TY - JOUR
T1 - Repositioning early childhood leadership as action and activism
AU - Woodrow, Christine
AU - Busch, Gillian
PY - 2008
Y1 - 2008
N2 - Robust leadership is increasingly recognized as a critical element of healthy professions, yet some research suggests that early childhood practitioners do not readily identify with the concept of leadership. This article explores some dimensions of leadership in early childhood and how it is understood and practiced in Australian early childhood contexts. The analysis suggests that the dominant images of leadership in the wider community and the discourses of early childhood, together with increasing control of the profession through mandated curriculum and auditing and the rise of corporate childcare and commodified children’s services, militate against the realisation of a strong leadership identity. Resources emerging from feminist work in the area of leadership, ethics and professionalism provide new opportunities to reconceptualise leadership through activism and engagement. Such a shift has implications for how we might reconstruct the professional preparation of early childhood teachers through projects of action and activism. The article concludes with an outline of a pilot project involving pre-service teachers in a project of community engagement in which aspects of a ‘new leadership’ are practiced.
AB - Robust leadership is increasingly recognized as a critical element of healthy professions, yet some research suggests that early childhood practitioners do not readily identify with the concept of leadership. This article explores some dimensions of leadership in early childhood and how it is understood and practiced in Australian early childhood contexts. The analysis suggests that the dominant images of leadership in the wider community and the discourses of early childhood, together with increasing control of the profession through mandated curriculum and auditing and the rise of corporate childcare and commodified children’s services, militate against the realisation of a strong leadership identity. Resources emerging from feminist work in the area of leadership, ethics and professionalism provide new opportunities to reconceptualise leadership through activism and engagement. Such a shift has implications for how we might reconstruct the professional preparation of early childhood teachers through projects of action and activism. The article concludes with an outline of a pilot project involving pre-service teachers in a project of community engagement in which aspects of a ‘new leadership’ are practiced.
UR - http://handle.uws.edu.au:8081/1959.7/559135
U2 - 10.1080/13502930801897053
DO - 10.1080/13502930801897053
M3 - Article
SN - 1350-293X
VL - 16
SP - 83
EP - 93
JO - European Early Childhood Education Research Journal
JF - European Early Childhood Education Research Journal
IS - 1
ER -