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01/12/2022

Earth-Centered Early Childhood

In this modern world where activity is stressed to the point of mania, quietness as a childhood need is too often overlooked.
Margaret Wise Brown

In the January/February issue of Exchange magazine, Rukia Monique Rogers challenges us to consider underlying assumptions of a ‘child-centered approach’ that is “steeped in Western culture of individualism, consumption, and capitalism. This cultural view of the child is often deficit based and fails to recognize children’s innate capabilities. Educators, for example, are told to provide multiples of certain items because young children are incapable of sharing. What idea about resources does this convey to children? Are they just to be individually protected or mindlessly consume? Do we believe that young children are more interested in material things than in forming relationships with each other?”

Rogers instead focuses on children’s innate connection with nature and on traditional ways of knowing to endorse an earth-centered approach: “In the African worldview, as in many Indigenous communities including Native Americans, land and the earth are imbued with spiritual energy that demands reverence and care… I propose that as early childhood educators, we begin to examine and reflect upon how we might borrow from and reignite these ancient cultural practices, so that children deepen their natural gratitude to find better ways to engage in a symbiotic relationship with the biosphere.”

Join the ROW Initiative to participate in an offering from Rukia Monique Rogers:

Unpacking Child-Centered Ideas with an Ethic of Care through the Lens of African and Indigenous Traditions,” on Wednesday, January 19, 2022, at 7 pm EST (New York).

NOTE: Once you join the ROW Initiative, you’ll receive a zoom link prior to the online event.


For more information about Exchange's magazine, books, and other products pertaining to ECE, go to www.ccie.com.



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