Disclaimer: This entry is HUGE! I'm sorry ... Good luck!
When did teaching in early childhood stop being so much
about the children and more about the paper work? You know the children’s
observations, the daily reflection book, the program and the evaluations that
follow? Then we mustn’t forget projects that we “must” do as well as perhaps
documentation displays on top of that! Oh, and you must follow-up on what you
did before. And don’t forget to link EVERYTHING into EVERTHING else so that you
are meeting the requirements that the government has set for you. You’ve been
told by so many people that you have to do this that and the other and you are
doing them, but it’s just too much! You are drowning. I am drowning. How is
that quality?
Tell me, with your nose in a portfolio/journal or your face
in a computer, do you understand and know your students better? We are forever
stalking the children from one moment to the next and then shoving a camera in
their face.
Imagine how you would feel if there were people constantly following
you around and taking photos of what you were doing. You don’t have any privacy
in the bathroom because there is either someone going to the toilet with you or
there are others standing around and watching you. Sometimes standing and
staring. They remind you to wipe your bottom. You were going to, but you just
hadn’t gotten to that point in the process yet. But there they are, telling you
to wipe your bottom. You were quite content
having a quiet and ‘private’ moment to yourself thinking about what you wanted
to play next, and someone interrupts you with “wipe your bottom” ...
Imagine how you would feel with people constantly following
you around with a camera taking photos of what you are doing. Whether you are
trying to read a book or serve yourself a wedge of apple, there are people
watching closely with a camera in hand. Private conversations you have are
overheard and then documented and either shared with everyone OR they are put
into a file with your name on it and the file of all your associates. [I know,
I’m starting to sound a bit paranoid – but I am just sharing what I have seen many times over!]
Imagine standing at an easel with a paint brush in hand (and
it really doesn’t matter what colour paint nor does it matter what hand you are
holding the brush in!). You are watching the paint work its way across the
paper and touch the other colours. You notice that when one colour goes into
another colour, it changes into a different colour. You are amazed and
wondering about this when someone over your shoulder points to one of the
colours and asks you “What colour is this?” So you oblige them and you say “blue”
... You wonder why this person, who is much older and more experienced than you
is asking you what the colour blue is. Surely they should already know this?
You get back into the groove of your painting when they point at your painting and
quiz you again about what colour ...and again and again? You really just wanted to paint. But that
unique moment of wonder and magic is gone. The adult got what they wanted from
you, and your painting, interrupted, unfinished, is hanging up to dry.
Everything you do is then analysed and picked apart and
critiqued. People make assumptions about who you are based upon the information
they have gathered and they then come to conclusion about who you are and what
they think you should do next. You are then told that you have to engage in
this activity, and again, they are there. Always watching. Always listening.
With camera in hand. Always judging.
Where is the humanity in this? Where are the relationships?
Where is the sense of community? As I started to write this reflection, the
more I started to really question what the heck I’ve been doing all these
years. Look, I know that just because we do these things, it doesn’t mean that
we aren’t wonderful educators who know our children well. It doesn’t mean we
don’t have genuine relationships with them. It’s not about that ... I just
really started to feel uncomfortable about some aspects of my work that has
been part of my practice for a great many years.
And come on you have to admit that really, we are acting a
bit like paparazzi when it comes to documenting children’s engagement and
learning!
So, why do we do this?
We are told that if we observe children and analyse their
actions and development we will have a deeper understanding of children and
learning in general. This will apparently then make us better educators, more
able to engage with children and provide for their learning and development. We
are told that if we can link our observations with theory and quality
standards, then we will not only better understand the children in our care,
but we will also be achieving a higher standard of care and education. We are told that by better understanding children
and relating their development to theory we will have a positive impact upon
the understanding of children and their abilities as a whole. This will make
the world a better place, because we can provide better outcomes for children.
I disagree. Strongly.
Our observations and what we link them to, sit at a service.
They sit in a file or in a portfolio. These then sit inside a magazine box or
basket on a shelf at a service for the parents to sometimes look through. Sometimes
we give children opportunities to look at them. Sometimes they are individual.
Sometimes they are so full of group observations where the child is not
particularly visible as an individual because we are under so much pressure to
pump out a certain number of “obs” that we start slapping in whatever we can.
At some point, they go home with the child and are sometimes
cherished. Sometimes they are lost. Sometimes they held at a service until an
account is finalised, and never go home. Sometimes they are even thrown away by
families.
A copy is kept at the service that goes into a file and sits
there until the child is of a certain age (depending upon your country, state
and their particular regulations) ... then it is shredded, recycled and goes
back into the paper making system. It might become an egg carton or kitty
litter or photocopy paper or even toilet tissue. Your hard work today, might
sit around for 24 years, be filed and stored, shredded, recycled and then be used
to wipe someone’s nose. Seriously. How is this sustainable? How is this
quality? How is this good for the environment? How does this serve children? How
does this make us better educators?
This work does not go to a university to be reviewed by
philosophical academics. It is not going to be used to design contemporary
theories of teaching and learning. So please tell me how all this work ... how
all this confused complicated energy goes towards substantiating learning and
development theories?
I am not an academic.
I am not interested in substantiating theories.
Theories are also a collection of ideas and beliefs as explainations ... they are NOT 100% proven fact!
I am interested in working with children, families,
communities and fellow educators in creating amazing learning spaces for all
parties to learn and grow as people. I am interested in making a difference.
I am not belittling the academics among us who love theory
and relating it to practice. But, I’m sorry that is simply not me. And you
might argue that I am then in the wrong place, but I will argue that I am most
definitely in the right place.
Everyone seems to be running around lost and confused as to
what they need to do to survive in early childhood in an Australian context
today. Yes, I know, *they* are coming! The Assessors! They are going to judge
us ... I get that. I really do.
BUT, we seem to be going crazy with this linking! We are
being told by someone who was told by someone who was in turn told that we had
to link to this that and the other.
The reality is that if you start throwing about theory at
people, who are not interested in it, they are going to shut off and disengage.
We want engagement! We want an active learning community. The reality is that
not every educator is university educated AND even the university educated
educators (this includes me) are interested in theory! Confusing isn’t it?
This is already getting too long and its getting a little
tiring standing here on top of my soap box ... but seriously ... we are going
way over the top. Just like this blog essay of 1,545 words!
I’m currently reading the Standards and the Regs and the
EYLF and other bits and pieces and I am planning on working out what we
actually have to do. I really don’t want to plan and document according to
gossip or misinformation. I will share. When I know what I’m doing!
Exhale.
© Teacher’s Ink. 2013