The implications of young children's digitalconsumerist play for changing the kindergarten curriculum

1991

Abstract

Cultural-historical theory makes claims about the place of play in children's development and its relationship to epoch-typical forms of development. This paper reports from a study that is attempting to understand the changing developmental context for young children in digitalconsumerist cultures and the consequences of this for kindergarten curriculum. Five children from kindergartens in Melbourne, Australia, were videotaped engaging with a series of artefacts on a continuum from traditional/generic through to digital-consumerist. The children were found to engage with the artefacts in ways that are largely consistent with existing perspectives on play. However, problemsolving predominated with the traditional toys, whilst children's preexisting knowledge was much more apparent in consumerist and digital-consumerist play. The paper concludes that teachers need to incorporate changing understandings about the potential of digital-consumerist artefacts to enhance play in early childhood education into their curriculum decisionmaking, thereby contributing to changes in the culture of kindergartens and in children's general cultural formation.

General Information

Keywords: Play, digital technologies, consumption, cultural-historical theory

Journal rubric: Developmental Psychology

Article type: scientific article

For citation: Nuttall J., Edward S., Lee S., Mantilla A., Wood E. The implications of young children's digitalconsumerist play for changing the kindergarten curriculum. Kul'turno-istoricheskaya psikhologiya = Cultural-Historical Psychology, 2013. Vol. 9, no. 2, pp. 54–63.

Full text

Introduction

A central claim of cultural-historical theorising about children's development is that different points in time create different generational contexts for develop­ment (Davydov, 1982). In contemporary advanced economies, this changing developmental context is rep­resented by the rise of digital media and enhanced mod­els of consumption (Rideout, Foehr & Roberts, 2010; Marshall, 2010). Many children are now born into social and cultural contexts where they typically engage with digital technologies. These technologies interface with multiple media platforms that support the consumption of items associated with popular culture, such as games, television shows and associated products (Calvert, 2008). Traditionally, children's engagement in cultural contexts has been examined with the aim of under­standing how their play orientates them to their cultur­al worlds and provides opportunities for practicing adult orientated roles and skills (Japiassu, 2008). However, the development of digitised contexts has shifted this focus so that children's play is increasingly understood as immediate and includes direct participa­tion within digitised media alongside more traditional play practices, such as dramatic play and modelling adult behaviours (Edwards, 2011).
Teachers in early childhood education settings, including pre-schools, kindergartens, and child care centres, have a key role in constructing and maintain­ing contemporary contexts for development, and therefore in the production and re-production of cul­tural understandings (Dumais, 2006). In our present research, we are particularly interested in early child­hood teachers' understanding of the concept of 'play' as a fundamental mediator of their decision-making about the early childhood curriculum. 'Play-based cur­riculum' remains the cornerstone of early childhood education in many Anglophone and European early childhood contexts, including Australia (Ailwood, 2010), and is often used as the foundation for curricu­lum planning and decision-making. Internationally, the field has a strong commitment to the use of play as a basis for curriculum provision and for supporting children's learning (Yelland, 2011). For example, cur­riculum documents including those from New Zealand (Ministry of Education, 1996), Finland (Ministry of Social Affairs and Health (2004); Singapore (Ministry of Education, 2003), the United States of America (National Association for the Education of Young Children, 2009), England (Department for Education, 2012), and Australia (Department of Education, Employment and Workforce Relations, 2009) all refer­ence the role of play in children's learning and promote the use of play as basis for curriculum. What teachers consider to be 'play' or 'not play' therefore guides their decisions about the materials and experiences they will make available to children in kindergarten, including drawn from children's contemporary contexts, such as digitised media and the consumption of trademarked toys.
An example of this type of decision-making was observed by one of the authors in an Australian kindergarten when a child brought along her Barbie™ doll. The child showed the doll to her teacher, who spent some minutes looking at the doll and talking to the child. The child was then asked to return the doll to her bag as the teacher did not nec­essarily consider the Barbie doll as an appropriate basis for 'play' within her understanding of early childhood curriculum. In our work we are interested in children's play across a continuum from tradition­al (i.e. generic, un-branded) toys for play, through the use of trademarked (i.e. branded, consumer) toys for play, to experiences on digital devices (i.e. apps based on digitally mediated and trademarked charac­ters) (Edwards, forthcoming), and understanding how teachers' negotiate this continuum in their cur­riculum decision-making. In the case of Barbie, this continuum would include a traditional doll, a Barbie™ doll, and the Barbie™ I Can Be™ app for the iPhone™ or iPad™. In order to understand how teachers make decisions about the kindergarten cur­riculum, we need to understand how they make sense of children's experiences in contemporary digitised contexts and whether they see these as a legitimate basis for curriculum construction. Our aim is not to determine whether teachers are making 'correct' decisions about play; instead, we are trying to under­stand how they connect children's experience of their digital-consumerist world with how they construct and mediate the kindergarten curriculum. This chal­lenge acknowledges the considerable power teachers have to determine the formation of culture, both within and beyond the kindergarten walls.
In this paper we report on the first phase of our research into this question. In this phase, we have begun by looking closely at how actually children engage with artefacts across the continuum of traditional to digital-consumerist artefacts. We begin by outlining the key theoretical assumptions informing our work, drawn from cultural-historical theory and the literature about childhood consumption in digitally mediated social con­texts, before turning to the study's design and findings so far.

