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Featured researches published by Anna Kilderry.


International Journal of Early Years Education | 2010

Becoming Numerate with Information and Communications Technologies in the Twenty-First Century

Nicola Yelland; Anna Kilderry

This article draws on data from a three‐year Australian Research Council‐funded study that examined the ways in which young children become numerate in the twenty‐first century. We were interested in the authentic problem‐solving contexts that we believe are required to create meaningful learning. This being so, our basic tenet was that such experiences should involve the use of information and communications technologies (ICT) where relevant, but not in tokenistic ways. This article highlights learning conditions in which young children can become numerate in contemporary times. We consider ‘academic’ or ‘school‐based’ mathematical tasks in the context of a Mathematical Tasks Continuum. This continuum was conceptualised to enable focused and detailed thinking about the scope and range of mathematical tasks that young children are able to engage within contemporary school contexts. The data from this study show that most of the tasks the children experienced in early years mathematics classes were unidimensional in their make up. That is, they focus on the acquisition of specific skills and then they are practiced in disembedded contexts. We suggest that the framework created in the form of the Mathematical Tasks Continuum can facilitate teachers’ thinking about the possible ways in which they could extend children’s academic work in primary school mathematics, so that the process of becoming numerate becomes more easily related to authentic activities that they are likely to experience in everyday life.


Journal of Curriculum Studies | 2015

The intensification of performativity in early childhood education

Anna Kilderry

Operating within a neoliberal education reform context, performativity and teaching in schools has been a focus of study for a number of years. However, less is known about the effects of performativity on teaching and curriculum in the early childhood (preschool) context. Making a case for the intensification of performativity in Australian early childhood education, this paper reports on findings from a doctoral study and draws on research literature from the past fourteen years to illustrate how performative measures have increasingly affected teaching and curriculum. The way that performativity has intensified is discussed in three chronological phases, performativity emerging, consolidating and normalised. Teacher interview transcripts and curricular related policies were analysed using critical discourse analysis and Ranson’s typology of accountability regimes. Findings reveal that early childhood teachers have different ways of responding to performativity, with the teacher featured in this paper displaying three types of performative accountability: anxiety, confidence, and disregard. An implication arising from this paper’s findings illustrates how the effects of performativity on teaching and curriculum can be complex, contradictory and at times, unintended.


Childhood education | 2003

ICT and Numeracy in the Knowledge Era: Creating Contexts for New Understandings.

Anna Kilderry; Nicola Yelland; Vicky Lazaridis; Silvana Dragicevic

Drawing on the experience of two first-year classrooms in Melbourne, Australia, this article explores numeracy learning within an information and communication technology (ICT) environment. Included are examples of how mathematical skills can be promoted and learned in such a way that children can extend their use to practical, problem-solving contexts, thus becoming numerate.


Early childhood education policies in Asia Pacific: advances in theory and practice | 2017

Early Childhood Education Policies in Australia

Bridie Raban; Anna Kilderry

This chapter introduces, explores, and analyzes Australian policies with respect to early childhood education (ECE). It does this by using the 3A2S framework: accessibility, affordability, accountability, sustainability, and social justice. The last decade has seen large-scale and significant changes to the Australian early childhood sector, an ambitious reform agenda that is still in process. The major features of these changes have seen early childhood education move from a sanctuary for children’s health and safety while their parents worked to settings advocating for young children’s educational development. Discourse has shifted from ECE viewed as a “cost” to government and families to an “investment” for the future of the social and economic growth of the country, leading to a more highly educated workforce.


Early Years | 2017

‘Out of the loop’: early childhood educators gaining confidence with unfamiliar policy discourse

Anna Kilderry; Andrea Nolan; Caroline Scott

Abstract It has been seven years since the Early Years Learning Framework (EYLF) was introduced in Australia and four years since the National Quality Standard (NQS) was implemented. To gain insight into how educators are understanding practice in the Australian early childhood and care context, the study draws on a praxeological frame where educators have the opportunity to inquire and critically reflect on practice in a supported research environment. Data were analysed using critical discourse analysis, enabling a close examination of participant reflections and understandings about practice. Findings reveal that educators are confident when describing their teaching using familiar educational discourse, whereas educators were apprehensive when confronted with new and unfamiliar concepts. The third finding illustrates the ways educators gain confidence with unfamiliar policy discourse. The study’s findings add to limited empirical evidence about how early childhood educators understand key concepts introduced by the EYLF and NQS.


Critical issues in early childhood | 2005

Against the tide: new ways for early childhood education

Nicola Yelland; Anna Kilderry


Australian Journal of Early Childhood | 2004

Critical pedagogy: A useful framework for thinking about early childhood curriculum

Anna Kilderry


Australian Journal of Early Childhood | 2004

Multiple Ways of Knowing and Seeing: Reflections on the Renewed Vigour in Early Childhood Research.

Anna Kilderry; Andrea Nolan; Karen Noble


Critical issues in early childhood | 2005

Postmodernism, passion and potential for future childhoods

Nicola Yelland; Anna Kilderry


Engaging play | 2010

Postdevelopmentalism and professional learning: implications for understanding the relationship between play and pedagogy

Andrea Nolan; Anna Kilderry

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Karen Noble

University of Southern Queensland

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Bridie Raban

University of Melbourne

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