Journal Articles
Is whole-day kindergarten better than half-day kindergarten? A mixed methods study of Chinese educators' perceptions
- Is whole-day kindergarten better than half-day kindergarten? A mixed methods study of Chinese educators' perceptions
- Children and Youth Services Review, 93, 365-377, 2018
- Elsevier
- 2018
-
- Hong Kong
-
- 1997.7 onwards
-
- Pre-Primary Education
- Decades of research in the West cannot determine whether the whole-day or half-day kindergarten program is more beneficial to children's development. In Hong Kong, despite strong public demand for the whole-day program, mixed research findings have led the government to support the half-day program only. As a supplement to a large-scale 2-year longitudinal study, this mixed methods study adopted Donabedian's (2003) approach to explore this complex social-educational issue with reference to Hong Kong-Chinese educators’ perceptions of the whole-day kindergarten program. The authors surveyed 180 kindergarten educators from 15 randomly sampled kindergartens and conducted interviews with 30 of these educators one year later. The results showed that the whole-day program allowed for structural, curricular, and pedagogical improvement, enhanced children's development, and eased families’ childcare concerns. The disadvantages, however, were reduced parent–child time and heavier tuition fees. The findings imply that no “best” program exists, only a better program “fit.” Program selection should reflect family preferences and needs while ensuring high-quality learning opportunities and active parental involvement. The whole-day program is recommended for families that lack a stimulating home environment and childcare resources; the half-day program might be a better fit for financially able families with adequate childcare resources. The authors argue that the supply and affordability of the free whole-day program should better match the needs of families. Copyright © 2018 Elsevier Ltd. All rights reserved.
-
- English
- Journal Articles
-
- 01907409
- https://bibliography.lib.eduhk.hk/en/bibs/577c200a
- 2023-11-09
Recent Journal Articles
Fostering non-aviation undergraduates’ aviation literacy in an online aviation laboratory: Effects on students’ perceptions, motivation, industry optimismJournal Articles
Design and validation of the AI literacy questionnaire: The affective, behavioural, cognitive and ethical approachJournal Articles
Empowering student self-regulated learning and science education through ChatGPT: A pioneering pilot studyJournal Articles
Using digital story writing as a pedagogy to develop AI literacy among primary studentsJournal Articles
Business (teaching) as usual amid the COVID-19 pandemic: A case study of online teaching practice in Hong KongJournal Articles
Augmented reality book design for teaching and learning architectural heritage: Educational heritage in Hong Kong Central and Western DistrictJournal Articles
Physical activities in Hong Kong kindergartens: Grade-level differences and venue utilizationJournal Articles
Gaining or losing momentum? The perceived educational role of university student hostels in Hong Kong from 1980 to 2020Journal Articles