We asked 92 children in North West England, aged 2–17, if they were children and what it meant to be a child. Our findings show that not all children think they are a ‘child’. Although different age groups defined ‘childness’ in different ways, children reproduced normative Western discourses of childhood, including ideas which subordinate them. The children in our study seemed unable to articulate their capabilities and contributions. We argue that children and adults need to co‐produce positive definitions of childness to facilitate adult acceptance of children's participation in society and continue the struggle against adultism
Commentaries on childhood, whilst abundant, largely depend on secondary sources, namely adults. This...
What does it mean to be a child of our time in a learning society? What role does temporality play f...
How to conceptualize children and childhood are intrinsic to the ways of understanding education. Th...
We asked 92 children in North West England, aged 2–17, if they were children and what it meant to be...
We asked 92 children in North West England, aged 2–17, if they were children and what it meant to be...
Debate about the definition of a ‘child’ occurs in multi-disciplinary contexts, most recently locate...
This paper aims to report part of the findings from a project that addressed young people’s percepti...
Participating in conversation involves the co-construction of ideas, folk-beliefs and narratives con...
Children’s experiences are unique to themselves; they can neither be perceived as separate from the ...
Throughout history, notions of what constitutes a child and defines childhood have been strongly con...
This study aimed to investigate the responses of university students (late adolescents) about their ...
Both education and parenting became increasingly ‘child-centred’, or ‘progressive’, in post-war Engl...
Based on the assumption that childhood is a social construct, this qualitative study explores how ch...
This article regards a particular way through which adults take children into consideration and list...
What is a child? The concept of childhood is so familiar that we tend to assume its universality. As...
Commentaries on childhood, whilst abundant, largely depend on secondary sources, namely adults. This...
What does it mean to be a child of our time in a learning society? What role does temporality play f...
How to conceptualize children and childhood are intrinsic to the ways of understanding education. Th...
We asked 92 children in North West England, aged 2–17, if they were children and what it meant to be...
We asked 92 children in North West England, aged 2–17, if they were children and what it meant to be...
Debate about the definition of a ‘child’ occurs in multi-disciplinary contexts, most recently locate...
This paper aims to report part of the findings from a project that addressed young people’s percepti...
Participating in conversation involves the co-construction of ideas, folk-beliefs and narratives con...
Children’s experiences are unique to themselves; they can neither be perceived as separate from the ...
Throughout history, notions of what constitutes a child and defines childhood have been strongly con...
This study aimed to investigate the responses of university students (late adolescents) about their ...
Both education and parenting became increasingly ‘child-centred’, or ‘progressive’, in post-war Engl...
Based on the assumption that childhood is a social construct, this qualitative study explores how ch...
This article regards a particular way through which adults take children into consideration and list...
What is a child? The concept of childhood is so familiar that we tend to assume its universality. As...
Commentaries on childhood, whilst abundant, largely depend on secondary sources, namely adults. This...
What does it mean to be a child of our time in a learning society? What role does temporality play f...
How to conceptualize children and childhood are intrinsic to the ways of understanding education. Th...