Cultural-historical theory and the study  of digital-consumerist contexts  for child development

This study draws on the work of Vygotsky (2004), Davydov (1982), and Kravtsova (2006), who have the­orised the relationship between children's social and cultural experiences, development, and play. Davydov (1982) argued that different points in time create dif­ferent generational contexts for children's develop­ment. Cultural-historical theory explains this by showing how the social and cultural tools of a commu­nity develop over time; then, as children grow into the use of the tools and subsequently transform these tools as adults, they contribute to the ongoing construction of the community itself. In contemporary 'advanced' economies such as Australia, the changing context for children's development is most clearly seen in the rise of digital media and enhanced models of consumption (Rutherford, Bittman & Biron, 2010). This means that young children are now born into social and cultural contexts in which digital technologies, and the con­sumption of digital media and popular culture through these technologies, are increasingly typical cultural behaviours (Plowman, Stevenson, Stephen & McPake, 2012).
The second important cultural-historical argument influencing this study concerns the relationship between typical cultural behaviours, development, and play. Japiassu (2008) argues that the acquisition of cultural behaviours and knowledge occurs through the interpretative process of play (p. 385). This aligns with Vygotksy's (2004) ideas about imagination being a psychological function that allows children to connect play and reality (p. 15). In other words, children draw on their experiences of the culture to inform their play. Play is important in the early years because, according to a cultural-historical perspective, it is directed towards children's development: as children become better at play, they expand their access to the opportu­nities for social interaction and engagement that are necessary to support their development (Duncan & Tarulli, 2003). This claim is described by Kravtsova (2006) as 'changing the child's social situation of development through the mastery of play as a leading activity' (p. 14). Kravtsova (2006) also argues that a child has mastered play when they are able to talk about what they are doing and that it is through this talk (usually with adults) that the social situation is expanded. This expanded social situation increases the child's access to the social and cultural tools of the community and, in turn, supports further develop­ment. A cultural-historical perspective therefore argues that play is directed towards development rather than being the cause of development. These two ideas from cultural-historical theory explain how change can occurs across generations: children use the social and cultural tools they acquire through mastery of play to create the context that informs the next generation (Edwards, 2010). Within a cultural-historical J. Nuttall, S. Edwards, S. Lee, A. Mantilla, E. Wood  perspective, tools are understood not just as physical artefacts, such as computers and other digital tech­nologies, but also the psychological tools children learn to use and adapt, such as language, and cultural­ly valued concepts represented through language and practice, such as 'play' (Aronsson, 2010; Plowman, McPake & Stephen, 2010). Understanding the speed with which social and cultural tools have changed in recent years — and what this means for the play expe­riences of today's children — is essential if teachers are to respond to these changes within the early childhood curriculum.
The rise of digital technologies is not the only fea­ture of these changes. A second fundamental change has been the emergence of consumerism as a dominant economic model following the end of World War Two (Paterson, 2006). During this period, children were identified as an important growth market for the con­sumption of 'specialised' children's goods such as clothing, toys and food (Chudaroff, 2011). In the last two decades, these two strands of change have come together as childhood consumption has become inte­grated with the use of digital technologies (Cross, 2010). These technologies have provided platforms for sophisticated forms of marketing through television, DVD's, mobile devices and the internet. Children's television programs have been developed, cross-pro­moted, and marketed so that young children are able to watch particular shows, purchase products and toys associated with the programs, and participate in vari­ous digital activities connected with a character from the show (Edgar & Edgar, 2008). This has resulted in what some researchers suggest is an unprecedented developmental context for young children and their play (Goldstein, 2011; Kirkorian, Wartella & Anderson, 2008). Daniel Cook (2005), a pre-eminent scholar in the area of childhood sociology and con­sumption, argues that:
The world of consumption and marketplaces rep­resents a key and absolutely necessary site for the study of childhood — as well as for social action — precisely because it disrupts even the most generous of conceptions of children and the locus of power. To keep consumption, popular culture and [digital] media culture separate and distant from children and childhood in our studies and undertakings is to reaf­firm a vision of social life disconnected from lived experience (p. 158).
Such arguments raise important questions about the nature of young children's play in terms of their use of digital technologies and their interest in consumer-based toys such as Barbie™ dolls or Thomas the Tank Engine™ train sets. These questions raise, in turn, chal­lenges for how teachers understand children's contem­porary play, both within the kindergarten and in home contexts, and how they incorporate these understand­ings into their curriculum decision-making. We return to this point at the end of the paper. We turn now, how­ever, to the design and findings of the first phase of the present study.

