stature as a gateway to the ECE profession?
  3. Race, Class, and Gender: What is the role of race, class, and gender in resolving ECE鈥檚 thorny knot?
  4. Family Child Care: Where does family child care fit in the ECE system?
  5. Early Childhood Educators: 鈥媁hy Do Educators鈥 Voices Matter in Conversations 国产视频 the Field鈥檚 Thorny Knot? What should be done differently to authentically engage them?

The authors invited to prepare introductions for these five theme sections were prodded to push readers鈥 thinking and invited to be provocative in their responses to the field-defining questions. Authors were charged to

  • Introduce each theme section by consolidating what can be learned from 鈥渢heir鈥 authors by presenting a synopsis that offered a fresh platform for unpacking ECE鈥檚 thorny knot.
  • Expand the ECE field's exploration of its thorny knot in the context of the theme鈥檚 overarching, field defining question without falling into the abyss of inaction.
  • Steer the conversation toward next-step possibilities.
  • Demonstrate awareness of race, class, and gender issues.

This charge is reflected in the common organizational format used for each introduction, with the intent of honing authors鈥 attention to their field-defining questions. Their answers are aimed at sparking fresh approaches to unraveling ECE鈥檚 thorny knot.

The issue of equity, of course, has no boundaries, so a framing essay is organized around the question of 鈥淲hat do equity and progress look like for children and their early childhood educators?鈥 The compendium鈥檚 concluding essay examines the fundamental question of 鈥淕etting Unstuck: What鈥檚 Needed for ECE to Take a Big Step Forward?鈥

Moving Beyond the Status Quo

The compendium鈥檚 format propelled the conversation evoked by the blog series beyond revelations of the range and diversity of perspectives about the ECE field鈥檚 thorny knot and insights into its complexity. The five theme introductions, as well as the opening and closing essays, differ from one another, as one would expect since each responds to a unique field-defining question. Yet there is a unifying conclusion: different kinds of intervention are necessary for releasing ECE鈥檚 thorny knot. Recommendations from the compendium鈥檚 new authors all urge the ECE field to move beyond current approaches to addressing its thorny knot.

These authors individually, and often collectively, contend that awareness is needed of the field鈥檚 historical legacies, past choices, and existing presumptions. We are asked to recognize that the presumptions we hold, and the choices we鈥檝e made, are contributing to the field鈥檚 present challenges and relative inertia when it comes to its thorny knot. The authors maintain that those of us in the ECE field need to forge a new mindset if we want to drive meaningful change.

The compendium鈥檚 new content unearths buried assumptions hindering ECE鈥檚 evolution as a field of practice and offers novel strategies. Not unlike Barbara Bowman鈥檚, Bela Mote鈥檚, and Patricia Snyder鈥檚 pieces, they challenge us to open ourselves to different alternatives. And perhaps foretelling an adjustment of increasing importance, they almost unanimously join with series authors who called for repositioning early childhood educators so they are central in shaping the field鈥檚 developmental trajectory (e.g., Anne Douglass, Sherri Killins Stewart, Lauren Hogan, and Michele Miller-Cox ). Collectively, they also corroborate a conclusion I expressed in the series鈥 final piece: 鈥済iven how long these issues have thwarted ECE鈥檚 development as a field, it would seem obvious that the 鈥榮ame ole鈥 is not well serving the field or children and families.鈥

I don鈥檛 want to be misinterpreted as agreeing with all that鈥檚 been written. Nonetheless, without trying to over-project a sense of optimism, Moving Beyond False Choices for Early Childhood Educators鈥擳he Compendium conjures up the possibility that the ECE field is awakening to the realization that transcending boundaries1 and transforming systems2 cannot be accomplished if one鈥檚 approach to change is driven by technical thinking and a restricted problem-solving mentality. Rather, it is characterized by creative work that calls upon not only commitment and perseverance but also upon a willingness to venture into the unfamiliar with a spirit of learning, experimentation, and discovery.

Acknowledgments

Huge thanks are due to the series鈥 32 authors whose willingness to express their thoughts with authenticity and courage fueled the success of Moving Beyond False Choices for Early Childhood Educators. Without their willingness to work through multiple drafts to fine-tune their thinking, the compendium鈥檚 authors would have been unable to take this project to new heights.

The seven authors who graciously accepted the invitation to write the compendium鈥檚 essays and introductions deserve similar credit. Responding to the seven field-defining questions provided both opportunity and challenge and each of these authors rose to the occasion.

Finally, special appreciation is extended to Laura Bornfreund, director of Early & Elementary Education Policy at 国产视频, who generously agreed to host the blog series and this follow-up compendium. She has been a strong supporter and valued colleague throughout the project鈥檚 nearly two years, as have members of her team.

Stacie G. Goffin, EdD, is principal of the Goffin Strategy Group, LLC and author (with Valora Washington) of the recently published Ready or Not: Early Care and Education鈥檚 Leadership Choices 鈥12 Years Later

Citations
  1. Dean Williams, Leadership for a Fractured World How to Cross Boundaries, Build Bridges, and Lead Change (Oakland, CA: Berrett-Koehler Publishers Inc., 2015).
  2. Peter Senge, Hal Hamilton, and John Kania , 鈥淭he Dawn of System Leadership,鈥 Stanford Social Innovation Review, last modified November, 2015,
Prelude: Moving Beyond False Choices May Be Within Our Reach

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