
The Hundred Languages of Children
Description
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Educators in Reggio Emilia, Italy, use a distinctive innovative approach that supports children's well-being and fosters their intellectual development through a systematic focus on symbolic representation. From birth through age six, young children are encouraged to explore their environment and express their understanding through many modes of expression or "languages," including verbal communication, movement, drawing, painting, sculpture, shadow play, collage, and music. This organic strategy has been shown to be highly effective, as the children in Reggio Emilia display surprising examples of symbolic skill and creativity.
This book describes how the world-renowned preschool services and accompanying practical strategies for children under six in Reggio Emilia have evolved in response to the community's demographic and political transformations, and to generational changes in both the educators and the parents of the children. The authors provide the reader with a comprehensive introduction to the Reggio Emilia experience, and address three of the most important central themes of the work in Reggio in detail: teaching and learning through relationships; the hundred languages of children, and how this concept has evolved; and integrating documentation into the process of observing, reflecting, and communicating.
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Persons
Lella Gandini is Reggio Children liaison in the United States for the Dissemination of the Reggio Emilia Approach and associate editor of Innovations in Early Education: The International Reggio Exchange.
George Forman is professor emeritus of education at the University of Massachusetts, Amherst and president of Videatives, Inc.
Content
- Cover
- Contents
- Acknowledgments
- About the Contributors
- Foreword
- Preface: Reggio: A City of Courtesy, Curiosity, and Imagination
- Part I: Starting Points
- No Way. The Hundred is There.
- 1. Introduction: Background and Starting Points
- 2. History, Ideas, and Basic Principles: An Interview with Loris Malaguzzi
- 3. Malaguzzi's Story, Other Stories, and Respect for Children
- 4. Our Responsibility toward Young Children and toward Their Community
- 5. Reggio Emilia: A Transforming City
- 6. Micro-Project and Macro-Policy: Learning through Relationships
- Part II: Teaching and Learning through Relationships
- 7. Parent Participation in the Governance of the Schools: An Interview with Sergio Spaggiari
- 8. The Pedagogical Coordinating Team and Professional Development
- 9. Teacher and Learner, Partner and Guide: The Role of the Teacher
- 10. The Observant Teacher: Observation as a Reciprocal Tool of Professional Development: An Interview with Amelia Gambetti
- 11. The Inclusive Community
- Interlude. From Messages to Writing: Experiences in Literacy
- Part III: Documentation as an Integrated Process of Observing, Reflecting, and Communicating
- 12. Pedagogical Documentation: A Practice for Negotiation and Democracy
- 13. The Pedagogy of Listening: The Listening Perspective from Reggio Emilia
- 14. Negotiated Learning through Design, Documentation, and Discourse
- 15. The Relationship between Documentation and Assessment
- Part IV: The Idea of the Hundred Languages of Children and Its Evolution
- 16. Is Beauty a Way of Knowing?
- 17. The Atelier: A Conversation with Vea Vecchi
- 18. Connecting through Caring and Learning Spaces
- 19. The Use of Digital Media in Reggio Emilia
- 20. The Loris Malaguzzi International Center
- Part V: Conclusion
- 21. Final Reflections and Guiding Strategies for Teaching
- Glossary of Terms Used by Educators in Reggio Emilia
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- Additional Resources
- Illustration Credits
- Author Index
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- Subject Index
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