Pedagogical quality in preschool : an issue of perspectives
Abstract
The main aims of this thesis on the pedagogical quality in preschool are: to define and
describe a pedagogical concept of quality; to explore how quality is experienced and valued
from different perspectives; to find out what characterises a pedagogical environment of high
quality; and to discuss how those characteristics can be used to improve the quality of preschool.
The thesis comprises four studies, a meta-perspective of the results of these and a
theoretical framework. Two studies were part of a project, which aimed to improve the pedagogical
quality in 20 preschools. The use of both external and self-evaluations of quality with
ECERS gave an opportunity to compare these evaluations with one another as well as using
the results to plan the content of a targeted development programme. In the third study, three
preschools evaluated to be of low quality and three of good quality were selected for in-depth
studies. Thirty-nine five-year-old children were interviewed about their conceptions of
decision-making and how they experienced their possibilities for exercising influence in their
own preschool. In a comparative study between Germany and Sweden, researchers made
parallel and independent evaluations of the quality with ECERS in 20 preschools, 10 in each
country. The underlying perceptual process was documented and reconstructed and presented
in the form of five different themes.
From a meta-perspective of the results, the concept of pedagogical quality is defined
and described on a primary level, which can be seen as one step in the development of a
theory of pedagogical quality. The results confirm that high quality in preschool is related to
the competence of the teacher and show that activities in the participating preschools are
rarely learning-orientated. This indicates that there is a difference between the children’s
experience of exercising influence and the level of quality and shows that it is vital for the
children to be involved in decision-making. The results clearly show that external and selfevaluations
of quality differ, and that there is a tendency for teachers in low-quality
preschools to overrate their own quality, while teachers in high-quality preschools seem to
evaluate their quality lower than the external evaluator. The results confirm that structural
aspects are no guarantee for high quality and show that low-quality preschools are more
vulnerable to decreases in resources. Further, the results show that the quality in preschool
can be enhanced through competence development even while organisational changes and
financial cutbacks are taking place. To allow these conditions to exist and develop, at least
four perspectives must be focused on during research on quality and in the development work,
that is: the quality of interactions, the perspective of the teacher, the perspective of the child,
and the perspective of society.
The study suggests that a theory of pedagogical quality needs to be developed, to define
the concept further, and that the complexity of pedagogical quality requires broad research
approaches and an inclusion of different perspectives.
University
University of Gothenburg. Faculty of Education
Institution
Department of Education ; Institutionen för pedagogik och didaktik
Disputation
sal D3 50 Pedagogen Frölundag 118 Mölndal kl. 09.15
Date of defence
2001-06-01
Publisher
Göteborg : Acta Universitatis Gothoburgensis
View/ Open
Date
2001Author
Sheridan, Sonja
Keywords
Pedagogical quality
external evaluations of pedagogical quality
selfevaluations of pedagogical quality
a model of competence development
children’s rights
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
91-7346-403-1
ISSN
0436-1121
Series/Report no.
Göteborg studies in educational sciences
160
Language
eng