The study design

Five children (all boys) from three suburban kinder­gartens in south-east Melbourne, Australia, participated in the study. Two of the boys were aged five years, two were aged four years and one was three years old. Teachers from three kindergartens were invited to partic­ipate in the project through their local City Council. Each of the teachers then invited families from each cen­tre to participate. Some families declined to participate, and data from two participants is not presented in this paper. These were a female child whose level of participa­tion suggested she was not providing assent to participate and whose data was consequently deleted at the time of collection, and a male child whose engagement with the generic and consumer-based artefacts was too limited to warrant inclusion. Data collection was conducted with teacher and parent consent and included the consent of each of the children (Harcourt & Conroy, 2011).
Each child was invited to use either a farm set or a train set. They were then given a set of plastic farm toys or a wooden train set, according to their choice. One boy chose the farm set, whilst the others each chose the train set. The children were invited to show a researcher how they used the set, while a second researcher filmed the introduction. A series of pre-scripted questions were asked during the children's engagement with the arte­facts. A third researcher also engaged with the children during the filming, and the researcher asking the script­ed questions also participated in non-scripted conversa­tions with the children. Three of the children were videoed individually, whilst two boys who were broth­ers were filmed together. Videoing occurred either in a room adjacent to the children's main kindergarten room or within the main room at a time when the kinder­garten was closed to other children.
When the children indicated they had tired of using the generic artefact they were provided with a thematical­ly related consumer artefact. For the child using the farm set, this was a Peppa Pig™ figure and some of her fellow characters from the Peppa Pig™ television program (cur­rently the highest-grossing children's television program in the world; see Andrews, 2010). Children who selected the train set were given a set of Thomas the Tank Engine ™ trains and railway track. Again, the children were invit­ed to show the researchers how they used the artefacts and their engagement was videorecorded as both researchers interacted with the children. When the chil­dren indicated they had finished using these artefacts, they were provided with the final artefact. This third arte­fact was in the form of thematically-related application software (i.e. an 'app') pre-loaded onto an iPad™. These included the Peppa Pig Happy Mrs Chicken™ app and the Thomas and Friends: Engine Activities™ app. If the children lost interest in the app after a few minutes, they were invited to explore other apps on the iPad™ to sustain their engagement with digital artefacts for at least 15 min­utes. Three of the children used more than one app. Table 1.0 summarises the gender, age, and range of arte­facts engaged with across the continuum, for each child.

Approach to data analysis

Our purpose in videotaping the children's engage­ment with each artefact was to generate data that would allow us to examine what characterised their play across the continuum from traditional to digital-consumerist artefacts. For this reason, analysis of their engagement focused on coding what they did with each artefact and the range of commentary they provided in response to the interviewer's questions and conversations. This reflects a cultural-historical orientation to children's play, in which play is understood to be socially mediat­ed with adults via both language and action (Bodrova & Leong, 2006). The development of codes involved three steps, including: generating the code; reviewing, revis­ing and inductively deriving additional codes in context of the data; and determining the reliability of coding (DeCuir-Gunby, Marshall, & McCulloch, 2011).
For step one, three of the researchers met to discuss and determine the deductively derived codes (Patton, 2002) based on initial review of the data and observa­tions made in the field. The researchers challenged each other's perspectives and interpretations in order to cre­ate initial codes that were conceptually meaningful and relevant to the data. These included characteristics of play such as flexibility, interaction, and affect (Smith & Pellegrini, 2008; Vygtosky, 2004). During step two, these initial codes were modified and additional codes were inductively derived and revised (Thomas, 2006) by one researcher using transcriptions of the children's engagement with the artefacts. The modification of the deductively derived codes and identification of addi­tional codes within the transcripts was conducted simultaneously against the videorecordings, to ensure accuracy of interpretation and inclusion of children's and interviewer's actions alongside the spoken (tran­scribed) language. This meant adding descriptions about the children's and researcher's physical activity to the transcripts (reported in this paper in italics in the brackets following transcribed speech). Step three involved a second researcher reading through the tran­scripts, using the established codes generated during step two, to further identify instances in the data that characterised the children's engagement with the arte­facts. This resulted in two sets of coded data, which were then used to establish inter-observer reliability regarding what constituted each identified code.
Data identified by both researchers as characterising the children's engagement with the artefacts was then thematically grouped into two broad categories: 1) actions supporting children's direct engagement with the artefacts; and 2) behaviours associated with the chil­dren's use of the artefacts. The 'direct engagement' cate­gory included a range of characteristics that enabled the children's interaction with the artefacts in ways that seemed to support meaning making, such as reasoning, narrative, imagination and the expression of pre-existing knowledge. The second category included characteristics that were orientated towards the expression of behaviours made possible because of the opportunity to use the arte­fact, such as humour and effect (emotion). A frequency count was conducted to determine the number of episodes of each sub-characteristic that appeared in the transcripts and the descriptions of the children's physical activity (Cohen, Morrison & Manion, 2007). The sub-characteristics with the highest counts were then collat­ed in relation to each artefact, to determine which descriptors of play applied to each artefact.

