Teachers’ Perceptions of the Cultural Capital of Children and Families with Immigrant Backgrounds in Early Childhood Education
Abstract
:1. Introduction
2. Literature Review
2.1. Finnish ECEC Curriculum
2.2. Bourdieu’s Cultural Capital
3. Data
4. Method
5. Findings
5.1. Embodied
“We do the family photos at the beginning of the autumn season and then the families can tell us about their family’s celebrations, what they do at home and who is in the family, with pictures or words or something else”.(G1T1) (G1T1 = Group 1 Teacher 1)
“But also, you are allowed to be yourself. And so, we create the opportunity for that”.(G4T2)
“We have the home language of each child’s parents, the kind of greetings, flags, and maps. We look at where each person has come from, and then if they naturally come up in conversation, we talk about it and talk”.(G2T1)
“Enabling equality, so that they feel that they are getting something of Finnish culture from this environment. But also that they can give their own culture and be their selves. And that we create the opportunity for that. Just an example of not always making light-faced angels at Christmas, but also dark-faced ones, to give a very small but concrete example”.(G4T2)
“A few years ago, the children spoke the basic Finnish they knew and then it built up over time. But now it’s English that has come, and the children do speak it to each other, regardless of their home language. This is problematic at the moment because the children are not really learning any language properly”.(G2T2)
“The Finnish language is important for them to learn, so that they can communicate with their fellow countrymen who don’t speak the same language they speak at home. And then those skills of making friends and working in a group, because often when the language is missing, it is very difficult to work in the group”.(G3T2)
“Even the children have the question, “Oh, why can’t he put an elf hat on his head, or why can’t he sing Christmas songs?”(G1T1)
“And there’s just a lot of discussion with parents about what Christmas is, and it’s more related to the Finnish cultural heritage”.(G1T2)
“Everyone can play with everyone and we don’t have boys and girls’ clothes and toys. So there is a discussion about them from behind the culture”.(G1T3)
5.2. Objectified
“Many times, we have done it in such a way that if there has been a celebration, we have been able to use songs or materials, for example, a Vietnamese dragon game, Arabic songs or African songs”.(G2T1)
“We still have the Lukulumo app for this year’s preschoolers. It has stories in several languages, so you can listen to the same story or the same book in Finnish and then in your language, so there are translations. We also familiarise ourselves with each other’s languages so that we don’t speak them mindlessly, but we practice some songs and then some stories or greetings and practice how to say some words in your language”.(G1T3)
“Last year, we listened to children’s songs in different languages. The older ones like to try to learn some of the words in their different languages. They have a lot of fun trying to pronounce them themselves”.(G3T2)
“A lot of people invite us to their homes, so we visited different families’ homes”.(G1T3)
“All sorts of things have happened over the years. We have exhibitions where families bring something from their own culture or a children’s rights day, a day where they bring something, like an old toy of a parent and stuff like that. We have had more of an exhibition tradition where parents are challenged to participate”.(G3T1)
“A boy dresses up, even in a skirt. Wants to play with something like this, so when the parents see it, they are a bit surprised and question whether boys can wear something like this”.(G1T2)
“Yeah, and in the games, you don’t get just that much yet, that everyone gets to play with everyone, and we don’t have boys and girls clothes and games. So there is a discussion about them from behind the culture: no, this is not for boys, or these dresses or dolls are not for boys. No clothes of this kind or colours of this kind”.(G1T3)
5.3. Institutionalised
“Families with more children, where someone has already gone to school, have the understanding and knowledge. The perception changes pretty quickly when the trust in us comes”.(G1T3)
“I have experienced personally, particularly in the preschool, that some families put a lot of emphasis on learning. And it is of course due to the fact that their children go to school much earlier than here in Finland. Pre-primary education here, for example, does not aim to help children learn to read and write. And when you tell parents this, it can be a terrible disappointment because then what are you doing there if you don’t teach these things? You have to talk a lot about what the goal of preschool education is here”.(G2T2)
