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The Importance of Being a Little More Inclusive

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By Karen N. Nemeth

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How did you like the new book, The Importance of Being Little: What Preschoolers Really Need from Grownups, by Erika Christakis?  It is so appealing that readers might not immediately realize what’s missing:  there is no inclusion of diversity. This is not a book about all preschoolers – it is a book about a certain kind of preschooler. If you are the parent of that certain kind of preschooler, you might feel this book really speaks to you. But, if you are an early childhood educator, you are going to realize that Christakis is not talking about the diverse, complex group that you work with every day. Do you know why that is not OK? By ignoring the different languages, cultures, abilities and experiences of young children and the demands this diversity places on teachers, an author belittles their importance. By writing about “preschoolers” while leaving out more than a quarter of
them, the author perpetuates the view that children who don’t fit the majority mold are outliers, not worth talking about.  Since MOST early childhood classrooms have children who don’t speak English or who don’t learn in the typical majority way, this book is also belittling most teachers. It is like saying the real world they work in is just not important enough to talk about.

What If Christakis wrote this book about preschoolers, but only talked about boys? Would that be OK? What if she only talked about mothers and female teachers because she believed men don’t have roles in the lives of little children? Would that be OK? So, why is it OK to write a book on what preschoolers need but fail to address the 25% of little kids in the U.S. that do not speak the same language as their teacher or the 15% of little kids that have disabilities, or the millions of children who come from backgrounds with health issues, violence, trauma, instability, inadequate nutrition, nonexistent early literacy and many other factors that affect their learning needs? Don’t they need to be little, too?

Will policy makers read this and think it is trendy to go back to ignoring diversity? Will foundation executives and think tank thinkers follow this assumption that all children are the same? Will legislators considering budgets for early education and care think they can go back to saving money by removing supports for the millions of young children who speak different languages or who need other adaptations to succeed? Will district and program administrators, college professors, researchers, journalists, app developers, curriculum writers, librarians, social service providers, health care professionals – anyone who picks up this book – get just a little push in the direction of not worrying about diverse learners?  Can we afford to take a step backward? In a time when we are fighting an uphill battle because our field has lagged so far behind the rapid growth of diversity, a step backward is a very bad thing.

Christakis does a wonderful job of covering key components of child development and this thought-provoking book is sure to bring about positive discussion in our field. But, she also talks about play and interaction without discussing how language barriers might affect that play and the needs of those children. She talks about how children should learn the sounds of letters and the meanings of words, how parents should interact with children and how they should participate in their child’s school, but mentions nothing about how different languages, abilities, experiences and cultures should be considered. She talks about curriculum models, assessments and outcomes as if all we need is English. She cites pages and pages of research, policy and opinion – but nothing from the great researchers of our time who have taught us so much about all of the different needs and abilities of young children. Respected colleague, R. Scott Wiley, a kindergarten teacher and blogger, reminded us this week that unexamined practice is the most dangerous thing and “we’ve always done it this way” is the most dangerous phrase in early childhood education. I cannot, in good conscience, let these questions go unexamined just because that’s the way we always wrote about children in the past.

You know I have appointed myself the “annoyer in chief” on behalf of young children and families who speak different languages.  When a new book or article appears amid lots of buzz, I am ready to zoom in, but I’m happy to have you join in the discussion on either side.  I am hoping for a future when every reader will look for, ask for…. demand… attention to the diverse needs of young children. Heaven knows, pretty much everyone who works with young children has to address those diverse needs. My position, developed with Dr. Pam Brillante, is that “all early childhood educators should be prepared to work effectively with children from Different Experiences, Cultures, Abilities and Languages (DECAL)”. To make up for past neglect, we have to push harder, demand more. Sometimes, that does seem annoying.  I’m not writing this as a review of the quality of Christakis’ book. I’m writing this to nudge reflection and discussion so future writers will move the field forward by including all little kids.  All of them. Not just the easy ones.

Christakis, E. (2016) The Importance of Being Little: What Preschoolers Really Need from           Grownups, Viking Press.

Nemeth, K., Brillante, P. Mullen, L. (2015) “Naming the New, Inclusive Early Childhood   Education: All Teachers Ready for DECAL” Language Castle, 8/7/2015         http://www.languagecastle.com/2015/08/decalforinclusiveearlyed/

Wiley, R.S. (2016) “The Most Dangerous Phrase?”, Brick by Brick, 2/19/2016        http://bit.ly/1oI7ngt

 

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