Findings
Table 2.0 provides the definitions for each sub-char­acteristic and the frequencies with which each was iden­tified in relation to the three artefacts. The findings sug­gest that the children's play across the continuum was characterised by forms of engagement and behaviours that are largely consistent with existing perspectives on play. For example, imagination, problem- solving, and narrative are included in Vygotsky's description of the role of combinatorial activity in play (Vygotsky, 2004). Construction, mathematical knowledge, and explo­ration feature in constructivist accounts of the relation­ships between play and learning (DeVries, et al., 2002), whilst strategizing, reasoning, and wondering are con­sidered typical aspects of children's play that are often also associated with learning (Isenberg & Quisenberry, 2002). Humour and affect are characteristics of play identified by Broadhead, Howard and Wood (2010) as emerging from participation in the play situation itself. In this respect, the nature of the children's play across the continuum suggested that existing perspectives about play can be drawn on to understand the nature of the children's engagements with each artefact.
However, these perspectives have been typically used to describe what was represented in our study as play with generic/traditional artefacts and have only recently been used by scholars to understand digital play (Verenkina & Kervin, 2011), with slightly less focus on consumer play (Ironico, 2012) Interestingly, the sub-characteristics with the highest counts appeared first in digital-consumerist play, followed by consumer play, with generic play having only 'problem-solving' as its highest ranked sub-characteristic. This suggests that nine of the sub-characteristics of play were associated with using the digital-consumerist artefacts and three with the consumer artefact.
Pre-existing knowledge was apparent in both con­sumer and digital-consumerist play at a higher rate than generic play. Transcript data of the children's actions and dialogue using these artefacts shows them engaged in discussion and self-talk regarding the characters, and reporting on their knowledge of typical storylines asso­ciated with the characters, their previous experiences using touchscreen technologies, and familiarity with the selected apps. This knowledge, discussion, and self-talk tended to be associated with opportunities for the chil­dren to engage with the artefacts in ways that promoted characteristics of play such as imagination, narrative and affect more frequently than play with generic arte­facts, which appeared to prompt only problem-solving. In the next section we draw on the qualitative data for one of the participants (Jacob) to examine the nature of his play across the continuum to show how pre-existing knowledge connected with a greater range of character­istics in his consumer and digital-consumerist play than in generic play.

Generic, consumer and digital-consumerist Interviewer 1: oh it is wake up time. Can we be loud play: the role of pre-existing knowledge again?
Jacob: Ding, ding, ding

