Routledge International Handbook of Learning with Technology in Early Childhood

Routledge International Handbook of Learning with Technology in Early Childhood

Rowsell, Jennifer; Kucirkova, Natalia; Falloon, Garry

Taylor & Francis Ltd

01/2020

472

Mole

Inglês

9781138308190

15 a 20 dias

870

Descrição não disponível.
Foreword

Rosie Flewitt (University College of London, UK)

Section One: Studying children's contemporary play






Cut it out! Materiality and Action in Children's Play and Toymaking
Karen Wohlwend & Jaye Johnson Thiel Indiana University, USA




Chestcam tales: Exploring embodied ethnography with young children
Jackie Marsh, University of Sheffield, UK




The development of childhood cultures
Anne Haas Dyson, Illinois University, USA

Section Two: Studying specific groups of children




Meeting the needs of students in a multilingual classroom: Linking Research to Practice
Rahat Zaidi, University of Calgary, Canada




Research with children with SEN
Melissa Allen, Lancaster University, UK




Children from diverse backgrounds
Jim Anderson, British Columbia

Section Three: Studying children's practices at home and in lab settings




Learning at home
Laidlaw, O'Mara & Wong, Deakin University, Australia




Community-based research
Pam Whitty, University of New Brunswick, Canada




Using magnetic resonance imaging in infants and young children and its implication for bridging the fields of Neuroscience and Education
Nadine Gaab, Harvard University, USA

Section Four: Children's global practices and movement through space




"Talk into my GoPro, I'm making a movie!" Using digital ethnographic methods to explore children's experiences in the woods
Debra Harwood & Diane Collier, Brock University, Canada




Deep hanging out: artifactual literacies and ethnographic methods
Margaret Somerville & Sarah Powell, Western Sydney University, Australia




Getting away from the screen: the play affordances of Internet connected toys
Donell Holloway, Edith Cowan University, Australia



Section Five: Studying children's learning with others




This is the stuff that literacies are made of: Researching children's learning with grandparents and other elders through ethnographic methods
Rachel Heydon, & Xiaoxiao Du, University of Western Ontario, Canada






Children and parents interacting together with an app support
Kathy Sylva & Fiona Roberts, University of Oxford, UK




Children learning in their families
Tisha Lewis, University of Georgia, USA

Section Six: Children's learning through body, embodiment and haptics




Embodiment
Kerryn Dixon, Wits University, South Africa




Technologies, affordances, children and (embodied) reading: a call for intedisciplinarity
Anne Mangen, Trude Hoel, Thomas Moser, University of Oslo, Norway




Valuing Signs of Learning: A Multimodal Perspective on Observation and Digital Documentation in Early Years Classrooms
Kate Cowan, University College London, UK

Section Seven: Studying reading and interacting on screen




Eye-tracking and e-books
Zsofia Takacs, Eoetvoes Lorand University, Hungray




Lab-based studies of children's reading on screen
Brenna Hassinger and Rebecca Dore, University of Delaware, USA




Visual methods for studying children's interactions on screen
Abi Hackett & Lucy Caton, Manchester Metorpolitan University, UK

Section Eight: Children's multiliteracies




Who's helping who?: Young children seeking help when learning to write
Annette Woods, Queensland University of Technology, Australia




Children's literature and critical literacy
Peggy Albers, Georgia State University, USA, together with Vivian Vasquez and Jerry Harste






Methodologies without methodology: (Re)imagining research practices when thinking with poststructural and posthumanist theories
Candace Kuby, Missouri University, USA

Section Nine: Children's drawing, mark-making and arts




Studying science apps in low-income pre-schools
Lena Lee, Miami University, USA




Storying as a methodology in early years classrooms
Cathy Burnett and Guy Merchant, Sheffield Hallam University, UK




Student generated visual narratives: lived experiences of learning
Narelle Lemon, La Trobe University, Australia




Arts-based methods

Linda Knight, Queensland University of Technology, Australia
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Parent Child Shared Book Reading;Young Man;Technology;Arts Based Research;Early Childhood;Latino Preschool Children;Educational Psychology;GoPro Video;Handbook;Papa's Story;Natalia Kucirkova;E-book Features;Jennifer Rowsell;Midwestern Urban School District;Garry Falloon;Children's Early Literacy Learning;Routledge International Handbook;Family Literacy;Developmental psychology;GoPro Cameras;Post-humanist literacy;Children's Technology;Digital technologies;Children's Digital Media;Early years;Family Literacy Program;Phenomenology;LA;Wearable Cameras;Ell Student;ECEC Setting;Guest Readers;Sensorimotor Contingencies;Heritage Language;Print Picture Book;Rapid Automatized Naming;Molar Lines;PQI