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Researching 0-3 year old children’s language and literacy play at home in a digital age

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paperpeer-review

Published

Standard

Researching 0-3 year old children’s language and literacy play at home in a digital age. / Flewitt, Rosie; Arnott, Lorna; Mevawalla, Zinnia et al.
2022. Paper presented at European Early Childhood Education Research Association Conference, Glasgow, United Kingdom.

Research output: Contribution to conference - Without ISBN/ISSN Conference paperpeer-review

Harvard

Flewitt, R, Arnott, L, Mevawalla, Z, Gillen, J, Goodall, J, Winter, K & McLaughlin, K 2022, 'Researching 0-3 year old children’s language and literacy play at home in a digital age', Paper presented at European Early Childhood Education Research Association Conference, Glasgow, United Kingdom, 23/08/22 - 26/08/22.

APA

Flewitt, R., Arnott, L., Mevawalla, Z., Gillen, J., Goodall, J., Winter, K., & McLaughlin, K. (2022). Researching 0-3 year old children’s language and literacy play at home in a digital age. Paper presented at European Early Childhood Education Research Association Conference, Glasgow, United Kingdom.

Vancouver

Flewitt R, Arnott L, Mevawalla Z, Gillen J, Goodall J, Winter K et al.. Researching 0-3 year old children’s language and literacy play at home in a digital age. 2022. Paper presented at European Early Childhood Education Research Association Conference, Glasgow, United Kingdom.

Author

Flewitt, Rosie ; Arnott, Lorna ; Mevawalla, Zinnia et al. / Researching 0-3 year old children’s language and literacy play at home in a digital age. Paper presented at European Early Childhood Education Research Association Conference, Glasgow, United Kingdom.

Bibtex

@conference{b92ca52f95fd49429ee2ad7508758278,
title = "Researching 0-3 year old children{\textquoteright}s language and literacy play at home in a digital age",
abstract = "This recently-launched, two-year ESRC-funded study breaks new ground in researching 0-3-year-old children's language and literacy play at home in the digital age, in diverse communities across the four UK nations. Digital technologies feature prominently in contemporary family life (Chaudron et al. 2018; Kumpulainen & Gillen 2020). Even very young children observe and use language playfully in digitally-mediated activities, e.g. e-books, digital toys and interacting via mobile devices (Arnott et al. 2019; Zhao & Flewitt 2020). Drawing on social semiotic theory (Kress 2010), socio-materiality (Barad 2003; Murris 2016) and respecting young children{\textquoteright}s participation rights, the study builds empirically-grounded conceptualizations of 0-3-year-olds{\textquoteright} engagement with today{\textquoteright}s technology-rich cultural artefacts, where play and meaning making are entangled with {\textquoteleft}humans, nonhumans and more-than-humans{\textquoteright} (Kuby & Rowsell 2017: 285). The multi-phase study design offers a template for interdisciplinary research, including iterative innovation in participatory approaches to researching the home. Research methods include an online survey, remote interviews with families and professionals, followed by 40 in-depth case studies. In alignment with our conceptual and theoretical approach, we emphasise the interpersonal, responsive nature of research ethics, using creative approaches to ensure informed and voluntary child and adult consent. This paper critically evaluates how the study will generate findings related to researching the home environment collaboratively and sensitively with young children and their families in diverse communities. Here, we focus on research impacts, including multi-phase research design and a palette of participatory methods from which families can choose the approach most apt for their circumstances, including self-generated data. ",
author = "Rosie Flewitt and Lorna Arnott and Zinnia Mevawalla and Julia Gillen and Janet Goodall and Karen Winter and Katrina McLaughlin",
year = "2022",
month = aug,
day = "25",
language = "English",
note = "European Early Childhood Education Research Association Conference : Cultures of play: actors, affordances and arenas, EECERA ; Conference date: 23-08-2022 Through 26-08-2022",
url = "https://2022.eeceraconference.org/",

}

RIS

TY - CONF

T1 - Researching 0-3 year old children’s language and literacy play at home in a digital age

AU - Flewitt, Rosie

AU - Arnott, Lorna

AU - Mevawalla, Zinnia

AU - Gillen, Julia

AU - Goodall, Janet

AU - Winter, Karen

AU - McLaughlin, Katrina

N1 - Conference code: 31

PY - 2022/8/25

Y1 - 2022/8/25

N2 - This recently-launched, two-year ESRC-funded study breaks new ground in researching 0-3-year-old children's language and literacy play at home in the digital age, in diverse communities across the four UK nations. Digital technologies feature prominently in contemporary family life (Chaudron et al. 2018; Kumpulainen & Gillen 2020). Even very young children observe and use language playfully in digitally-mediated activities, e.g. e-books, digital toys and interacting via mobile devices (Arnott et al. 2019; Zhao & Flewitt 2020). Drawing on social semiotic theory (Kress 2010), socio-materiality (Barad 2003; Murris 2016) and respecting young children’s participation rights, the study builds empirically-grounded conceptualizations of 0-3-year-olds’ engagement with today’s technology-rich cultural artefacts, where play and meaning making are entangled with ‘humans, nonhumans and more-than-humans’ (Kuby & Rowsell 2017: 285). The multi-phase study design offers a template for interdisciplinary research, including iterative innovation in participatory approaches to researching the home. Research methods include an online survey, remote interviews with families and professionals, followed by 40 in-depth case studies. In alignment with our conceptual and theoretical approach, we emphasise the interpersonal, responsive nature of research ethics, using creative approaches to ensure informed and voluntary child and adult consent. This paper critically evaluates how the study will generate findings related to researching the home environment collaboratively and sensitively with young children and their families in diverse communities. Here, we focus on research impacts, including multi-phase research design and a palette of participatory methods from which families can choose the approach most apt for their circumstances, including self-generated data.

AB - This recently-launched, two-year ESRC-funded study breaks new ground in researching 0-3-year-old children's language and literacy play at home in the digital age, in diverse communities across the four UK nations. Digital technologies feature prominently in contemporary family life (Chaudron et al. 2018; Kumpulainen & Gillen 2020). Even very young children observe and use language playfully in digitally-mediated activities, e.g. e-books, digital toys and interacting via mobile devices (Arnott et al. 2019; Zhao & Flewitt 2020). Drawing on social semiotic theory (Kress 2010), socio-materiality (Barad 2003; Murris 2016) and respecting young children’s participation rights, the study builds empirically-grounded conceptualizations of 0-3-year-olds’ engagement with today’s technology-rich cultural artefacts, where play and meaning making are entangled with ‘humans, nonhumans and more-than-humans’ (Kuby & Rowsell 2017: 285). The multi-phase study design offers a template for interdisciplinary research, including iterative innovation in participatory approaches to researching the home. Research methods include an online survey, remote interviews with families and professionals, followed by 40 in-depth case studies. In alignment with our conceptual and theoretical approach, we emphasise the interpersonal, responsive nature of research ethics, using creative approaches to ensure informed and voluntary child and adult consent. This paper critically evaluates how the study will generate findings related to researching the home environment collaboratively and sensitively with young children and their families in diverse communities. Here, we focus on research impacts, including multi-phase research design and a palette of participatory methods from which families can choose the approach most apt for their circumstances, including self-generated data.

M3 - Conference paper

T2 - European Early Childhood Education Research Association Conference

Y2 - 23 August 2022 through 26 August 2022

ER -