Ethnography in Early Childhood Education 2019
Ethnography in Early Childhood Education 2019
Ethnography in Early Childhood Education 2019
Keywords: ethnography, early childhood education, preschool education, childhood studies, cultural studies
Introduction
Ethnography is a qualitative research methodology particularly suited to research
projects that aim to gain in-depth understandings of the lived experience of children and
teachers in early childhood care and education settings. It offers researchers the opportu
nity to discover in an emergent, responsive way the intricate dynamics of interactions and
motivations of the members of this setting via long-term engagement with participants on
a regular daily basis. Philosophically, ethnography in early childhood settings aligns with
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the philosophical and pedagogical approaches of early childhood educators who uphold
professional codes and expectations that involve building relationships founded in a deep
respect for children and their families, their cultural values, and their aspirations.
Ethnography also enables the investigation of microcosms of interrelationships and inter
actions that reflect wider historical, social, economic, political, and cultural influences
and issues of the wider society.
Defining Ethnography
Ethnography is a qualitative research methodology most often associated with the field of
anthropology from which it emerged. It serves to provide rich, in-depth understandings of
the cultural beliefs and lived practices of particular groups of people. Cultural anthropol
ogist Clifford Geertz has explained that the term “ethnography” is used to refer to “both a
process and a product of the study of human culture” (1973, as cited in Lubeck, 1985, p.
47). The educational ethnographer Harry Wolcott described doing ethnography as “a way
of looking and a way of seeing” (Wolcott, 2008, p. 41), the ethnographer producing a “pic
ture of the way of life of some interacting human group” (Wolcott, 1975, as cited in
Lubeck, 1985, p. 47). A distinctive aspect of ethnography is the need to conduct fieldwork
over a long period, typically a year at minimum, spending time in the community that is
the focus of the study, “sharing their work, thoughts, and concerns” (Lubeck, 1985, p. 49).
The renowned cultural anthropologist Margaret Mead describes the ethnographer as be
ing willing to learn the language of the community being researched, and being im
mersed in their ways of being, in order to “get their culture sufficiently by heart to feel
their repugnances and sympathise with their triumphs” ([1930] 1968, p. 213, as cited in
James, 2011, p. 5).
The aim of ethnographic study is thus “to provide holistic accounts that include the views
and perspectives, beliefs and values of all those involved on the particular sociocultural
practice or institutional context” of the research focus (Siraj-Blatchford & Siraj-Blatch
ford, 2001, p.193). Ethnography relies “fundamentally on first-hand, personal involve
ment in the lives of people being studied” (Eisenhart, 2001, p. 18). “Ethnographic re
search typically involves prolonged fieldwork in which the researcher gains access to a
social group and carries out intensive observation in natural settings for a period of
months or years” (Eder & Corsaro, 1999, p. 523). Geertz defined ethnographic work as
being an interpretative act of “thick description” (1973, pp. 9–10, as cited in James, 2011,
p. 3). The researcher, through close involvement in the community and with participation
of community members, attempts to portray the understandings through the lens of the
community members, generating a “holistic description” (Eisenhart, 2001, p. 23). The
methodology acknowledges the interpretative role of the researcher(s). However, an im
portant distinction is that this “mode of interpretation goes beyond the microscopic exam
ination of action and to their contextualisation in a more holistic sense, to capture suc
cessfully actions and events as they were understood by the actors themselves” (Eder &
Corsaro, 1999, p. 523).
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just the intricate occurrences observed on a day-to-day basis within the early childhood
care and education center but also the wider cultural patterns observed in participants’
ways of being, knowing, doing, and relating that are resonant of the historic, economic,
and political contexts that inform societies. The remainder of this section briefly outlines
several of these influential early childhood ethnographies.
Valerie Polakow (1982) located her ethnographic study in a historical context with views
of childhood ranging from the medieval period to contemporary Western economies that
separate children from the world of work, “having infantilized their perceptions and
moral sensibilities with insidious moral inventories and taxonomies, where there experi
ences, intellect, and state of being are constantly measured, quantified, and
evaluated” (Polakow Suransky, 1982, p. 27). She highlights the positioning of the ethnog
rapher of childhood, in that “Becoming an anthropologist of a culture once inhabited, yet
now transcended, involves a dialectical reconciliation with one’s own
historicity” (Polakow Suransky, 1982, p. 29). For Polakow:
Polakow’s two-year study aimed to provide a “finely etched, composite portrait of a mod
ern institutional childhood” (1982, p. 54) as observed in five contrasting early childhood
care and education settings in the American Midwest. These comprised a Jewish
preschool, a for-profit urban center, a Montessori program, an African American commu
nity center, and a Summer Hill inspired “free school,” with a “free play” philosophy in
which she described the children as being “free to create their own landscape” (Polakow
Suransky, 1982, p. 160, emphasis in original). Polakow concludes that “play, as the child’s
praxis upon the world, should not be dichotomized from work: for the playing child is a
working child—engaged in meaningful, purposive activity” (p. 172). In this manner, the
“child becomes herself through play” (Polakow Suransky, 1982, p. 172, emphasis in origi
nal). Polakow also presciently signaled the harm caused to young children attending cor
porate profit-oriented “childcare” settings, which treat the child purely as a source of
profit and reduce the numbers of staff, stating that:
It is under those conditions that a profit turnover can be increased and it is these
very conditions which produce fragmentation, hostility, violence and severe forms
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What do adults perceive as their situation in life? How are values and attitudes
transmitted to children? How do adults structure their immediate environment?
