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What is Sociohistorical Psychology

Supporting Children’s Well-Being During Early Childhood Transition to School
A school within psychology heavily influenced by the works of Lev Vygotsky and later neo-Vygotskyan scholars. The sociohistorical perspective integrates individual (intrapersonal), social (interpersonal), and cultural/historical contributors to human development and posits that they are not meaningfully separable. Within this view, individual children’s development, family processes, and institutions like schooling are all contextualized within social context and historical time. In this view, goals of development are understood as socially constructed within cultural and historical contexts.
Published in Chapter:
Qualitative Inquiry in Early Childhood Education Research: Interviewing to Study Schools' Recognition of Funds of Knowledge in the Kindergarten Transition
Karlyn R. Adams-Wiggins (Portland State University, USA) and Hebbah El-Moslimany (Rutgers University, USA)
DOI: 10.4018/978-1-7998-4435-8.ch016
Abstract
Recent research on the kindergarten transition highlights the importance of alignment across contexts to provide high-quality interactions. Yet, we know less about how families make sense of their experiences in the transition. This chapter explores families' experiences with the kindergarten transition from a funds of knowledge perspective. Results from a qualitative interview study of schools' recognition of families' funds of knowledge during the kindergarten transition are presented. Families in the study discussed parent-initiated involvement and disconnects between school perceptions of their home culture and their own self understandings. The authors argue that understanding families' own experiences with the transition is an important step in conceptualizing families' involvement in their children's education.
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