The findings summarised above suggest that generic play was characterised only by problem- solving, where­as consumer and digital-consumerist play included other characteristics such as affect, exploration, reason­ing, and strategizing. This was the case for Jacob, whose use of the generic train set showed him engaging in problem-solving. Problem-solving is a highly valued dis­position in early childhood education and is often used to justify the role and use of play in the early childhood curriculum (see Department for Education, 2012; Ministry of Education, 2003). In this study, the chil­dren's problem solving during generic play was focussed on difficulties they encountered when trying to build the train track or working out how to establish the fences for the farm set. For example, Jacob (aged 5) was recorded trying to work out how to make two ends of the track connect:
Jacob: Is there another way to get, is there a way to get this track on? (Jacob realises that he has two track pieces with ends that do not fit together. He attempts to find a place for one of the pieces by breaking up two of his connected track pieces and placing the first piece between them — only to realise that he has the same problem of two ends that won't connect. Jacob tries again at another loca­tion along the track and finds he has the same problem).
Jacob was also recorded problem-solving when he attempted to connect two halves of a bridge, and when he realised that his track had bumped up against a cabi­net so that he lacked room to continue building:
Jacob: maybe if I did that ... (Jacob realises he can place the half bridge with the other half to complete the bridge). There's no more room for this (Jacob realises there is a problem because there is not enough space on the floor as the track gets longer)
After finalising his track and demonstrating how the engine pulled the carriages along the track, Jacob made an immediate connection to consumer play. Without prompting by the researchers, he began to discuss Thomas the Tank Engine™, telling the researchers that the 'other engines' have 'eye[s], numbers and names'. When invited to use the consumer artefact, Jacob par­ticipated in a highly detailed recount and discussion of Thomas the Tank Engine™. He provided information regarding: the name, colour, number, and personality of each engine; discussed how they lived on the Island of Sodor™; and was able to the explain the Fat Controller's™ role in caring for the engines. He described the relationships between the different engines and also talked about their typical activities. This discussion occurred as he manipulated the tracks and preceded a period of imaginative play, during which he re-enacted a typical Thomas the Tank Engine™ sce­nario, drawing on his knowledge of the characters:
Jacob: when it is bedtime, Thomas goes in (Jacob slides the small wooden Thomas the Tank Engine™ into the shed). Shh (whispering) It is bedtime. Now it is time to wake up
Interview 1: This one seems to be asleep
Jacob: Yes.
Interviewer 1: And that one too?
Jacob: Thomas is ill today, so Henry has to take his train
Interviewer 3: poor Thomas is ill?
Jacob: Yes. He has to go the shed and we are staying (Jacob pushes Thomas back into the shed to be made well and moves Henry on to the tracks. He pushes Henry quick­ly down the track and he slams into some carriages) Boom! Thomas can get out and rescue (Jacob slides Thomas out of the shed and pushes him down towards Henry and the carriages)
Interviewer 2: Thomas to the rescue. What is that? What is Thomas doing?
Jacob: He is rescuing them with a hook (Jacob tilts Thomas towards Henry and then lifts Henry back onto track)
Jacob's existing knowledge of Thomas the Tank Engine™ meant he was able to do more with the engines than simply push them along the track in the way he did with the generic train. The generic artefact provided opportunities for problem-solving in relation to the con­struction of the actual track; the consumer artefact, however, carried a history of meaning and prior experi­ence that Jacob was able to discuss and then draw on to inform his imaginative play. Vygotsky (2004) discusses this in terms of combinatorial activity, and argues that 'rich' and 'varied' experiences are drawn on by children to feed their play (pp. 14—15). Such play then becomes an expression of the cultural context in which this 'rich­ness' and 'variety' were first experienced. For Jacob, this included talking about trademarked engines he had home, his viewing of different Thomas the Tank Engine™ episodes, the inclusion of the Thomas the Tank Engine™ trains in the kindergarten train set, and his familiarity with a Thomas the Tank Engine™ movie. Jacob differentiated between the generic and consumer artefacts and suggested it was better to play with Thomas because the 'normal' trains do not have eyes or mouths and so cannot talk. Jacob's experience of Thomas as a talking engine with greater potential for action meant that, for him, Thomas trains 'were better' and 'everyone likes Thomas'.
Jacob's familiarity with Thomas the Tank Engine™ was also evident in his use of the digital-consumerist artefact. When using the app he expressed further knowledge about the engines, showing he was able to name and talk about engines that appeared on the screen that had not been included in the consumer set. He also showed existing knowledge of the app, having previously used it on his mother's iPhone ™. This was illustrated in one exchange where Jacob persisted in completing a series of puzzles because, unknown to the interviewers, he knew that finishing the puzzles would result in a 'reward'. The reward was a short movie show­ing Thomas carrying crates of lemonade and crashing  J. Nuttall, S. Edwards, S. Lee, A. Mantilla, E. Wood into a field of pigs. Here Jacob continued with the task and pre-empted the movie, even though the interview­ers (who did now know what was about to happen) con­tinued to ask him questions about Thomas the Tank Engine™:
Jacob: 'Pop!' goes Thomas
Interviewer 2: Does Thomas feel sad sometimes?
Jacob: Sometimes (dragging puzzles pieces into place using his finger)
Interviewer 2: Because of what?
Jacob: Um, um, because he um, um, everything gets wrong (continuing to drag puzzle pieces into place)
Interviewer 2: I see
Jacob: ... sometimes... and now something is going to go wrong ... because the lemonade that is going to go into a field of pigs (screen changes from puzzle and opens to an image of Thomas)
Interviewer 1: the lemonade (laughs) which lemon­ade?
Jacob: that he's put (moments later the screen shows Thomas carrying lemonade)
Interviewer 2: Oh that is the lemonade
Interviewer 1: Wow that is the lemonade. So you knew beforehand?!
Jacob: Field of pigs (moments later the screen shows Thomas crashing into a field of pigs)
All: (laughing)
Jacob: it was going to go right into a field of pigs
Interviewer 1: You knew that. You are very clever. How did you know that from just watching that?
Interviewer 3: Is that same as the one on Mummy's phone?
Jacob: Yeah
Interviewer 3: Uh so you knew
Jacob: All of them are the same
Jacob's familiarity with the app meant that he was playing a game that initially did not include his interac­tions with the interviewers. He was deliberately work­ing his way towards seeing Thomas crash into the field of pigs and the lemonade go 'pop'. Jacob exhibited obvi­ous enjoyment in having achieved the goal and watch­ing the crash. He asked for permission to repeat the puz­zles so that he could view the crash again. As he replayed the puzzles and the crash, he talked about the humour he ascribed to the situation, saying he 'liked super funny things'. In this episode the play include strategizing (to reach the reward), humour (laughing at Thomas), and affect (liking super funny things). Jacob's existing knowledge of the app and of Thomas the Tank Engine™ appeared to afford a greater range of play characteristics than had been enabled by his engagement with the generic toy.
This possibility raises interesting questions for teachers' facilitation of play in the early childhood cur­riculum, particularly where generic approaches are val­ued over the inclusion of consumer and digital-con­sumerist play. If Jacob's experience is mainly with generic artefacts, he may continue to develop problem-solving skills and have opportunities to grow in areas such as narrative and imagination. However, if the generic artefacts were to be supplemented by consumer and/or digital-consumerist play, it is possible this could create greater opportunities for him to draw on existing knowledge and skills in ways that could contribute to the development of play characteristics that early child­hood curriculum has historically valued, such as strate­gizing, humour, affect, and imagination.

