Are you listening to me? Understanding children's rights through Hungarian pedagogic practice

Hungarian pedagogues agree that children should be listened to, have their rights recognised, and their voices heard.  The UNCRC recommends that children’s rights should be part of early childhood education, but this is not typical in Hungarian kindergartens and there is little pedagogical material...

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Main Authors: Natalie Canning, Eleonora Teszenyi, Sandor Pálfi
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Journal of Childhood, Education and Society 2022-11-01
Series:Journal of Childhood, Education & Society
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.j-ces.com/index.php/jces/article/view/193
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author Natalie Canning
Eleonora Teszenyi
Sandor Pálfi
author_facet Natalie Canning
Eleonora Teszenyi
Sandor Pálfi
author_sort Natalie Canning
collection DOAJ
description Hungarian pedagogues agree that children should be listened to, have their rights recognised, and their voices heard.  The UNCRC recommends that children’s rights should be part of early childhood education, but this is not typical in Hungarian kindergartens and there is little pedagogical material to support the education of children about their rights.  This paper focuses on 5 kindergartens each typically accommodating over 150 children between the ages of 3-6 years old across Hungary. Six pedagogues worked with multi-age groups (4 kindergartens) and same-age groups (2 kindergartens).  The research adopted participatory methods to gather children’s views recognising them as valuable collaborators.  Children provided insight into their own lives through play based creative activities that focused on eliciting children’s thoughts and feelings.  Pedagogues collected video data using a ‘toolkit’ of children’s play activities during a 6-week period of the COVID-19 pandemic.  Pedagogues reflected on children’s play through a series of online focus groups with emphasis on how children expressed their views and preferences through play. Participants were encouraged to examine the power relationships between children and adults and analyse their role in knowledge production rather than knowledge extraction. Six themes emerged through thematic analysis, mapped to the 4 guiding principles of children’s rights: participation, survival, development and protection.  The findings highlight the juxtaposition between children’s life-as-experienced and life-as-told by adults; the skill of pedagogues to hear and sensitively interpret children’s voices based on their play and the challenge to slow down and reflect on practice.
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spelling doaj.art-5764c259002a4651adcd606ef6fe47712023-02-15T16:09:28ZengJournal of Childhood, Education and SocietyJournal of Childhood, Education & Society2717-638X2022-11-013321823210.37291/2717638X.202233193181Are you listening to me? Understanding children's rights through Hungarian pedagogic practiceNatalie Canning0https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7683-400XEleonora Teszenyi1https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7465-4988Sandor Pálfi2https://orcid.org/0000-0003-0819-0235The Open UniversityThe Open University University of Debrecen Hungarian pedagogues agree that children should be listened to, have their rights recognised, and their voices heard.  The UNCRC recommends that children’s rights should be part of early childhood education, but this is not typical in Hungarian kindergartens and there is little pedagogical material to support the education of children about their rights.  This paper focuses on 5 kindergartens each typically accommodating over 150 children between the ages of 3-6 years old across Hungary. Six pedagogues worked with multi-age groups (4 kindergartens) and same-age groups (2 kindergartens).  The research adopted participatory methods to gather children’s views recognising them as valuable collaborators.  Children provided insight into their own lives through play based creative activities that focused on eliciting children’s thoughts and feelings.  Pedagogues collected video data using a ‘toolkit’ of children’s play activities during a 6-week period of the COVID-19 pandemic.  Pedagogues reflected on children’s play through a series of online focus groups with emphasis on how children expressed their views and preferences through play. Participants were encouraged to examine the power relationships between children and adults and analyse their role in knowledge production rather than knowledge extraction. Six themes emerged through thematic analysis, mapped to the 4 guiding principles of children’s rights: participation, survival, development and protection.  The findings highlight the juxtaposition between children’s life-as-experienced and life-as-told by adults; the skill of pedagogues to hear and sensitively interpret children’s voices based on their play and the challenge to slow down and reflect on practice.https://www.j-ces.com/index.php/jces/article/view/193children’s rightsthematic analysisparticipatory researchpower dynamics
spellingShingle Natalie Canning
Eleonora Teszenyi
Sandor Pálfi
Are you listening to me? Understanding children's rights through Hungarian pedagogic practice
Journal of Childhood, Education & Society
children’s rights
thematic analysis
participatory research
power dynamics
title Are you listening to me? Understanding children's rights through Hungarian pedagogic practice
title_full Are you listening to me? Understanding children's rights through Hungarian pedagogic practice
title_fullStr Are you listening to me? Understanding children's rights through Hungarian pedagogic practice
title_full_unstemmed Are you listening to me? Understanding children's rights through Hungarian pedagogic practice
title_short Are you listening to me? Understanding children's rights through Hungarian pedagogic practice
title_sort are you listening to me understanding children s rights through hungarian pedagogic practice
topic children’s rights
thematic analysis
participatory research
power dynamics
url https://www.j-ces.com/index.php/jces/article/view/193
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