This timely collection provides an accessible discussion and analysis of some of the most urgent policy issues facing early childhood care and education in the United States: fragmented policy systems; broad disregard for early years professionals exemplified by low pay; standards that fail to increase equity; and overlooking the role community contexts plays in producing or ameliorating social inequalities among children. Contributors draw upon their deep personal experiences with these issues as educators, scholars, and advocates to advance practice-based recommendations for how the nation's inequitable systems can be transformed. Their call to collective action is supported by an accessible and powerful advocacy toolkit that will grow with readers over time and with practice. The text centers the perspectives of Black, Indigenous, and other People of Color, with a clear focus on the effects of systemic racism, ageism, sexism, classism, and associated oppressions on early years policies and programs in the U.S.

Book Features:

  • Concise essays that acknowledge the demands on contemporary readers' time.
  • Authors that represent a cross section of educators, advocates, researchers, and leaders who are in dialogue with each other.
  • Personal stories that illustrate how policies and systems affect people, making an urgent case for transforming early care and education policies.
  • A call for action that includes tools for linking personal reflection to collective action.
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Provides an accessible discussion and analysis of some of the most urgent policy issues facing early childhood care and education in the United States. Contributors draw on their deep personal experiences with these issues to advance practice-based recommendations for how the nation's inequitable systems can be transformed.
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  • Contents (Tentative)
  • Foreword
  • Mariana Souto-Manning
  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction
  • Mark K. Nagasawa, Lacey E. Peters, Marianne N. Bloch, and Beth Blue Swadener
  • Part I: EARLY YEARS SYSTEMS FRAGMENTATION AND INEQUALITY
  • 1. In This Moment . . . We Are Essential
  • Lucinda Heimer
  • 2. One Center, Two Programs: Finding Promise Within a Fragmented and Unequal Non-System
  • Louis Hamlyn-Harris
  • 3. Toward Transforming Fragmented and Unequal Early Years Systems—Recommendations
  • Jacqueline Jones
  • Part II: CENTERING ANTI-RACISM IN EARLY YEARS CONTEXTS
  • 4. Constellations of Care: Black Kith and Kin Home/Place Making Beyond the State Gaze
  • Ashley J. May
  • 5. Proactive, Not Reactive: Creating Anti-Racist Policies for Child Care Centers and Preschools
  • Kerry-Ann Escayg and Flóra Faragó
  • 6. Short- and Long-Term Policy Solutions Are Necessary to Address Inequities in Access and Affordability in the Early Years
  • Chrishana M. Lloyd and Julianna Carlson
  • Part III: FELT IN/EQUITIES IN THE EARLY YEARS: INFANT/TODDLER CARE AND EDUCATION
  • 7. Felt (In)equities: The Status of Infant-Toddler Care
  • Barbara Milner
  • 8. Felt (In)equities: The Status of Infant-Toddler Teachers
  • Emmanuelle N. Fincham
  • 9. Recognizing the Birth to Three Workforce as Educators
  • Emily Sharrock and Annie Schaeffing
  • Part IV: DE/PROFESSIONALIZATION
  • 10. Grounding Educators' Experiences, Perspectives, and Intellect in De/Professionalization Debates
  • Lea J. E. Austin
  • 11. Toward Equity in Professionalization Through Community and Coalition Building
  • Juliana Pinto McKeen, Fabiola Santos-Gaerlan, Alice Tse, and Wendy Jo Cole
  • 12. Toward Professionalization BY the People
  • Betzaida Vera-Heredia
  • Part V: SUPPORTING THRIVING TEACHERS
  • 13. Don't Train Me to Serve! Supporting Thriving Teachers Through Identity Development
  • Vanessa Rodriguez
  • 14. "I Want to Be Treated Like I'm Valuable": Advocating for Teachers' Humanity
  • Abbi Kruse
  • 15. Talking the Talk, Walking the Walk With Teachers
  • Lorraine Falchi and Cristina Medellin
  • Part VI: Whose Standards?
  • 16. Being Held to Whose Standards? Considering the Unique Experiences of Racially and Ethnically Diverse Children
  • Alexandra Figueras-Daniel and Stephanie M. Curenton
  • 17. Using Aesthetic Approaches to Meet and Challenge the National Standards: A Both/And Approach
  • Margarita G. Ruiz Guerrero and Carolyn Brennan
  • 18. "John Adams Didn't Own Slaves": Culturally Affirming Standards, Assessments, and Curriculum
  • Evandra Catherin
  • Part VII: HONORING COMMUNITY CULTURAL WEALTH
  • 19. Elevating the Cultural Wealth in Communities of Color: The RICHER Framework–Intersectionality Between Race and Place
  • Iheoma U. Iruka
  • 20. It Really Does Take a Village: Why Educators Need to Be Involved in Community Initiatives
  • Jaclyn Vasquez and Mark Nagasawa
  • 21. Mi Casita: How a School Can Exist to Meet the Needs of Children and Adults Alike
  • Eva Ruiz and Rafa Pérez-Segura
  • 22. Sustaining Our Futures Through Expanded Relations
  • Anna Lees
  • 23. Now What? Our Call to Collective Action
  • Mark K. Nagasawa, Lacey E. Peters, Marianne N. Bloch, and Beth Blue Swadener
  • Index
  • About the Editors
  • About the Contributors
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780807768143
Publisert
2023-02-24
Utgiver
Vendor
Teachers' College Press
Vekt
363 gr
Høyde
226 mm
Bredde
152 mm
Dybde
15 mm
Aldersnivå
P, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
224

Biographical note

Mark K. Nagasawa is director of the Straus Center for Young Children & Families at Bank Street College of Education.

Lacey Peters is an assistant professor and graduate program co-coordinator for early childhood care and education at Hunter College, City University of New York.

Marianne N. Bloch is professor emerita in the Departments of Curriculum and Instruction and Gender and Women's Studies at the University of Wisconsin–Madison.

Beth Blue Swadener is professor emerita of justice studies and of social and cultural pedagogy in the School of Social Transformation at Arizona State University.