Conclusion

Scholars in early childhood education have an estab­lished body of knowledge about play in the early years (Cheng & Johnson, 2010), about how teachers concep­tualise play, and the influence of these conceptualisa­tions on their curriculum decision-making. This work has drawn on a range of theoretical perspectives, includ­ing gender studies (Blaise, 2010), post-structuralism (Ailwood, 2010), and cultural-historical theory (Fleer, 2010). A conspicuous gap in this work is on understand­ing how teachers connect their conceptions of play and curriculum formation with children's contemporary play experiences. Previous research has shown that teachers' knowledge, beliefs, and values have a central role in mediating their decisions about what and how children will learn in early childhood education, and that curricu­lum implementation in early childhood education is a highly interpretive process (Nuttall, 2004). This has made the relationship between beliefs and decision-mak­ing a particular focus for research in early childhood teacher education (Giovacco-Johnson, 2011).
Early childhood education also has a strong commit­ment to understanding children's wider life-worlds, par­ticularly their experiences in the home, and using these as a basis for curriculum in early childhood settings. As we argued earlier, these experiences increasingly involve children's engagement within a digital-con­sumerist context (Edwards, 2013). Given the centrality of 'learning-through-play' in teachers' construction of the early childhood curriculum (Wood, 2008), what teachers recognise as relevant to their processes of cur­riculum formation may be more likely to influence their decision-making than whether they know how to oper­ate digital technologies per se. This suggests there is benefit in understanding the nature of children's play in terms of a continuum of experiences that includes both traditional and digital-consumerist artefacts.
Our early analysis of the nature of children's engage­ment with artefacts along this continuum suggests that different characteristics of play are experienced by chil­dren according their previous knowledge and/or experi­ence of the artefact. The nature of children's engage­ment across the continuum indicates that characteris­tics commonly associated with play were evident for all of the artefacts, although only problem-solving appeared for play with traditional/generic artefacts. Children's existing knowledge and familiarity with con­sumer and digital-consumerist artefacts seems to be a significant informant to their play and provides a basis for the emergence of play-based characteristics that are traditionally considered important in early childhood education, including reasoning (Isenberg & Quinsberry, 2002), narrative, imagination and affect (Smith & Pellegrini, 2008; Vygotsky, 2004) and humour (Broadhead, et al., 2010).
Cultural-historical theory argues that children's play is a response to the cultural contexts in which they are located (Davydov, 1982; Japiassu, 2008). Since chil­dren's contemporary contexts for development increas­ingly include a range of digital and consumerist experi­ences that localise children's play (Chudaroff, 2011; Goldstein, 2011), our findings suggest it will become increasingly important to develop new ways of under­standing children's play, so that their experiences with consumer and digital-consumerist artefacts may be more readily recognised in the early childhood curricu­lum as valued forms of play that can contribute toward children's development and learning.

