2021
DOI: 10.32920/ryerson.14668128.v1
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Dangerous time: a critical qualitative inquiry into early childhood educators' perspectives on planning time in southern Ontario

Abstract: This critical qualitative inquiry lifts the silenced voices of early childhood educators about their perspectives on planning time. Planning time is essential for educators to plan and document ongoing curriculum-making. Yet, not all educators are afforded this time, exacerbating poor wages and working conditions and contributing to stress, burnout and high turnover rates. Framed with feminist poststructuralism and queer time, this study situates planning time within discourses of neoliberalism and development… Show more

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Cited by 2 publications
(14 citation statements)
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“…This is part of the work of teaching, to cast a tale where no one is damaged by living in whirls of words, ideas, images, apprehensions and joys that are partly beyond his or her ken, but, hopefully, no one is left quite the same. (Jardine, 2013: 3)…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…This is part of the work of teaching, to cast a tale where no one is damaged by living in whirls of words, ideas, images, apprehensions and joys that are partly beyond his or her ken, but, hopefully, no one is left quite the same. (Jardine, 2013: 3)…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Ultimately, what underlies our work is a hope that students will resist pressures to conform to being a 'good educator' (Johnston, 2019;Langford, 2007) and strive instead for 'good work' (Jardine, 2013).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Neoliberalism is an economic system that promotes a global free trade marketplace, minimizes government interference, and focuses on individualism, competition, and consumerism (B. Davies & Bansel, 2007;Johnston, 2021). Governments take on a marketplace model that reduces taxes, limiting their ability to provide services to citizens, and that filters all policies and programs through a risk and reward business model.…”
Section: Neoliberalismmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…The Ontario government's neoliberal stance on education policy and curriculum oppresses ECEs through the marketization of services, which in turn encourages profits over quality, performance evaluation, and surveillance of professional expectations (Cotton, 2001;Courtney, 2016;A. Davies et al, 2022;Johnston, 2021;Perryman et al, 2017;Richardson & Langford, 2022). This oppression is amplified by poor working conditions, the absence of supports, and burnout.…”
Section: The Oppressed Ecementioning
confidence: 99%
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