A1 Alkuperäisartikkeli tieteellisessä aikakauslehdessä
Hierarchies of knowledge, incommensurabilities and silences in South African ECD policy : Whose knowledge counts? (2017)


Rudolph, N. (2017). Hierarchies of knowledge, incommensurabilities and silences in South African ECD policy : Whose knowledge counts?. Journal of Pedagogy, 8(1), 77-98. https://doi.org/10.1515/jped-2017-0004


JYU-tekijät tai -toimittajat


Julkaisun tiedot

Julkaisun kaikki tekijät tai toimittajatRudolph, Norma

Lehti tai sarjaJournal of Pedagogy

ISSN1338-1563

eISSN1338-2144

Julkaisuvuosi2017

Volyymi8

Lehden numero1

Artikkelin sivunumerot77-98

KustantajaTrnava University

JulkaisumaaSlovakia

Julkaisun kielienglanti

DOIhttps://doi.org/10.1515/jped-2017-0004

Julkaisun avoin saatavuusAvoimesti saatavilla

Julkaisukanavan avoin saatavuusKokonaan avoin julkaisukanava

Julkaisu on rinnakkaistallennettu (JYX)https://jyx.jyu.fi/handle/123456789/65482


Tiivistelmä

Policy for young children in South Africa is now receiving high-level government support through the ANC's renewed commitment to redress poverty and inequity and creating 'a better life for all' as promised before the 1994 election. In this article, I explore the power relations, knowledge hierarchies and discourses of childhood, family and society in National Curriculum Framework (NCF) as it relates to children's everyday contexts. I throw light on how the curriculum's discourses relate to the diverse South African settings, child rearing practices and world-views, and how they interact with normative discourses of South African policy and global early childhood frameworks. The NCF acknowledges indigenous and local knowledges and suggests that the content should be adapted to local contexts. I argue that the good intentions of these documents to address inequities are undermined by the uncritical acceptance of global taken-for-granted discourses, such as narrow notions of evidence, western child development, understanding of the child as a return of investment and referencing urban middle class community contexts and values. These global discourses make the poorest children and their families invisible, and silence other visions of childhood and good society, including the notion of 'convivial society' set out in the 1955 Freedom Charter.


YSO-asiasanatvarhaiskasvatusopetussuunnitelmatkoulutuspolitiikkavaltarakenteethierarkiaalkuperäiskansattietämysautoetnografia

Vapaat asiasanatEtelä-Afrikka


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OKM-raportointiKyllä

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Viimeisin päivitys 2024-08-01 klo 20:19