Sunday, October 13, 2013

Reggio Emilia Method



I recently spoke to someone who I consider to be a Guru of early childhood education. She has been in the field her entire career and now is ready to retire. She is my mentor! As I think about critical thinking in early childhood, I think about how would I do this at such an early age. In my reading I came across promoting critical thinking skills through play, art and movement. I wanted to talk to her about her thoughts on this concept. She thought this was a great idea to promote language and thinking. She told me she often walks into prekindergarten programs where the students are sitting at the table completing worksheets. Then she told me about a few amazing prekindergarten programs that focus on Reggio Emilia approach. I have heard of this approach but I didn’t have a full understanding of the concept. I started to research this approach and found it to be very insightful. The information I read about was very valuable but I found one
value to be critical in the learning process-making learning visible. I love the idea that learning is documented with cameras, tape recorders, journals, quotes from the children about their work and portfolios-not worksheets and tests.

I found this site to be helpful in understanding the approach.
http://www.education.com/magazine/article/Reggio_Emilia/

2 comments:

  1. Hi Tammy,
    Reggio Emilia's approach is worth exploring for your topic but i suggest you read academic books or articles concerning it. Bredekamp, (2011) suggest that there's a wrong conception of Reggio Emilia's approach in United States. Certainly thinking comes into focus in the act of play but it encompasses a lot among which you have mentioned and not just the work of art as is commonly perceived.
    I suggest the following details about it.
    Co- construction, p 276
    Documentation, p. 127, 350
    Graphic, Representation, p.282-283
    Overview, 123, 126-128
    Bredekamp, S. (2011). Effective practice in early childhood education: Building a foundation. Upper Saddle River, NJ: Pearson Education Inc.

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  2. Shade,
    Thank you for suggesting I look further into this approach. I just started reading about it so I didn't know that there is a misconception about the Reggio approach. I have heard that it is focused on art but I thought it was much more than that. It will be interesting to read Bredekamp's work. I really like how this approach looks at assessments. I wonder if I can focus on one component of the Reggio approach instead of the entire approach.

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