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Journal of Early Childhood Research
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What's this?

ethnographic approaches to child care research

a review of the literature

Mara Buchbinder

University of California, Los Angeles, USA, mhb{at}alum.dartmouth.org

Jeffrey Longhofer

Case Western Reserve University, USA

Thomas Barrett

The Hanna Perkins Center for Child Development, USA

Peter Lawson

Case Western Reserve University, USA

Jerry Floersch

Case Western Reserve University, USA

This article presents the findings from a review of ethnographic approaches to child care research. Ethnographic research has enhanced researcher and practitioner understandings of the child care environment by providing entry into the child care center as an important site not only of development and education, but also of social reproduction and enculturation. The extant research is summarized by identifying four dominant perspectives for viewing non-parental child care: (1) caregiver-centered, (2) mother-centered, (3) child-centered, and (4) societal. This article argues that studying the perspectives of caregivers, mothers, and children in isolation limits understandings of child care experience, since experience is shaped by continuous interactions among participants. We suggest that a more holistic ethnographic approach could enhance child care practice by increasing understanding of the relationships among caregivers, mothers, and children, and how these relationships influence children’s social and emotional development. The article concludes with a proposed agenda for ethnographic research on child care.

Key Words: caregiving • child care • early childhood • ethnography • qualitative research methods • research with children

Journal of Early Childhood Research, Vol. 4, No. 1, 45-63 (2006)
DOI: 10.1177/1476718X06059789


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M. K.E. Lahman
always Othered: ethical research with children
Journal of Early Childhood Research, October 1, 2008; 6(3): 281 - 300.
[Abstract] [PDF]