
A Cultural-Historical View of Child Development: Key Concepts for Going Beyond a Universal View of the Child
A Cultural-Historical View of Child Development: Key Concepts for Going Beyond a Universal View of the Child
- The Pacific Early Childhood Education Research Association(환태평양유아교육연구학회)
- Asia-Pacific journal of research in early childhood education
- Vol.9 No.1
- : SCOPUS, KCI등재
- 2015.01
- 19 - 37 (19 pages)
A developmental view of child development with its biological imperatives has been extensively critiqued over the years and found to be wanting from a range of cultural (Rogoff, 2003; Howes, 2010), social (Qvortrup, Corsaro & Honig, 2009) and even health (Bendelow, 2009; Rogoff, 2011) reasons. But what has been missing from these debates has been a theoretically robust presentation of another way of conceptualizing children’s development (Hedegaard & Fleer, 2013). In drawing upon cultural-historical theory, this paper argues for a more localised and nuanced conception of human development. Through analyzing how society creates the conditions for children’s development (Hedegaard, 2012), this paper presents a view of development that captures both a traditional (historical lived in the present moment) and contemporary (new cultural technologies) view of children’s lived experiences.
Introduction Cultural-Historical View of Child Development Conclusion Acknowledgment References