2012
DOI: 10.1017/cha.2012.27
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Thinking about Practice in Integrated Children's Services: Considering Transdisciplinarity

Abstract: Integrated service delivery in the early childhood education and care sector is burgeoning as a direct result of government agendas in Australia that privilege services for young children and families, especially those considered most vulnerable and at risk. In many cases this means reviewing and revising current practice to work more collaboratively with other professionals. This paper reports the findings of one aspect of a larger Australian study entitled: 'Developing and sustaining pedagogical leadership i… Show more

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Cited by 9 publications
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“…This is re ective of calls for a focus on prevention of adversity from research, policy and practice perspectives (38,39). Shared goals and common experiences have been shown to facilitate collaboration across health, social, community and education sectors to better meet the needs of families living with adversity (40,41). Conversely, a lack of common frameworks and vision between sectors and providers is a well established barrier to effective intersectoral collaboration (42).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…This is re ective of calls for a focus on prevention of adversity from research, policy and practice perspectives (38,39). Shared goals and common experiences have been shown to facilitate collaboration across health, social, community and education sectors to better meet the needs of families living with adversity (40,41). Conversely, a lack of common frameworks and vision between sectors and providers is a well established barrier to effective intersectoral collaboration (42).…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In ECFE, the transdisciplinary approach is significant as "it involves the 'client' (the child and their family) as a member of the transdisciplinary team, acting as a key contributor in developing goals and implementing plans" [21]. The related literature reports that when transdisciplinary professionals work collaboratively among themselves, as well as with the caregivers to support young children at risk for developmental delay or those who have special needs, several key benefits have been identified, including promoting young children's developmental skills, accelerating the developmental process, and nurturing productive learning styles [22][23][24]. Reaping these benefits, however, requires various strategies to provide effective transdisciplinary intervention practices.…”
Section: Challenges In Implementing a Transdisciplinary Ecfe Approachmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…A growing challenge for the early childhood sector in WA is the scarcity of early childhood professionals who hold both knowledge of leadership and knowledge of the discipline (early childhood learning and development) along with the skills to apply these in practice (Bricker, cited in, Muijs, Aubrey, Harris & Briggs, 2004). The changes in the early childhood landscape necessitate a reconceptualisation of the leadership model to one of a multi-disciplinary team approach which negates the notion of 'silos of practice' (Nolan, Cartmel & Macfarlane, 2012). In addition, a new understanding of the concept of leadership which recognises that leadership is not only positional and equated with 'being in charge' (Clark, 2012, p. 192) is important.…”
Section: Introductionmentioning
confidence: 99%