ABSTRACT

In this newly revised edition of Understanding Research in Early Education, Margaret Clark demonstrates the continuing relevance of research in the homes of young children and in preschool units.

Through rigorous yet understandable language, the text stresses the importance of research, acknowledging how easy it can be, amidst the change and flood of documents on early education and care, to overlook the insights to be gained from past research. The author draws on her own studies, and those of others, to illustrate how to avoid common pitfalls, ask the right questions to inform students’ research projects, and critically apply findings in the classroom or nursery. The book is one of the few texts for students to bring research alive, analysing key research to consider its limitations and the extent to which results are relevant to policy and practice.

Without requiring any prior expertise in research and research methodologies, the third edition will prove invaluable for undergraduate and postgraduate students taking courses in early years’ education, and practitioners undertaking continuing professional development. New content includes: fully revised chapters, an updated reference list, and a new chapter discussing current research on baseline assessment.

chapter 1|9 pages

Introduction

part 1|32 pages

Language and the homes of young children

chapter 2|5 pages

The language of young children

The continuing relevance of issues from the 1970s

chapter 3|25 pages

Research evidence on language and the homes of young children

Looking back and looking forward

part II|38 pages

Research in preschool units

chapter 4|6 pages

Researches in early education set in context

A framework for evaluating researches

chapter 5|11 pages

Studies of preschool education in Scotland

Lessons from the past

chapter 6|19 pages

Language and interaction in preschool units in England

Looking back and looking forward

part III|60 pages

Continuity, communication and learning in early education

chapter 7|12 pages

Research studies on transition and continuity in early education

Lessons from the past

chapter 8|16 pages

Communication in the early education of children from different ethnic backgrounds

Part I of a DES-funded study

chapter 9|20 pages

Reception classrooms as contexts for learning

Part 2 of a DES-funded study

part IV|33 pages

Two contrasting researches on learning to read

chapter 11|6 pages

Reading and learning to read

Setting the scene

chapter 12|18 pages

Children with difficulties and young fluent readers

Two contrasting research approaches

chapter 13|7 pages

Better beginnings