Edith W. King,
1999 Index Hardback;1-875-408-258 Available 03/99, Paperback 1-875-408-193
Available 03/99
Eleanor Roosevelt once described Edith King as a "worldminded
woman". In Looking into the Lives of Children: A Worldwide View,
Edith King maintains this tradition which has guided her observation, research,
writing and university teaching. Taking as her central theme the wide-ranging
diversity and cultural pluralism which she sees as one of the key features
of postmodern nations, she looks at the ways in which education should be
delivered to young children ages four to ten years in the complex and diverse
contemporary society in which they grow up. Her ultimate goal is that her
writing will help teachers around the world to develop teaching strategies
that acknowledge our human diversity within an overall context of equality
and peacefulness. Controversial but Important Topics in Relation to Children's
Lives This book is special because its wealth of information, anecdotes and
research include very relevant but highly controversial and often neglected
topics which are indispensable in any consideration of the relationship between
the lives children lead and their education. These topics include the growing
incidence of bi-ethnicity and multi-ethnicity of children and families today;
the sexual orientation of children as young as ages 8-10; the lives of children
from families of gay and lesbian parents; and the lives and childhood experience
of children in families with triplets, quadruplets and more. Guided by three
overarching positions:
- a global and comparative view of children, families,
and education;
- the sociological perspective;
- the qualitative approach to research design and methods,
each chapter opens by placing the experiences and education
of young children ages four to ten years into a sociological focus. The chapters
use personal accounts, anecdotes and stories taken from the first-hand experience
of the daily life of young children to illuminate concepts and theories based
on a qualitative, ethnographic research perspective. Looking Into the
Lives of Children: A Worldwide View is designed for graduate level teacher
education courses, in-service courses and workshops and pre-service teacher
education programs, especially courses in early childhood and primary education;
educational sociology; qualitative research methods in childhood education,
diversity and multicultural education. Professor Peter Woods, Center for Sociology
and Social Research, The Open University, Milton Keynes, England wrote: I
do not know of any other (book) that combines the range of forms of inequality,
the global view, the application of critical theory, and the implications
for teachers and for school policy and practice. The vignettes... really bring
home to the reader the experience of inequality. Professor Jeanne Ballantine,
University Center for Teaching and Learning, Wright State University, Dayton,
Ohio writes:
This is a valuable book for courses in teacher education.
It will be especially valuable in Social Foundations of Education, Educational
Psychology, Sociology of Education, Multicultural Education and related
offerings. The examples of real children and what they face in their daily
lives are illuminating for teachers in training. Edith W. King, Professor
of Education at the University of Denver, is a highly respected and distinguished
teacher and an internationally recognized scholar in sociology of education
and comparative education. Her recent books include Educating Young Children
in a Diverse Society (with Marilyn Chipman and Marta Cruz-Janzen) Teaching
Gender and Ethnic Awareness and Twentieth Century Social Thought (with R.
P. Cuzzort).
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