And what subsequent behaviors are observable in the children? In brief, what do
adults do to orient children to adapt to the world in a particular way?
Her year-long study identified distinctive contrasts between the personnel and pedagogi
cal approaches in the two centers. She found that the white middle-class preschool teach
ers generated a program that replicated the individualistic values and practices of white
nuclear families, whilst the African American Head Start teachers worked collectively to
promote values of collectivism via routines and collaboration within group activities.
Also coming from a social justice perspective, the work of Australian scholar Glenda Mac
Naughton has shed light on ways in which young children demonstrated and perpetuated
gender power and racism in an early childhood setting (Mac Naughton, 1993). For Mac
Naughton:
The day-to-day world of the classroom provides a rich source of information about
how children's relationships develop and change over time. The complex ways in
which young children produce and reproduce racism through and in their play are
likely to missed by research that is not situated within a “real-life” context, such
as the early years classroom.
A key focus in the work of the sociologist William Corsaro’s studies in both the United
States and Italy was children’s friendships and cultural groupings as defined, organized,
and negotiated by children within the early childhood setting (Corsaro, 1985, 1996,
2003). One example of this child-negotiated practice is the tendency of children to resist
attempts by other children to enter their play (Eder & Corsaro, 1999). A cursory view
from an adult perspective might judge such resistance as being exclusionary and unfair.
However, through his ethnographic work Corsaro came to understand this behavior as
“protection of interactive space” whereby children were motivated to continue with play
that would otherwise be disrupted by the entry of children who didn’t share prior under
standings around participation in the pre-negotiated format (Eder & Corsaro, 1999, p.
524). Corsaro thus shifted the lens of his study focus from the broad view of children’s
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‘peer interaction’, to the more nuanced recognition of their “creative production of and
participation in a shared peer culture” (Eder & Corsaro, 1999, p. 524).
The work of Joseph Tobin and his colleagues utilizes an innovative approach which differs
from the traditional ethnographic expectation of long-term immersion of the researcher in
the study setting. Tobin and colleagues have applied their “video-cued multivocal ethno
graphic” method across a series of studies which compared early childhood education
practices in different countries (Tobin, 2016; Tobin et al., 1989, 2009, 2013). This method
involves a week of videoing within the early childhood setting, from which a 20-minute
video is produced via selective editing. This is shown first to the teacher whose classroom
was filmed, then to other teachers in the preschool, followed by wider viewing by teach
ers from that same country before finally showing the different country videos to teach
ers from the various participating countries (Tobin et al., 2009). The videos are not con
sidered to be the key source of data but are employed as a tool to simulate discussion
based on the activities or events depicted in the videos. This discussion is recorded, pro
viding insights into the different countries’ teachers’ contrasting understandings of their
own and others’ pedagogies, of the children’s behaviors, and of the values that underpin
both of these. An innovative benefit of this method was that the surprise at another
culture’s very different early childhood practices can result in “spontaneous explication of
indigenous assumptions concerning children that had eluded conventional ethnographic
interviewing” (LeVine, 2007, p. 256). The longitudinal nature of the preschool in three
countries studies has provided further insights drawn from the deep familiarity and
unique intersubjectivities developed over years of co-constructing understandings across
cultural divides (Hayashi & Tobin, 2015; Tobin & Hayashi, 2017). Collaborations between
ethnographers of early childhood education from different countries and theoretical per
spectives can enable wider interpretative lenses resulting in more multifaceted under
standings as demonstrated in the work of Fernie, Davies, Kantor, and McMurray (1993).
