
Learning Together
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Persons
Sherelyn R. Kaufman, J.D., M.A.T., is a Professor on the Adjunct Faculty at the Erikson Institute Graduate School of Child Development. She has practiced education law in private law firms and the United States Department of Education, Office for Civil Rights, has taught students in virtually every grade level, has served as the director of an early childhood education program, and has provided expert consulting to many early childhood programs.
Elizabeth C. Nelson, J. D. M.A.T., is a Professor on the Adjunct Faculty at Loyola University Chicago School of Law, specializing in education law and policy, as well as professional skills development. She has practiced law in the Office of the Attorney General for the State of Illinois and taught third grade in the city of Chicago.
Content
Introduction
Section 1: The Political, Pedagogical, Legal, and Economic Case for Investing in Early Childhood Education
Chapter 1: The Foundations of American Education Policy
1.Classical Philosophies of Education: Early Education Must Be a Public Concern Because It Has the Power to Shape Character and Support the Particular Political Regime
2.Modern Educational Philosophy: Public Education Is Vital to Freedom and Self-Government
3.The Foundation of American Educational Policy: Democratic Education Must Develop Meaningful Relationships Between Individuals and the Community
4.The Foundations of Contemporary Debates About American Educational Policy
5.Reconciling the Authoritarian and Progressive Movements: Educating Children for the Future by Encouraging them to Construct Knowledge through Meaningful Relationships
6.American Education Policy Establishes a Strong Foundation for Early Childhood Education Programs Designed to Construct Knowledge Through Meaningful Relationships
Chapter 2: The Pedagogical Foundations of American Early Childhood Education
1.The Framers' Nuanced Understanding of Human Nature and Human Development
2.The Pedagogical Consequences of the Framers' Nuanced View of Human Nature and Human Development
3.The Political Consequences of the Framers' Nuanced View of Human Nature and Human Development
Chapter 3: The Legal Foundations of American Early Childhood Education
1.The Fundamental Relationship Between Federal and State Control Over Education
2.The Relationship Between the State's Power to Regulate Education and the Constitutional Rights of Parents and Guardians to Direct the Upbringing of their Children
3.The Relationship Between the State's Power to Regulate Education and Federal and State Constitutional Rights to Equitable and Adequate Educational Funding
4.The Relationship Between the State's Power to Regulate Education And Federal Statutory Rights and Protections for Young Children with Educational Disabilities
5.The Foundations of American Education Law Support Compelling Legal Arguments for Providing Access to Early Childhood Education Programs
Chapter 4: The Economic Foundations of American Early Childhood Education
1.America's Schools and Their Students
B. America's Early Childhood Education Programs and Their Students
C. The Sources of Revenue to Support American Education
4.The Sources of Revenue to Support Early Childhood Education
E. The Inadequate and Inequitable Funding of American Education
6.The Changing Economic Landscape
7.Investing in Early Childhood Education
8.The Robust Economic Returns from an Investment in Early Childhood Education
Chapter 5: The Relationship Between Investing in Early Childhood Education and Other Reform Initiatives
1.Accountability
2.Privatization
3.Remedial Education and Vocational Training Programs
Section 2: The Proven Benefits of Early Childhood Education Programs that Encourage Children to Construct Knowledge by Building Meaningful Relationships
Chapter 6: Pedagogical Approaches to Early Childhood Education
1.Direct Instruction of Traditional Academic Skills
2.The Constructivist Approach
3.The Social Constructivist Approach
Chapter 7: The Proven Benefits of the Social Constructivist Approach to Early Childhood Education
1.The Social Constructivist Approach Has Proven to Produce Robust Educational, Social, and Economic Benefits
2.Recent Discoveries in Cognitive Neuroscience and Psychology Demonstrate How the Social Constructivist Approach Produces Particularly Robust Returns on an Investment in Early Childhood Education
Section 3: Strategies for Expanding, Developing, and Designing Early Childhood Learning Communities that Construct Knowledge through Meaningful Relationships
Chapter 8: Legal, Political, Economic and Comprehensive Strategies for Expanding Access to Early Childhood Education Programs
1.Legal Strategies for Expanding Access to Early Childhood Education Programs
2.Political Strategies for Expanding Access to Early Childhood Education Programs
3.Strategies for Authentically Assessing Early Childhood Education Programs
4.Economic Strategies for Expanding Access to Early Childhood Education Programs
5.Developing Public-Private Partnerships to Expand Access to Early Childhood Education Programs
6.The Comprehensive Implementation Strategy: Supporting Teachers and Reconciling Policy Debates About Accountability and Privatization
Chapter 9: Strategies for Developing a Social Constructivist Early Learning Environment
1.Role-Playing
2.Shared Activities
3.Encouraging Multiple Expressions of Learning through Media and Materials
4.The Social Construction of Literacy
5.The Social Construction of Mathematics
6.The Social Construction of Science
Chapter 10: Making Learning Visible Through Documentation
1.Developing the Art of Documentation
2.Practicing Documentation to Deepen Learning
3.Using Documentation to Make Learning Visible to Multiple Stakeholders
Conclusion
Appendices
About the Authors
Index
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