Risk-Taking in the New Zealand Bush: Issues of Resilience and Wellbeing
Risk-Taking in the New Zealand Bush: Issues of Resilience and Wellbeing
- The Pacific Early Childhood Education Research Association(환태평양유아교육연구학회)
- Asia-Pacific journal of research in early childhood education
- Vol.12 No.2
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2018.057 - 29 (23 pages)
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DOI : 10.17206/apjrece.2018.12.2.7
- 17
This article discusses a single case analysis of teacher-child interactions on an everyday bush walk in New Zealand. It uses a combination of the Leuven wellbeing scale (Laevers, 2000) and a conversation analysis approach to explore how children and teachers attend to specific features of the outdoor environment in a way that encourages risk-taking and builds resilience through problem solving. The collaborative achievement of the activities between the pre- school teacher and the fouryear-old children are discussed as an important and necessary aspect of the interactions, which we suggest may represent physical sustained shared thinking, for supporting wellbeing whilst building resilience and risk-taking. Implications for future practice are considered with regard to implementation of early childhood curricula.
The Project
Findings
Discussion and Conclusion
Implications
References
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