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Slow Knowledge and the Unhurried Child Time for Slow Pedagogies in Early Childhood Education

Slow Knowledge and the Unhurried Child Time for Slow Pedagogies in Early Childhood Education

This book explores the relationship with time in early childhood by arguing for the valuing of slow pedagogies and slow knowledge. Alison Clark points to alternative practices in Early Childhood Education and Care that enable a different pace and rhythm against the backdrop of the acceleration in early childhood and the proliferation of testing and measurement. Diverse approaches are explored to enable an ‘unhurried child’ and less hurried adults. Slow Knowledge and the Unhurried Child is divided in three parts. Part 1 Reasons to be slow looks at the pressures in Early Childhood Education and Care to speed up and for children to be ‘readied’ for the next stage. The book then explores different relationships with time for young children and educators. Part 2 Slow pedagogies and practices explore some of the forms slow practices can take including outdoors in the studio in everyday routines through stories in pedagogical documentation and in ‘slow’ research. Part 3 Moving forward shows what a ‘timefull’ approach to ECEC can look like whilst debating the challenges and possibilities that exist. The book serves as a catalyst for urgent discussion about the need to slow down in early childhood education and teacher education and explores case studies of where slow early childhood education are already happening. It will be a key reading for researchers practitioners and policy-makers about the relationship with time in early childhood and the importance of taking a longer view. | Slow Knowledge and the Unhurried Child Time for Slow Pedagogies in Early Childhood Education

GBP 29.99
1

Slow Looking The Art and Practice of Learning Through Observation

Teaching the 'Slow' Learner in the Special School

Teaching the 'Slow' Learner in the Primary School

Teaching the 'Slow' Learner in the Secondary School

Impoverishment and Asylum Social Policy as Slow Violence

Impoverishment and Asylum Social Policy as Slow Violence

Impoverishment and Asylum argues that a shift has taken place in recent decades towards construing asylum as primarily a political and/or humanitarian phenomenon to construing it as primarily an economic phenomenon and that this shift has had led to the purposeful impoverishment by the state of people seeking asylum in the UK. This shift has far-reaching consequences for people seeking asylum who have been systematically impoverished as part of the effort to strip out any possibility of an economic pull factor leading to more arrivals but also for those administering their support system and for civil society organisations and groups who seek to ameliorate the worst effects of the resulting asylum regimes. This book argues that within this context asylum support policies in the UK which are meant to help and protect in fact do serious harm to their recipients. It argues that the shift from construing asylum seekers as economically rather than politically motivated migrants across the West is part of a much broader set of historical and philosophical worldviews than has previously been articulated. The book offers a rigorously researched and richly theorised analysis drawing on postcolonial and decolonial perspectives in making sense of the purposeful impoverishment by the state of a particular group of people and why this continues to be tolerated in the fourth richest country in the world. | Impoverishment and Asylum Social Policy as Slow Violence

GBP 38.99
1

Bringing Hygge into the Early Years A Step-by-Step Guide to Bring a Calm and Slow Approach to Your Teaching

Tourism Resilience and Adaptation to Environmental Change Definitions and Frameworks

Tourism Resilience and Adaptation to Environmental Change Definitions and Frameworks

In recent years resilience theory has come to occupy the core of our understanding and management of the adaptive capacity of people and places in complex social and environmental systems. Despite this tourism scholars have been slow to adopt resilience concepts at a time when the emergence of new frameworks and applications is pressing. Drawing on original empirical and theoretical insights in resilience thinking this book explores how tourism communities and economies respond to environmental changes both fast (natural hazard disasters) and slow (incremental shifts). It explores how tourism places adapt change and sometimes transform (or not) in relation to their environmental context with an awareness of intersection with societal dynamics and links to political economic and social drivers of change. Contributions draw on empirical research conducted in a range of international settings including indigenous communities to explore the complexity and gradations of environmental change encounters and resilience planning responses in a range of tourism contexts. As the first book to specifically focus on environmental change from a resilience perspective this timely and original work makes a critical contribution to tourism studies tourism management and environmental geography as well as environmental sciences and development studies. | Tourism Resilience and Adaptation to Environmental Change Definitions and Frameworks

GBP 38.99
1

Sustainable Action Overcoming the Barriers

Sustainable Action Overcoming the Barriers

In this timely exploration of sustainable actions Christian Berg unpacks the complexity in understanding the barriers we face in moving towards a sustainable future providing solution perspectives for every level from individuals to governments and supra-national organizations offering a lucid vision of a long-term and achievable goal for sustainability. While the 2030 Agenda has already set ambitious targets for humanity it offers little guidance for concrete actions. Although much is already being done progress seems slow and some actions aiming at sustainability may be counterproductive. Different disciplines societal actors governmental departments and NGOs attribute the slow progress to a number of different causes from the corruption of politicians to the wrong incentive structures. Sustainable Action surveys all the fields involved in sustainability to provide action principles which speak to actors of different kinds not just those professionally mandated with such changes. It offers a road map to all those who might not constantly think about systems change but who are concerned and want to contribute to a sustainable future in a meaningful way. This book will be of great interest to students and scholars of sustainability issues as well as those looking for a framework for how to change their systems at work to impact the quadruple bottom line: environment economy society and future generations. | Sustainable Action Overcoming the Barriers

GBP 39.99
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Trade Policy Protectionism and the Third World

Projecting Environmental Trends from Economic Forecasts

Japan Challenges America Managing An Alliance In Crisis

The Autonomous State of Childcare Policy and the Policy Process in Britain

Towards Korean Reconciliation Socio-Cultural Exchanges and Cooperation

The Omo-Turkana Basin Cooperation for Sustainable Water Management

Routledge Handbook of Bounded Rationality

Posthumanism and Literacy Education Knowing/Becoming/Doing Literacies

Paving Our Ways A History of the World’s Roads and Pavements

A Global Guide to FinTech and Future Payment Trends

Memory and Miscarriages of Justice

Public Space Between Reimagination and Occupation

Creative Expression and Wellbeing in Higher Education Making and Movement as Mindful Moments of Self-care

Sustainable Infrastructure Investment Toward a More Equitable Future