This article contests the emphasis that is frequently placed upon child-friendly methods in research with young children. Focusing upon a series of research encounters from a doctoral study of play in an early years classroom, I examine my interactions with the children and their social and material worlds and draw upon these encounters to highlight some emergent and unpredictable elements of research with young children. I argue that these elements call for a decreased emphasis upon the implementation of method towards an openness to uncertainty and an ethical responsiveness to the researcher’s relations with children and their everyday lives. An ethical responsiveness to uncertainty has implications throughout the research process, includ...
This paper explores the concept of children as researchers, positioning this from a rights perspecti...
Whilst young children are affected by educational policy decisions based on research evidence, their...
To engage young children meaningfully in educational research requires careful scrutiny of ethics an...
This paper draws upon research projects in which efforts have been made to find ways of listening to...
The recent foundation of a 'Young Children's Perspectives' special interest group in the European Ea...
The academy has tended to marginalise young children as researchers, even in matters affecting them,...
In the past few decades, a growing body of literature examining children’s perspectives on their own...
Primary school children participating as researchers has become a moral obligation to meet the goal ...
Ambiguities and tensions can arise when children are facilitated to act as ‘primary researchers’ con...
Interest concerning children’s capacity as researchers has increased in recent years yet tends to fo...
Along with the growth of child participatory research an increased focus on its complexity, specific...
This article discusses some of the challenges involved in conducting research with children and youn...
Primary school children participating as researchers has become a moral obligation to meet the goal ...
The recent foundation of a ‘Young Children’s Perspectives’ special interest group in the European Ea...
This article explores methodological and ethical issues of researching with children, drawing on a p...
This paper explores the concept of children as researchers, positioning this from a rights perspecti...
Whilst young children are affected by educational policy decisions based on research evidence, their...
To engage young children meaningfully in educational research requires careful scrutiny of ethics an...
This paper draws upon research projects in which efforts have been made to find ways of listening to...
The recent foundation of a 'Young Children's Perspectives' special interest group in the European Ea...
The academy has tended to marginalise young children as researchers, even in matters affecting them,...
In the past few decades, a growing body of literature examining children’s perspectives on their own...
Primary school children participating as researchers has become a moral obligation to meet the goal ...
Ambiguities and tensions can arise when children are facilitated to act as ‘primary researchers’ con...
Interest concerning children’s capacity as researchers has increased in recent years yet tends to fo...
Along with the growth of child participatory research an increased focus on its complexity, specific...
This article discusses some of the challenges involved in conducting research with children and youn...
Primary school children participating as researchers has become a moral obligation to meet the goal ...
The recent foundation of a ‘Young Children’s Perspectives’ special interest group in the European Ea...
This article explores methodological and ethical issues of researching with children, drawing on a p...
This paper explores the concept of children as researchers, positioning this from a rights perspecti...
Whilst young children are affected by educational policy decisions based on research evidence, their...
To engage young children meaningfully in educational research requires careful scrutiny of ethics an...