Why Become Involved in Research in Early Childhood?
Orientation: ′It′s Like Another Language′
Exploring and Theorizing Perspectives
Beginning the Research Journey: Determining Your Point of
Departure
Knowing What Has Gone before: Reviewing the Literature
Guiding the Research Journey: Ethical Considerations
Moving along Qualitative methodological pathways
Taking the Quantitative methodological trail
Drawing the journey to a close: Dissemination of the findings
The Journey
′Andrea Nolan and her colleagues have written a uniquely wise and
reader-friendly account of all aspects of researching early
childhood. Unlike some similar-sounding texts, this is not a
dumbed-down account, a ′beginner′s guide to writing your research
project′, but a serious consideration of the whole sequence of
undertaking research in the field, which tackles both the big
issues and the difficult terminology in a clear and accessible way.
It achieves this through the device of accompanying a very
disparate group of researchers, from undergraduates to doctoral
students and early-career professionals, through the stages of
their research journey, from developing their early ideas through
to writing up their findings. The featured researchers describe
their repeated dilemmas and the decisions they have to make as they
design and conduct their studies. These decisions are shown as
embedded within much larger constructs about the nature of
childhood and the appropriate forms of provision for young children
and families - issues which are both political and ethical. The
authors describe both the broad issues and the small, individual,
decisions which lie within them with a depth of understanding which
ensures that using the book can be a pleasure as well as a task for
researchers as they set out to construct their own new knowledge
about early childhood′
-Liz Brooker
Reader in Early Childhood, University of London Institute of
Education
This is a useful addition to the bookshelf of texts on research
into early childhood, and is particularly aimed at a readership of
students working towards higher degrees. Each chapter is clearly
organised, starting with the key questions that will be dealt with
in the chapter, sub-headings to enable the reader to keep track of
the narrative and a set of ‘reflection point’ questions for the
reader as they finish the chapter…A distinctive strength of the
book is the way in which the authors use aspects of students’
reflections on the research enterprise as the students developed
their projects. These exemplify the key points that are being made.
For two doctoral students, Lara using qualitative and Amy using
quantitative methods, we are able to follow them through the whole
journey, from choosing a research topic, to their final reflections
and discussion of their postdoctoral lives. This gives a refreshing
slant on the topics discussed.
*Bridget A. Egan, Faculty of Education Health & Social Care,
University of Winchester, Winchester, UK*
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