Chapter One: Introduction
Chapter Two: Being Formative
Chapter Three: Being Fair
Chapter Four: Recognising Powerful Frameworks
Chapter Five: Managing Ambiguity
Chapter Six: Sharing Responsibility with the Learners
Chapter Seven: Developing Partnerships with Families
Chapter Eight: Constructing Progress
Chapter Nine: A Learning Story Workshop
Margaret Carr is a Professor of Education at the Wilf Malcolm
Institute of Educational Research at the University of Waikato, in
Hamilton, New Zealand. Before she joined the Faculty of Education
at Waikato, she was a geographer at Victoria University in
Wellington, New Zealand, where there was a strong focus by the
professors on social and cultural change. This formed a
background for her interest in the role of education in society,
and in Hamilton she gained a qualification in early childhood
education and worked as a kindergarten teacher before becoming a
lecturer in education at the university. Her PhD thesis was
entitled ‘Technological Practice in Early Childhood as a
Dispositional Milieu’. New Zealand has provided a number of
opportunities for professors to research with early childhood
teachers on topics chosen by the teachers, and Margaret has
frequently published with teachers. Learning Stories as an
assessment practice was developed for the 1996 Te Whariki
bicultural curriculum (later revised in 2017); the development of
narrative assessment is told in the 2001 Sage book, Assessment in
Early Childhood Settings: Learning Stories, and further developed
in the 2012 Sage book Learning Stories: Constructing Learner
Identities in Early Education. The latter book was co-authored with
Wendy Lee, and this partnership has combined academic and
professional wisdom in many publications and presentations over
many years.
Wendy Lee is passionate about Early Childhood Education (ECE) in
New Zealand and has developed a deep interest in issues related to
the curriculum and leadership. She is a strong advocate for
Learning Stories and the power of documentation to strengthen
learner identity of children. Over the past 50 years, her career
has focused on building strong, reflective and robust learning
communities through her roles as teacher, unionist, lecturer,
community development worker, city councillor, manager,
professional development facilitator and researcher. Today, as
director of the Educational Leadership Project Ltd she and her team
provide training and advice to ECE centres throughout New Zealand
and in a wide range of other countries. Over the past 20 years, she
has had the privilege of collaborating with Professor Margaret Carr
on a number of ECE research projects, including co-directing the
National Early Childhood Assessment and Learning Exemplar Project.
This produced the Kei Tua o te Pae books on assessment for
improving learning in the NZ ECE sector. As the influence of
research in the area of Learning Stories and Assessment in New
Zealand grows and extends more into ECE practice, Wendy has been
increasingly requested to present its influence to a wider
international audience including teachers in Ireland, England,
Scotland, Germany, Japan, Belgium, the USA, Kazakhstan, Canada,
Australia and China.
![]() |
Ask a Question About this Product More... |
![]() |