IN EARLY CHILDHOOD EDUCATION the dominant discourse of play-based pedagogy is greatly influenced by a western play approach. This paper examines how play is valued as early learning in Bangladesh. It reports on a qualitative study that explored the understandings of four parents and four early childhood educators in semi-rural Bangladesh. Findings revealed that the value of play as learning is determined by the sociocultural, historical, educational, economic and political factors of the given society. Parents considered play as leisure while teachers acknowledged it as accelerating young children's learning and aiding their preparation for school. However, participants admitted that play could help the young children to overcome their feeling of fear about school. Since the value of play as learning in the Bangladesh context differed from the western practices, the paper emphasises sociocultural, political and economic considerations while adopting an imported pedagogical approach like play.
References
1.
AboudF. E. (2006). Evaluation of an early childhood preschool program in rural Bangladesh. Early Childhood Research Quarterly, 21, 46–60.
2.
AnningA. (2005). Play and legislated curriculum - Back to basics: An alternative view. In MoylesJ. (Ed), The excellence of play (2nd edn, pp. 15–26). Berkshire: Open University Press.
3.
ArdtK., HastingsC., HopkinsK., KnebelR., LohJ., & WoodsR. (2005). Report on Primary Education in Bangladesh: Challenges and Successes.Dhaka, Bangladesh: BANBEIS & Ministry of Women and Children Affairs.
4.
ArthurI., BeecherB., DeathE., DockettS., & FarmerS. (2005). Programming and planning in early childhood settings (3rd edn). Victoria: Thomson.
5.
Bangladesh Bureau of Statistics (2009). Statistical year book Bangladesh, 2009.Dhaka: Government of the People's Republic of Bangladesh.
6.
BredekampS. (2011). Effective practices in early childhood education: Building a foundation. Upper Saddle River, N.J.: Pearson.
7.
BrookerL. (2005). Learning to be a child — Cultural diversity and early years ideology. In YellandN. (Ed), Critical issues in early childhood education (pp. 115–130). Berkshire: Open University Press.
8.
BrostromS. (2005). Transition problems and play as transitory activity. Australian Journal of Early Childhood, 30(3), 17–25.
9.
CannellaG. S. (2005). Reconceptualizing the field (of early childhood care and education): if ‘western’ child development is a problem, then what do we do? In YellandN. (Ed), Critical issues in early childhood education (pp. 17–39). Berkshire: Open University Press.
10.
ChangP.-Y. (2003). Contextual understanding of children's play in Taiwanese kindergartens. In LytleD. E. (Ed), Play and educational theory and practice (pp. 277–297). London: Praeger.
11.
DavidT., & PowellS. (2005). Play in the early years: the influence of cultural difference. In MoylesJ. (Ed), The excellence of play (2nd edn, pp. 242–254). Berkshire: Open University Press.
12.
Directorate of Primary Education (DPE) (2008). School survey report, 2007, Ministry of Primary and Mass Education.Dhaka: Government of the People's Republic of Bangladesh.
13.
Directorate of Primary Education (DPE) (2010). Prashikkhan Shahaika Prak-Prathomic Shikkha (Training Manual) January 2010 (In Bangla language), Dhaka: Ministry of Primary and Mass Education, Government of the People's Republic of Bangladesh.
14.
EdwardsS. (2009). Early childhood education and care: Sociocultural approach.Castle Hill: Pademelon Press.
15.
FleerM. (2009). A cultural-historical perspective on play: Play as a leading activity across cultural communities. In Pramling-SamuelssonI. & FleerM. (Eds), Play and leading in early childhood settings: International perspectives (pp. 1–17). Dordrecht: London Springer.
16.
GuptaA. (2011). Play and pedagogy framed within India's historical, sociocultural and pedagogical context. In RogersS. (Ed), Rethinking play and pedagogy in early childhood education: Concepts, contexts and cultures (pp. 86–99) Abingdon, Oxon: Routledge.
17.
HegdeA. A., & CassidyD. J. (2009). Kindergarten teachers' perspectives on developmentally appropriate practices (DAP): A study conducted in Mumbai (India). Journal of Research in Childhood Education, 23(3), 367–381.
18.
HeidemannS., & HewittD. (2010). Play the pathway from theory to practice (2nd edn). St. Paul, MN: Redleaf Press.
19.
IslamZ. (2010). From ‘Marginality’ to ‘Mainstream’: A narrative of early childhood professionalism in Bangladesh. Contemporary Issues in Early Childhood, 11 (1), 29–38.
20.
JohnsonJ. J., ChristieJ. J., & YawkeyT. D. (1999). Play and early childhood development (2nd edn). New York: Longman.
21.
KieffJ. J., & CasbergueR. M. (2000). Playful learning and teaching: integrating play into preschool and primary programs.Boston: Allyn and Bacon.
22.
Ministry of Primary and Mass Education (MOPME) (2008). Operational framework for pre-primary education.Dhaka: Government of the People's Republic of Bangladesh.
23.
MoonK., & ReifelS. (2008). Play and literacy in a diverse language prekindergarten classroom. Contemporary Issues in Early Childhood, 9(1), 49–65.
24.
MoylesJ. (2005). The excellence of play (2nd edn). Berkshire: Open University Press.
25.
RogoffB. (1995). Observing sociocultural activity on three planes: participatory appropriation, guided participation, and apprenticeship. In WertschJ. V., RíoP & AlvarezA. (Eds), Sociocultural studies of mind (pp. 139–163). New York: Cambridge University Press.
26.
RogoffB. (2003). The cultural nature of human development.New York: Oxford University Press.
27.
RogoffB., Barker-SennettJ., & LacasaP. (1995). Development through participation in sociocultural activity. In GoodnowJ. J., MillerP. J. & KesselF. (Eds), Cultural practices as contexts for development (pp. 45–65). San Francisco: Jossey-Bass Publishers.
28.
ViruruR. (2001). Early childhood education: Postcolonial perspectives from India.Delhi, India: Sage Publications.
29.
WalshD. J. (2005), Developmental theory and early childhood education: necessary but not sufficient. In YellandN. (Ed), Critical issues in early childhood education (pp. 40–48). Berkshire: Open University Press.
30.
WoodE. (2009). Developing a Pedagogy of Play. In AnningA., CullenJ. & FleerM. (Eds), Early Childhood Education Society and Culture (2nd edn, pp. 27–38). London: Sage.
31.
YellandN. (2011). Reconceptualising play and learning in the lives of young children. Australasian Journal of Early Childhood, 36(2), 4–12.