The possibilities for rich understandings to be derived from the microcosms represented
in particular ethnographic studies in early childhood are exemplified in such diverse work
as that of Rossholt on the embodiment of infants and toddlers in Norwegian early child
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To interpret what those participants under study are doing and saying, the ethnog
rapher needs to know what daily life is like for them—the physical and institution
al setting in which they live, the daily routine of activities, the beliefs that guide
their actions, and the linguistic and other semiotic systems that mediate all these
contexts and activities.
From an early childhood care and education perspective, ethnographic research shifts the
lens from a positivistic approach of determining and measuring what children are learn
ing, to trying to gain understandings of how they are learning (James, 2011) and how they
are feeling, to processes rather than content, seeing children as informed, competent, en
gaged, and confident social actors who “collectively produce peer cultures” and also con
tribute to their wider culture(s) and societies (Corsaro, 2015, p. 84). Ethnography has
come to be recognized for its potential to “engage with children’s own views and enables
their views and ideas to be rendered accessible” (James, 2011, p. 3). In this vein, ethnog
raphers view children “as competent informants about and interpreters of their own lives
and of the lives of others,” and thus ethnography “is an approach to childhood research
which can employ children’s own accounts centrally within the analysis” (James, 2011, p.
10), as the “experts in their own worlds” (Tickle, 2017, p. 66). As such ethnographic stud
ies can produce “a view of children as competent interpreters” of their social worlds
(James, 2011, p. 2), and it is these rich understandings of children’s “meaningful cultural
worlds” (Ortner, 1991, p. 187, as cited in Eisenhart, 2001, p. 20) that when viewed from a
social justice perspective and critical analysis by educators and education policymakers
can lead to educational and political change.
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Ethnographic research is sustained and highly engaged over time. “By carefully entering
the worlds of children and youth and charting the historicity of significant aspects and
phases of their lives, ethnographers can document crucial changes and transitions that
are essential for understanding socialization as a process of production and
reproduction” (Eder & Corsaro, 1999, p. 522). Children arriving into early childhood set
tings, increasingly at a very early age, are moving daily back and forth between the world
of the early childhood setting and home, often spending more waking hours in the early
childhood care and education setting than they do with their families. This “bimondial”
transitioning on a daily basis means children may be in regular transition between very
different sets of routines, values, and expectations (Zimmer, 1979). Sensitive understand
ing by early childhood care and education practitioners, informed by in-depth ethno
graphical research, has the potential to foster deeper reciprocal relationships between
educators and their families and thus enhance the well-being of the young children who
are the shared concern.
The “richness of ethnographic data” can also inform the theory and practice of early
childhood care and education (Eder & Corsaro, 1999, p. 524). The rich, detailed, and nu
anced pictures of children’s worlds enables a reconceptualization of the previous normal
izing, universalizing nature of social science theorizing. Furthermore, privileging the
voices and perspectives of young children challenges the adultism that has often exclud
ed young children from having influence in decision-making that affects their well-being
and happiness. According to Allison James:
(James, 2011, p. 7)
Ethnographic research has thus “unmuted” children’s voices and positioned them as rec
ognized social actors, enabling their views to be prioritized in decisions affecting them
(James, 2011).
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Key to credible ethnography is the immersion of the researcher(s) in the research site
over an extended period of time, during which extensive fieldnotes are recorded and ana
lyzed on a daily basis. Richly descriptive fieldnotes are key to providing the contextual in
formation, or “thick data” which inform the wider project and enable the refining of data-
collection methods, accumulating over time to serve as the basis of the “thick
description” of the study (Geertz, 1973, as cited in Aubrey et al., 2000, p. 116, emphasis
in original). In addition to fieldnotes, “Standard ethnographic methods include partici
pant observation, face-to-face interviewing, researcher reflection/journaling, and analysis
of archival records” (Eisenhart, 2001, p. 18). Less intensive data-collection methods are
sometimes described as being “informed by” ethnographic approaches. However, ethnog
raphy in early childhood is also an evolving methodology and over the years various re
searchers have incorporated video and photographs, collections of children’s art and nar
ratives, pedagogical documentation, records of group discussions, interviews with par
ents and teachers, and responses emanating from the use of the “photovoice” technique
where children take photos and then explain the significance of these (Tickle, 2017). The
effective application of all of these methods are dependent on building rapport within the
community of the research setting, including center management, teachers, children, and
families.
The ethnographic researcher in an early childhood setting takes on the often complex
role of being a “participant observer.” For Sally Lubeck (1985) this involved spending a
great deal more time than she had anticipated in the working-class African American ear
ly childhood center, helping with cleaning and some of the duties of the teachers, in order
to build trust and rapport. William Corsaro became “Big Bill,” the large somewhat cum
bersome playmate of the children whom he was researching (Coffey, 1999, p. 74; Corsaro,
2003). Valerie Polakow (1982) found her carefully planned individual interview schedule
subverted by the staff of an African American early childhood center who decided to in
stead meet with her as a collective. A particular challenge for ethnography in early child
hood education is the expectation that children be involved both in decision-making re
garding the research process and in interpreting and analyzing data, particularly with re
gard to pre-verbal children, for whom siblings, parents, and teachers can serve as proxy.
