Play-Responsive Teaching: Navigating Semiotic Repertoires and Digital Technologies in Early Childhood Education and Care
Abstract
This thesis focuses on teaching in ECEC and how it can be responsive to bi-/multilingual children’s semiotic repertoires and support their participation in activities involving digital technologies. It is grounded in PRECEC theory and draws on the literature and principles of design-based research. The empirical data comprises video recordings of digital storytelling activities in which teachers and children use tablets and a story-making application to co-construct stories. The video recordings are analyzed using Interaction Analysis. Additional data, such as interviews with teachers and principals, field notes, photographs of the preschool environments, and screen recordings are generated to provide detailed descriptions of the context and participants.
The findings demonstrate that teachers’ responsivity to bi-/multilingual children’s semiotic repertoires involved translanguaging practices that acknowledged and included not only multiple languages but also diverse semiotic means of communication. These practices fostered children’s participation in digital storytelling activities and challenged deficit-oriented perspectives. Furthermore, teachers supported children’s participation in digital storytelling activities by being responsive to and mediating their expressions of agency through various strategies. These included (a) asking opinion-seeking questions, (b) being responsive to children’s alterity, (c) meta-communicating their previous suggestions and reminding them of the storyline they created, (d) accepting diverse interpretations of their drawings, (e) inviting children to test their initiatives, (f) assisting them with the application’s tools, and (g) using questions to stimulate their “what if” thinking. Additionally, teachers’ dynamic use of scaffolding and triggering questions emerged as a key teaching practice supporting children’s participation in digital storytelling activities.
This thesis offers practical implications for ECEC teachers’ work regarding multilingualism and the use of digital technologies. It makes empirical and conceptual contributions to the advancement of PRECEC theory and contributes new, empirically grounded insights into theoretical concepts such as responsivity, translanguaging, children’s agency, participation, and social and cultural sustainability.
Parts of work
Shengjergji, S. (2024). Yeah, I am making new stuff! »: responsivity to and negotiations of agency during digital storytelling in preschool. European Early Childhood Education Research Journal, 32(5), 834–851. https://doi.org/10.1080/1350293X.2023.2301595 Shengjergji, S., Myrendal, J., & Pramling, N. (2024). Responding to Children’s Semiotic Repertoires in Collaborative Digital Storytelling. Early Childhood Education Journal. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10643-024-01761-2 Shengjergji, S., Myrendal, J., & Pramling, N. Scaffolding and Triggering: teachers’ questions and children’s
response patterns during digital storytelling activities in preschool.
Degree
Doctor of Philosophy
University
Göteborgs universitet. Utbildningsvetenskapliga fakulteten
University of Gothenburg. Faculty of Education
Institution
Department of Education, Communication and Learning ; Institutionen för pedagogik, kommunikation och lärande
Disputation
Fredagen den 11 april 2025, kl. 10.00, Sal BE036, Hus B, Pedagogen, Göteborgs universitet (Nytt datum och tidpunkt för disputationen med anledning av sjukdom)
Date of defence
2025-04-11
Sofije.shengjergji@gu.se
Date
2025-02-07Author
Shengjergji, Sofije
Keywords
play-responsive teaching
semiotic repertoires
digital technologies
responsivity
agency
participation
preschool
Publication type
Doctoral thesis
ISBN
978-91-7963-199-4 (print)
978-91-7963-200-7 (pdf)
ISSN
0436-1121
Series/Report no.
Gothenburg Studies in Educational Sciences/ 498
Language
eng