“Sometimes, of course, when a child has a special need for support and is approached, there may be a conflict: ‘You do this and that here in Finland. We need to open up these issues and talk about the fact that we have not really done so and so, but that it is in the child’s best interests that the child receives all the support and needs that they require”.(G2T1)
“In some cultures, there is a strong fear or idea that in Finland, if a child is in need of support, the social authorities will come and take the children away. This kind of thinking is quite deep-rooted in some cases. Things are talked openly, and we are told what it really means here, and parents may have a completely wrong idea or picture of what a particular support measure means”.(G2T2)
“We have, for example, an annual calendar that looks at and considers different religions and cultures. Then, of course, what is easiest to consider, if there is something to serve, of course, and of course not to have a program that offends any culture, so that at the Christmas party, some Christmas carols, the “Glory to God” verse is not drawn to a close”.(G3T1)
“They may not participate. The ECEC respects their culture, and we can listen to what they need”.(G4T3)
“When there are religious celebrations, we ask what they are, and then the children are allowed to tell us. We are introduced to just what it is and what it means to them and what it involves”.(G1T3)
“I thought very carefully in the religious context that there would not be any kind of conflict related to religion. For example, last week we had a funny situation here when the City of Helsinki had sent us staff a Christmas gift of this kind of concert, streamed, which could be watched online. We turned it on during our coffee break from our big screen, and it was a concert filmed in a church. We couldn’t watch it during the coffee break, because we have children from other cultures, so we had to stop it”.(G4T1)
6. Discussion
Author Contributions
Funding
Institutional Review Board Statement
Informed Consent Statement
Data Availability Statement
Conflicts of Interest
References
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No. of Participants | 11 |
---|---|
Average length of time per interview | 44 min avg. |
Participants | 11 ECEC Teachers |
Type of interview (pair, group)/focus groups | 2 × pair 2 × group |
Mode of interviews | Online |
Continuously reflection on cultural capital | Open coding: Greetings and learning about family habits Christmas in Finland Family celebrations Organising celebrations in ECEC Making everyone feel welcome at the celebrations Outdoor activities in all weather conditions The right equipment for the weather Reporting on what has been done during the day |
Category creation: Celebrations in ECEC How families work Families celebrations Outdoor activities in ECEC ECEC practices in Finland | |
Abstraction: Families’ ways of doing things (How families work, Family celebrations) Different ways of doing things in ECEC (Celebrations in ECEC, Outdoor activities in ECEC, ECEC practices in Finland) |
Embodied | Objectified | Institutionalised |
---|---|---|
families’ ways of doing things | use of diverse languages in ECEC | ECEC activities |
language learning | various types of homes | new education system |
different ways of doing things in ECEC | various kinds of games played in relation to diverse habits | approaches taken towards what and how ECEC is celebrated |
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Lavanti, L.; Harju-Luukkainen, H.; Kuusisto, A. Teachers’ Perceptions of the Cultural Capital of Children and Families with Immigrant Backgrounds in Early Childhood Education. Educ. Sci. 2023, 13, 977. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci13100977
Lavanti L, Harju-Luukkainen H, Kuusisto A. Teachers’ Perceptions of the Cultural Capital of Children and Families with Immigrant Backgrounds in Early Childhood Education. Education Sciences. 2023; 13(10):977. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci13100977
Chicago/Turabian StyleLavanti, Lassi, Heidi Harju-Luukkainen, and Arniika Kuusisto. 2023. "Teachers’ Perceptions of the Cultural Capital of Children and Families with Immigrant Backgrounds in Early Childhood Education" Education Sciences 13, no. 10: 977. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci13100977
APA StyleLavanti, L., Harju-Luukkainen, H., & Kuusisto, A. (2023). Teachers’ Perceptions of the Cultural Capital of Children and Families with Immigrant Backgrounds in Early Childhood Education. Education Sciences, 13(10), 977. https://doi.org/10.3390/educsci13100977