In many cases, the children may not have been consulted prior to the permission having
been given by the center management and teachers for the research to begin.
However, during the fieldwork, children are able to participate in terms of negoti
ating the relationship and engagement with the researcher, direct the focus of the
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developing research and advise on the use of further research methods, depend
ing on the researcher’s sensitivity and flexibility.
Tickle (2017, p. 72) stresses that “the art of listening and maintaining ethical integrity”
are of paramount importance to the role of an ethnographer. The outsider’s demeanor of
“naïve enquirer” can be informative, as the researcher negotiates the outsider/insider di
alectic (Becker, 1963, as cited in Aubrey et al., 2000). The researcher(s), once having co-
analyzed with participants from the early childhood care and education setting, has the
responsibility of presenting the insights that have been derived from the study back to
the early childhood center community and to the wider early childhood care and educa
tion sector in ways that are appropriate and meaningful. Ethically, it is a responsibility of
ethnographic researchers to give back as much as they receive from the early childhood
center community in which they are engaged for their project and not be perceived as
taking their data and running, but maintaining the relationships long beyond the period
of the study (Corsaro & Molinari, 2000).
Ethnography as a methodology for researching in early childhood care and education con
texts offers an alternative to “traditional positivist research [that] has historically hierar
chically positioned the participant as the less powerful ‘other’ to the researcher” (Mac
Naughton, Smith, & Davis, 2007, p. 167). Three decades on from the groundbreaking
recognition of children’s rights in the 1989 United Nations Convention on the Rights of
the Child, policymakers, educators and researchers are still facing challenges with re
gard to shifting these commitments beyond rhetoric and into enactment. These chal
lenges are complexified when researchers are working across cultures and with groups of
children, their families, and communities that differ from the background of the
researcher(s). Mac Naughton et al. (2007) highlight ways in which in their Australian con
text they have endeavored to enhance child participation in their studies as well as to ac
knowledge the underlying power effects in relation to the complex interreactive dynamics
of adult/child/gender/ethnicity/class in their research projects. For example, they de
scribe the tensions that arose with regard to respecting children’s anxieties and prefer
ences when invited to choose pseudonyms, an expectation that was challenged by some of
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the children. In their multi-national research on immigrant children and families in early
childhood education settings in the United States and Europe led by Joe Tobin (2016), the
team of co-researchers conducted approximately 150 focus groups with teachers and
families to discuss the 20-minute video made in early childhood setting from that country
along with two further videos from other countries. They were very conscious of the sen
sitivities in relation to the power dynamics with regard to the immigrant parents as well
as the teachers and in particular to the vulnerability that might be felt in relation to the
particular circumstances of some of the parents around language difficulties and cultural
and gender issues (Jungen, Adair, Bove, & Guénif-Souilamas, 2016). For example, facilita
tors struggled with their own cultural assumptions with regard to a father who spoke on
behalf of his wife who remained silent, eventually recognizing the their “ethnocentric and
egocentric view of the role of the women in the family and community” which had led
them to seek to have the silent woman “perform their notion of self, motherhood, and citi
zenship [rather than] to hear her voice in her silence” (Jungen et al., 2016, p. 50).
Ethnographic work in early childhood care and education settings, due to the extensive
and intensive involvement of the researche(s)r in the setting, may involve a degree of
emotional engagement that is not normally associated with the traditional role of “re
searcher.” This may include attending funerals of family members of the early childhood
community, supporting fundraising events, and being sought for advice regarding profes
sional or even personal dilemmas faced by participants. The “personal, emotional and
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An ethical issue pertaining to working with young children that may be initially insur
mountable is that permission for the study to proceed is likely to have been given without
consultation with the children. However, careful attention to processes of informed con
sent in ways that young children who are verbally capable really do understand, as well
as for the parents of pre-verbal children, will go some way to remedying this oversight,
and this may need to be repeated for various uses of data. This might include, for exam
ple, consulting with a child or group of children before showing a video clip of them at an
academic conference. Children will need to be reminded that they have the right to opt
out of data gathering such as being videoed or participating in research-related discus
sions (Konstantoni & Kustatscher, 2016). Researchers also need to be sensitive to non-
verbal clues that the child is uncomfortable and stop recording data as soon as this is no
ticed. At times children may not be able to opt out (James, 2011), such as when there is
videoing taking place of a focus child but of course others are present. Technology can be
applied to blur faces in this instance if selections of the video is going to be shared back
to the center community for co-analyzing and accountability purposes. Particular care
needs to be taken with regard to the use of these videos beyond the immediate research
project. Ethical consents may have been given by the child for the immediate use of video
data within the research context, but these no longer apply beyond the life of the project,
and video captured for the purpose of the study should then be destroyed as per the ethi
cal approval requirements or additional consents obtained at that later date (Konstantoni
& Kustatscher, 2016).
