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New, Rebecca S. – Theory Into Practice, 2007
This article situates Reggio Emilia's municipally funded early childhood program within the city's cultural traditions of resistance and collaboration and considers what it is about this highly localized program that is appealing and useful to contemporary school reform initiatives. Five features of Reggio Emilia's approach to early education are…
Descriptors: Educational Change, Teacher Researchers, School Restructuring, Child Development
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New, Rebecca S. – Canadian Children, 1997
Examines the influences of the Reggio Emilia approach on a reconceptualization of quality and developmentally appropriate practices in early-childhood education. Concludes that the determination of quality approaches to children's care and education requires a functional system of relations in which all voices count. A commitment to quality…
Descriptors: Developmentally Appropriate Practices, Early Childhood Education, Educational Practices, Educational Quality
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New, Rebecca S. – Educational Leadership, 2003
The Reggio Emilia approach to education reveals new ways for promoting children's academic learning; offers documentation as a tool for studying, sharing, and planning children's education experiences; and provokes a new way to think about the role of the teacher. (Contains 17 references.) (MLF)
Descriptors: Classroom Environment, Early Childhood Education, Foreign Countries, Parent School Relationship
New, Rebecca S. – 2001
International perspectives on the care and education of preschool children that seem to be of greatest interest in the United States are those directly linked to prevailing concerns in American early childhood education. In this context, many early childhood specialists have explored the implications of Reggio Emilia's work for the theory,…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Educational Environment, Educational Philosophy, Educational Practices
New, Rebecca S. – 2000
International perspectives on the care and education of preschool children that seem to be of greatest interest in the United States are those directly linked to prevailing concerns in American early childhood education. In this context, many early childhood specialists have explored the implications of Reggio Emilia's work for the theory,…
Descriptors: Early Childhood Education, Educational Environment, Educational Philosophy, Educational Practices
New, Rebecca S. – 1993
An internationally acclaimed program that challenges American notions of appropriate early education is the municipal early childhood program in Reggio Emilia, Italy. The town's liberal financial support of child care and citizen membership in school committees indicate strong community support. Parents are involved in school policy discussions,…
Descriptors: Class Activities, Community Support, Developmentally Appropriate Practices, Educational Environment
New, Rebecca S. – 1990
This paper explores implications of the preschool program in Reggio Emilia, Italy for the early childhood education curriculum in the United States. Reggio Emilia's municipal early childhood program incorporates high quality day care with a carefully articulated philosophy of education. The curriculum of the preschools is based on a project…
Descriptors: Art Products, Communication (Thought Transfer), Curriculum Development, Early Childhood Education
New, Rebecca S. – Early Childhood Research & Practice, 1999
The basic premise of this paper is that decisions about children and their early educational experiences are culturally situated and, by definition, will reflect varying interpretations of appropriate educational aims and strategies. Drawing upon three decades of experience in the Italian culture as well as preliminary findings from a…
Descriptors: Adult Child Relationship, Cultural Influences, Educational Objectives, Family School Relationship
New, Rebecca S. – 1989
The municipal early childhood program in Reggio Emilia, Italy, one of the most renowned examples of community-supported child care systems in the Western world, is described. A brief historical overview is followed by discussion of such aspects of the Reggio Emilia project as the high level of exchange between families and schools, the…
Descriptors: Aesthetic Values, Boards of Education, Childrens Art, Community Programs