Home arrow Australian Journal of Early Childhood arrow AJEC Index/Abstracts arrow The politics of technology in early childhood in Aotearoa/New Zealand: Fitting early childhood educators in the ICT grid
The politics of technology in early childhood in Aotearoa/New Zealand: Fitting early childhood educators in the ICT grid PDF Print E-mail

Andrew Neil Gibbons
New Zealand Tertiary College

This article identifies contemporary issues for educators regarding the integration of new technologies in the early childhood education centre, through critical analysis of discourse associated with the integration of new technologies in early childhood services in Aotearoa/New Zealand. A culture of critique is revealed as an early childhood curriculum objective in Aotearoa/New Zealand, supported by the Ministry of Education. However, engaging in such critique reveals tensions between expectations regarding educators and the vested interests of policy-makers and technology industries. The characterisation of the educator as technologically deficient marginalises opportunities for educators to critically consider the role of technology in society. This paper argues for a problematisation of negative characterisations of educators in order to promote meaningful critique that is articulated as a requisite of effective integration of technology in early childhood curricula.

Keywords: critical literacy, curriculum, early childhood educators, ICT, Te Whāriki, vested interests, technocentrism

AJEC Volume 31 No 4 December 2006, pp. 7-14.

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Last Updated ( Friday, 01 December 2006 )
 

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