Another issue is the pressure that researchers may face to complete their study in a time
ly fashion as dictated by professional commitments. Ethnographic work takes time, first
to build relationships prior to commencing the data collection, second to collect the rich,
“thick,” descriptive data that characterizes ethnography, and third to co-analyze this ma
terial with participants. A limitation for researchers may lie in their capacity to make
sense of the situation, whether this be due to an “adultist,” adult-centric interpretation of
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children’s actions, in which lies the potential pitfall of re-colonizing children’s worlds
(Cannella & Viruru, 2004). Avoidance of this requires frank acknowledgment of adult/
child power differentials (James, 2011; Mukherji & Albon, 2015), particularly with regard
not only to the authenticity of the researcher(s) to be an adult participant observer along
side children but also to the interpretation of data and presentation of findings. There is a
clear difference between “writing about and working with” (Fine & Weiss, 1998, p. 277,
as cited in Eisenhart, 2001, p. 20, emphasis in original), in relation to this ethics of repre
sentation of the data, and the potential for misrepresentation of interpretations gleaned
from very young children for whom traditional means of “member-checking” may not be
possible. This requires a deep sensitivity and commitment to ongoing self-reflexivity on
the part of researchers (Tickle, 2017), along with a profound respect for children’s
agency both in determining their own “enculturation” and as research participants.
A final issue to be noted is that the majority of ethnographic studies in early childhood
care and education settings have been conducted in the Global North, which may be due
to the predominance of early childhood education institutions in these countries and the
lesser reliance on these in the Global South (Konstantoni & Kustatscher, 2016). Konstan
toni and Kustatscher point out that the production of research from predominantly West
ern contexts raises issues in terms of the underrepresentation of young children in fami
lies and societies that do not use formal early childhood care and education settings. Oth
er questions could be asked about the representation of diverse ethnic groups in research
conducted in settings dominated by the majority culture. “Thus, reflecting on which
young children are included in ethnographic research, and which are not, puts questions
about marginality and the production of knowledge more generally on the
agenda” (Konstantoni & Kustatscher, 2016, p. 233).
Despite the plethora of research that points to the benefits of participation in high-quali
ty, culturally responsive early childhood education, the ongoing marginalization by gov
ernments of early childhood care and education, positioning this outside of the compulso
ry education sector, means that more research is required to demonstrate the compo
nents of early childhood care and education practices that are of the greatest benefit for
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young children and their families. Ethnography in early childhood education has the po
tential to provide this detail via the researchers’ “reflexive attention to relational
aspects” (Konstantoni & Kustatscher, 2016, p. 234).
Conclusion
Ethnography, when done well, is time-consuming, emotionally draining, messy, fraught
with ethical dilemmas, and involves deep commitment to participants beyond the realm of
the research itself. Yet ethnographic methodologies offer pathways toward greater aware
ness of and insights into the lives of people in the communities of focus and are particu
larly valuable in sharing understandings of communities whose lives are less well sup
ported by dominant societies. Cycles of educational failure are perpetuated when policy
makers lack or fail to attend to nuanced understandings of the impacts of complex histori
cal, economic, political, cultural, and social factors on different communities subsumed
within a dominant culture. Children, along with Indigenous peoples, have faced particular
challenges in not being heard while surviving under regimes of colonization, the impacts
of which continue to perpetuate cycles of disadvantage (Cannella & Viruru, 2004; Smith,
1995, 1999/2012). Meanwhile, children in countries in the Global South face increasing
challenges such as the impacts of intensifying climate change (Burton, Mustelin, & Urich,
2011; Lawler, 2011). As Pence and Nsamenang (2008) write, “At the heart of our concern
is that the polyphonic diversity of childhood globally is not being heard, and that ho
mogenising forces are increasing in strength and reach” (p. 2). Ethnography in early
childhood education is not just “a way of looking and a way of seeing” (Wolcott, 2008, p.
41), it is also a way of listening and a way of hearing, since it provides a means of giving
voice to the concerns of young children, their families, communities, and teachers in di
verse settings.
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