Uppeldi og menntun - 01.07.2006, Qupperneq 112

Uppeldi og menntun - 01.07.2006, Qupperneq 112
112 training of cognitive skills. They both use stories as a tool to create imaginary worlds. LEGO has adopted the concept of “serious play” in order to emphasise that their products promote serious learning in business and develop learning motivation as well. “LEGO SERIOUS PLay is a radical, innovative, ex­periential process designed to enhance business performance. It is based on the belief that everyone can contribute to the discussion, the decisions and the outcome.” (Lego: Serious play, 2006). Positive evaluation of the importance of narratives, play and imagination is not based on the goal of enhancing the quality of early education, but on economic interests and profit. Much more can be done with the systematic use of narrative learning in early education. The need for a child-centred approach is stated in Nordic core curricula of early education, but the concept of learning is still academically oriented. Curricula set democratic values and children’s best interests as their cornerstone, but many educators know in advance what is best for children and what must be learned. For ex­ample, the new Finnish early education guidelines state that play should be present in all children’s activities, but specific subject matter orientations should also be taught. In other words, child-centred narrative learning in play is not trusted because play operates on children’s initiatives. an illustration of this problem is a classroom teacher who participated in our narrative project using The Little Prince. The project presented subject matter knowledge and assignments embedded in the dramatised story of The Little Prince. Our university students in school practice played the roles in the story. The teacher decided to control what the learning results of the project would be and gave the test from the previous year to the children. The results were clearly better than in his “normal teaching”, but the children got ex­tra homework because “they were just role-playing”. Narrat­ive learning Linear ex­planatory instruction connected to cognitive testing misses the essence of early learning and its quality. The results can be measured and compared, but they do not reveal the final purpose of early education. Quality assessment of early years’ service delivery is only an intermediate indicator of the possibility of fulfilling the pur- pose of early education. This purpose is child development. Quality service is not an end as such, but it should have developmental effects as with all teaching. It may be difficult to agree on what changes indicate development and how these changes can be attained. The first obstacle for common understanding of development is the long tradition of limiting development to individual phenomena. any individual change can be used as an indicator of child development and small changes like a new word in a child’s vocabulary can mark development. Vygotsky’s ideas about child develop- ment are still relevant and bring a new perspective to learning and developmental change (Vygotsky 1977, 1978, 1987, 1991, 2004). He proposed that we should focus on qualitative changes in children’s activity. His first unit of development was limited V ið­Horf
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