This study aims to provide a thick description of home education in Italy, combining emic and etic perspectives. It investigates homeeducating parents’ beliefs on early childhood education, e.g, children’s agency, individualised and child-centered practice. A growing number of parents are choosing to homeschool their children (Gaither, 2017), especially after the pandemic (Heuer & Donovan, 2021). Parenting choices are shaped by cultural beliefs about education (Harkness & Super, 1992) which are constantly changing in societies. Parental narratives are analysed through a socio-cultural perspective (Rogoff, 2003) which allows moving beyond the explicit level to investigate implicit ‘folk pedagogies’ (Bruner, 1996) and ‘parental ethnotheories’ (Harkness & Super, 1992). An ethnographic mixed-methods study was carried out within an interpretive paradigm (Creswell et al., 2006) and an ecological approach (LeCompte & Schensul, 2010). Participant observations, interviews and survey data were the main inquiry methods. Reflexive-thematic and descriptive statistical analysis were combined. The project was approved by the University of Milano-Bicocca ethics committee. Informed consent was obtained from all participants. Findings show the first parental motivation to home educate is to provide “tailor-made” and “child-centred” education. Home-educating parents seem to embrace an agentic pedagogy, involving children as protagonists of their learning process. However, the potential lack of peer group socialization emerges as a key concern in their narratives. The study sheds light on a controversial phenomenon in need of further research, also involving children’s voices. It contributes to the “regulation question” of home schooling in Italy, where the legal framework of the practice is still evolving.

Chinazzi, A., Bove, C. (2023). Children's education through the lens of home-educating parents. Insights from an ethnographic study in Italy. In 31st EECERA ANNUAL CONFERENCE Children’s Curiosity, Agency and Participation: Challenges for Professional Action and Development, CONFERENCE PROCEEDINGS: Book of Abstracts (pp.33-34).

Children's education through the lens of home-educating parents. Insights from an ethnographic study in Italy

Anna Chinazzi
Primo
;
Chiara Bove
Secondo
2023

Abstract

This study aims to provide a thick description of home education in Italy, combining emic and etic perspectives. It investigates homeeducating parents’ beliefs on early childhood education, e.g, children’s agency, individualised and child-centered practice. A growing number of parents are choosing to homeschool their children (Gaither, 2017), especially after the pandemic (Heuer & Donovan, 2021). Parenting choices are shaped by cultural beliefs about education (Harkness & Super, 1992) which are constantly changing in societies. Parental narratives are analysed through a socio-cultural perspective (Rogoff, 2003) which allows moving beyond the explicit level to investigate implicit ‘folk pedagogies’ (Bruner, 1996) and ‘parental ethnotheories’ (Harkness & Super, 1992). An ethnographic mixed-methods study was carried out within an interpretive paradigm (Creswell et al., 2006) and an ecological approach (LeCompte & Schensul, 2010). Participant observations, interviews and survey data were the main inquiry methods. Reflexive-thematic and descriptive statistical analysis were combined. The project was approved by the University of Milano-Bicocca ethics committee. Informed consent was obtained from all participants. Findings show the first parental motivation to home educate is to provide “tailor-made” and “child-centred” education. Home-educating parents seem to embrace an agentic pedagogy, involving children as protagonists of their learning process. However, the potential lack of peer group socialization emerges as a key concern in their narratives. The study sheds light on a controversial phenomenon in need of further research, also involving children’s voices. It contributes to the “regulation question” of home schooling in Italy, where the legal framework of the practice is still evolving.
abstract + slide
parenting, children’s agency, home education , sociocultural perspective, child-centred practice
English
EECERA 2023 - Children’s Curiosity, Agency and Participation: Challenges for Professional Action and Development - 30th August – 2nd September 2023
2023
31st EECERA ANNUAL CONFERENCE Children’s Curiosity, Agency and Participation: Challenges for Professional Action and Development, CONFERENCE PROCEEDINGS: Book of Abstracts
2023
33
34
A20
https://www.eecera.org/wp-content/uploads/2023/08/Abstract-book-updated-25.08.23.pdf
none
Chinazzi, A., Bove, C. (2023). Children's education through the lens of home-educating parents. Insights from an ethnographic study in Italy. In 31st EECERA ANNUAL CONFERENCE Children’s Curiosity, Agency and Participation: Challenges for Professional Action and Development, CONFERENCE PROCEEDINGS: Book of Abstracts (pp.33-34).
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/10281/435719
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