References

  1. Ailwood J. (2010). It's about power: Researching play, pedagogy and participation in the early years of school. In S. Rogers (Ed.), Rethinking play and pedagogy in early chidhood education. Concepts, contexts and cultures. London: Routledge.
  2. Andrews A. (2010). Peppa Pig™ the best-selling preschool toy of 2010, beats Thomas the Tank Engine. The Telegraph. Posted 25th January, 2011. Available at: http:// www.telegraph.co.uk/finance/newsbysector/retailandconsumer/8279793/Peppa-Pig-the-best-selling-pre-school-toy-of2010beatsThomas-the-Tank-Engine.html
  3. Aronsson K. (2010). Learning through play. In P. Peterson, E. Baker, & B. McGaw (Eds.), International Encyclopaedia of Education, pp. 330—334. Elsevier: Amsterdam.
  4. Blaise M. (2010). New maps for old terrain: creating a postdevelopmental logic of gender and sexuality in the early years. Chapter in L. Brooker & S. Edwards (Eds.), Engaging Play, (pp. 80—96). Open University Press: Maidenhead.
  5. Bodrova E., & Leong D. (2006). Adult influences on play. The Vygotskian approach. Chapter in D. Fromberg (Ed.), Play form birth to twelve: contexts, perspectives and meaning. Routledge: Hoboken.
  6. Broadhead P., Howard J. & Wood E. (2010). Play and learning in the early years. SAGE: London.
  7. Calvert S. (2008). Children as consumers: advertising and marketing. Future of Children, 18 (1), 205—234
  8. Chen J., & Chang C. (2011). Using computers in early childhood classrooms. Teachers' attitudes, skills and practices. Journal of Early Childhood Research, 9 (3), 169—188.
  9. Cheng M2F. & Johnson J.E. (2010). Research on children's play: An analysis of developmental and early education journals from 2005 to 2007. Early Childhood Education Journal, 37, 249—259.
  10. Chudacoff H. (2011). The history of children's play in the United States. Chapter in A. Pellegrini (Ed.), The Oxford Handbook of the development of play, (pp. 101—110). Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  11. Cohen L., & Morrison K., & Manion L. (2007). Research methods in education. Routledge: Abingdon, Oxon.
  12. Cook D. (2005) The dichotomous child in and of commercial culture. Childhood, 12 (2), 155—159.
  13. Cross G. (2010). Children and the market. An American historical perspective. Chapter in D. Marshall and
  14. Todd. Understanding children as consumers, (pp. 100—115). London: SAGE Publications
  15. Davydov V. (1982). The influence of L.S. Vygotsky on Education, Theory, Research and Practice (Trans. S. Kerr). Educational Researcher, 24 (3), 12—21.
  16. Department for Education (2012). Statutory Framework for the Early Years Foundation Stage. Setting the standards for learning, development and care for children from birth to five. London: Crown.
  17. Department of Education, Employment and Workforce Relations (2009). Belonging, Being and Becoming. The Early Years Learning Framework for Australia. Canberra, Australia.
  18. DeCuir-Gunby J.T., Marshall P.L., & McCulloch A.W. 2011). Developing and Using a codebook for the Analysis of Interview Data: An Example from a Professional Development Research Project. Field Methods, 23 (2), 136—155.
  19. DeVries R., Zan B., Hildebrandt C., Edmiaston R., & Sales C. (2002). Developing constructivist early childhood curriculum: Early Childhood Education series. Teachers College Press: New York.
  20. Dumais S.A. (2006). Early childhood cultural capital, parental habitus, and teachers' perceptions. Poetics, 34 (2), 83—107.
  21. Duncan R., & Tarulli D. (2003). Play as the leading activity of the preschool period: insights from Vygotsky, Leont'ev and Bakhtin. Early Education and Development, 14 (3), 271—292.
  22. Edgar D., & Edgar P. (2008). The new child. In search of smarter grownups. Wilkinson Publishing: Melbourne.
  23. Edwards S. (2010). 'Numberjacks are on their way': A cultural historical reflection on contemporary society and the early childhood curriculum. Pedagogy, Culture and Society, 18 (3), 261—272.
  24. Edwards S. (2011). Lessons from 'a really useful engine'™: Using Thomas the Tank Engine™ to examine the relationship between play as a leading activity, imagination and reality in children's contemporary play worlds. Cambridge Journal of Education, 41 (2), 195—210.
  25. Edwards S. (2013). Post-industrial play: understanding the relationship between traditional and converged forms of play in the early years. Chapter in J. Marsh., & A. Burke (Eds.), Children's Virtual Play Worlds: Culture, Learning, and Participation. Peter Lang: New York.
  26. Edwards S. (forthcoming). Towards contemporary play: sociocultural theory and the digital-consumerist context. Journal of Early Childhood Research
  27. Fleer M. (2010). Early learning and development: Cultural-historical concepts in play. Melbourne, Australia: Cambridge University Press.
  28. Giovacco-Johnson T. (2008). Applied ethics as a foundation in early childhood teacher education: Exploring the connections and possibilities. Early Childhood Education Journal, 38, 449—456.
