Publications (page under construction)
CEIEC Diversity Doll publications
- CEIEC, 2007, Diversity doll stories: examples and samples.BECS Students. CEIEC, The University of Melbourne. ($10.00 plus GST).
- MacNaughton, G. 2001, Dolls for equity: foregrounding children's voices in learning respect and unlearning unfairness. CEIEC, The University of Melbourne. ($10.00 plus GST).
Email: klal@unimelb.edu.au to order CEIEC publications.
CEIEC research publications linked to the Diversity Dolls
- MACNAUGHTON, G. - 'Blushes and birthday parties': telling silences in young children's constructions of 'race'. Journal for Australian Research in Early Childhood Education, 8 (1): pp. 41-51. (2001).
- MACNAUGHTON, G. - Silences and subtexts in immigrant and non-immigrant's children's understandings of diversity. Childhood Education. 78 (1): pp. 30-36. (2001).
- MACNAUGHTON, G. -. Dolls for equity: foregrounding children's voices in learning respect and unlearning unfairness. New Zealand Council for Educational Research Early Childhood Folio : pp. 27-30. (2001).
- MACNAUGHTON, G. & DAVIS, K. - Beyond 'othering': Rethinking Approaches to Teaching Young Anglo-Australian Children about Indigenous Australians. Contemporary Issues in Early Childhood. 2 (1): pp. 83-93. (2001).
Other publications
The following publications are helpful resources. Please note that they are not for sale from the CEIEC.
Books
- Brown, B. (2001). Combating Discrimination: Persona Dolls in Action. London: Trentham Books. This book is a very practical introduction to the rationale, processes and possibilities for using Persona Dolls to combat discrimination in early childhood services.
- Dowell, C. (Ed) (1996). Looking In, Looking Out: Redefining Child Care and Early Education in a Diverse Society, California: A California Tomorrow Publication. This book offers detailed advice and resources to those wanting to provide culturally inclusive programs for young children and their families.
- Dau, E. (Ed). (2001). The Anti-Bias Approach in Early Childhood. 2nd Ed. Sydney: Prentice Hall. A great introduction to the principles and practices of anti-bias education with young children.
Online articles
PDF downloads
Other
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