Affiliation:
1. Melbourne Graduate School of Education, Melbourne, Australia
Abstract
Curricula and policy documents in Australia and elsewhere commonly call for early childhood teachers to nurture cultural belonging for young children and their families. Meanwhile, there remains a critical gap in addressing teachers’ cultural belonging. In this article, the authors consider early childhood teachers’ culture stories and identities, drawing on an exploratory project involving four teachers from early childhood settings in Melbourne. They use Julia Kristeva's philosophy on subject formation and the Other to explore teachers’ identities as never fully knowable, even to themselves. Reflecting on teachers’ stories through Kristeva's philosophical approach to the subject in process (through the elements of the semiotic, love, abjection and revolt) offers the potential for increasingly nuanced insights into intercultural relations within teaching teams. Thinking through these culture stories creates a space for teachers’ identity constructions to strengthen cultural well-being, belonging and intercultural understanding in early childhood teaching teams and communities.
Funder
The University of Melbourne ECR Grants Scheme
Subject
Developmental and Educational Psychology,Education
Reference47 articles.
1. Arndt S (2017) Teacher Otherness in early childhood education: Rethinking uncertainty and difference through a Kristevan lens. Unpublished Doctoral Thesis, University of Waikato, Hamilton, New Zealand. http://hdl.handle.net/10289/11259
2. Early childhood teacher cultural Otherness and belonging
Cited by
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