  29. Goldstein J. (2011). Technology and play. The Oxford Handbook of the development of play, (pp. 322—341). Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  30. Harcourt D., Conroy H. (2011). Informed consent: processes and procedures: seeking research partnerships with young children. Chapter in D. Harcourt., B. Perry., & T. Waller (Eds.), Researching young children's perspectives. Debating the ethics and dilemmas of educational research with children, pp, 38—52. Routledge: New York.
  31. Ironico S. (2012). The active role of children as consumers. Young Consumers: Insight and Ideas for Responsible Marketers, 13 (1), 30—44.
  32. Isenberg J., & Quisenberry N. (2002). Play is essential for all children. Childhood Education, 79 (1), 33—39.
  33. Japiassu R. (2008). Pretend play and preschoolers. Chapter in B. van Oers., W. Wardekker., E. Elbers & R. van der Veer (Eds.), The transformation of learning. Advances in cultural-historical theory, pp. 380—399. Cambridge University Press: Cambridge.
  34. Kirkorian H., Wartella E., & Anderson D. (2008). Media and young children's learning. The Future of Children, 18 (1) 39—61.
  35. Kravstova E. (2006). The concept of age-specific new psychological formations in contemporary developmental psychology. Journal of Russian and East European Psychology, 44 (6), 6—18.
  36. Marshall D. (2010). Introduction. Chapter in D. Marshall and S. Todd. Understanding children as consumers, pp. 20—39. London: SAGE Publications.
  37. Ministry of Social Affairs and Health (2004). National Curriculum Guidelines on Early Childhood Education and Care in Finland. Helsinki.
  38. Ministry of Education, Singapore (2003). Nurturing Early Learners: A framework for a kindergarten curriculum in Singapore. Singapore: Preschool Education Unit.
  39. Ministry of Education (1996). Te Whariki. He whariki matauranga mo nga mokop[1]una o Aotearoa: Early childhood curriculum. Wellington: Learning Media.
  40. National Association for the Education of Young Children. (2009). Developmentally Appropriate Practice Guidelines. Position Statement. Washington, DC.
  41. Nutbrown C. (2005). Key concepts in early childhood education and care. Thousand Oaks, CA: SAGE Publications.
  42. Nuttall J. (2004). Negotiating reality in early childhood curriculum: The social psychology of teaching as a group. New Zealand Journal of Educational Studies, 39 (1), 39—53.
  43. Paterson M. (2006) Consumption and everyday life. London: Routledge.
  44. Patton M.Q. (2002). Qualitative research and evaluation methods. Thousand Oaks, CA: Sage Publications.
  45. Plowman L., Stevenson O., Stephen C., McPake J. (2012). Preschool children's learning with technology at home. Computers & Education, 59 (1) 30—37.
  46. Plowman L., McPake, J. & Stephen C. (2010). The technologisation of childhood? Young children and technology in the home. Children and Society, 24 (1), 63—74.
  47. Rideout V.J., Foehr U.G., Roberts D.F. (2010). Generation M2: media in the lives of 8—18 year-olds. Kaiser Family Foundation. January 2010. Available at: http://www.kff.org/entmedia/upload/8010.pdf
  48. Rutherford L., Bittman M., & Biron D. (2010). Young children and the media. A discussion paper. Australian Research Alliance for Children and Youth.
  49. Smith P., & Pellegrini A. (2008). Learning through play. Encyclopedia on early childhood development. Early Childhood Learning Knowledge Centre: Canada.
  50. Thomas D.R. (2006). A general inductive approach for analyzing qualitative evaluation data. American Journal of Evaluation, 27 (2), 237—246.
  51. Vandewater E., Rideout V., Wartella E., Huang X., Lee J., & Shim M. (2007). Digital childhood: electronic media and technology use amongst infants, toddlers and pre-schoolers. Paediatrics, 119 (5), 1006—1015.
  52. Verenkina I., & Kervin L. (2011). iPads, digital play and are pre-schoolers. He Kupu, 2 (5), 4—19.
  53. Vygotsky L. (2004). Imagination and creativity in childhood. Journal of Russian and East European Psychology, 42 (1), 7—97.
  54. Wood E. (Ed.) (2008). The Routledge reader in early childhood education. London, UK: Routledge.
  55. Yelland N. (2011). Reconceptualising play and learning in the lives of young children. Australasian Journal of Early Childhood. Vol. 36 (2).

Information About the Authors

Joce Nuttall, Doctor of Philosophy, PhD, Associate Professor, Principal Research Fellow, Faculty of Education, Australian Catholic University, e-mail: joce.nuttall@acu.edu.au

Susan Edward, Doctor of Philosophy, PhD, Principal Research Fellow, Faculty of Education, Australian Catholic University, e-mail: Suzy.Edwards@acu.edu.au

Scott Lee, Doctor of Philosophy, PhD, Research Fellow, Senior Proven Research Team, Faculty of Education, Australian Catholic University, e-mail: Scott.Lee@acu.edu.au

Ana Mantilla, Doctor of Philosophy, PhD, Executive Assistant, Faculty of Education, Australian Catholic University, e-mail: ana.mantilla@acu.edu.au

Elizabeth Wood, Doctor of Philosophy, PhD, Professor of Education, Director of Research, University of Sheffield, Great Britain, e-mail: e.a.wood@sheffield.ac.uk

Metrics

Views

Total: 3894
Previous month: 6
Current month: 7

Downloads

Total: 1991
Previous month: 2
Current month: 0