Creating a sense of togetherness through humor and laughter in early childhood education

Research on the role of daycare in children's lives shows many benefits for children's social competence. In the Malaysian context, where the number of childcare settings is growing rapidly, early childhood education research remains limited within the field of understanding the complexity...

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Published in:International Journal of Early Childhood Learning
Main Author: Yunus F.W.; Dalli C.
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Common Ground Research Networks 2019
Online Access:https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85084312285&doi=10.18848%2f2327-7939%2fCGP%2fv26i02%2f21-34&partnerID=40&md5=7da787462aff65abc58687cc0c1196d5
id 2-s2.0-85084312285
spelling 2-s2.0-85084312285
Yunus F.W.; Dalli C.
Creating a sense of togetherness through humor and laughter in early childhood education
2019
International Journal of Early Childhood Learning
26
2
10.18848/2327-7939/CGP/v26i02/21-34
https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85084312285&doi=10.18848%2f2327-7939%2fCGP%2fv26i02%2f21-34&partnerID=40&md5=7da787462aff65abc58687cc0c1196d5
Research on the role of daycare in children's lives shows many benefits for children's social competence. In the Malaysian context, where the number of childcare settings is growing rapidly, early childhood education research remains limited within the field of understanding the complexity of young children's social competence. This study opens up this under-researched field in Malaysia through qualitative case studies in three early childhood centers. Each case study involved video-recorded observations of the children's interactions with peers. The aim of the study was to examine how children create a sense of togetherness and exercise social competence among themselves at their daycare centers. The observations of children's peer interactions revealed complex negotiations by the children who were actively creating a sense of togetherness at their daycare centers through humor and laughter. In the process of these interactions, children exercised the skills of becoming socially competent participants in their center. Considering data from the perspective of Loizou's theory of the absurd, instances of humor and laughter were classified around two very similar themes-incongruous use of objects and making funny sounds. The findings provide a picture of how these humorous acts not only created feeling of amusement and joy in children but also constructed a sense of togetherness. This has implications for understanding the roles of daycare regarding children's peer interactions and social competence as well as how caregivers can enhance children's learning to make a social difference. © 2019 Common Ground Research Networks, Farhana Wan Yunus, Carmen Dalli.
Common Ground Research Networks
23277939
English
Article

author Yunus F.W.; Dalli C.
spellingShingle Yunus F.W.; Dalli C.
Creating a sense of togetherness through humor and laughter in early childhood education
author_facet Yunus F.W.; Dalli C.
author_sort Yunus F.W.; Dalli C.
title Creating a sense of togetherness through humor and laughter in early childhood education
title_short Creating a sense of togetherness through humor and laughter in early childhood education
title_full Creating a sense of togetherness through humor and laughter in early childhood education
title_fullStr Creating a sense of togetherness through humor and laughter in early childhood education
title_full_unstemmed Creating a sense of togetherness through humor and laughter in early childhood education
title_sort Creating a sense of togetherness through humor and laughter in early childhood education
publishDate 2019
container_title International Journal of Early Childhood Learning
container_volume 26
container_issue 2
doi_str_mv 10.18848/2327-7939/CGP/v26i02/21-34
url https://www.scopus.com/inward/record.uri?eid=2-s2.0-85084312285&doi=10.18848%2f2327-7939%2fCGP%2fv26i02%2f21-34&partnerID=40&md5=7da787462aff65abc58687cc0c1196d5
description Research on the role of daycare in children's lives shows many benefits for children's social competence. In the Malaysian context, where the number of childcare settings is growing rapidly, early childhood education research remains limited within the field of understanding the complexity of young children's social competence. This study opens up this under-researched field in Malaysia through qualitative case studies in three early childhood centers. Each case study involved video-recorded observations of the children's interactions with peers. The aim of the study was to examine how children create a sense of togetherness and exercise social competence among themselves at their daycare centers. The observations of children's peer interactions revealed complex negotiations by the children who were actively creating a sense of togetherness at their daycare centers through humor and laughter. In the process of these interactions, children exercised the skills of becoming socially competent participants in their center. Considering data from the perspective of Loizou's theory of the absurd, instances of humor and laughter were classified around two very similar themes-incongruous use of objects and making funny sounds. The findings provide a picture of how these humorous acts not only created feeling of amusement and joy in children but also constructed a sense of togetherness. This has implications for understanding the roles of daycare regarding children's peer interactions and social competence as well as how caregivers can enhance children's learning to make a social difference. © 2019 Common Ground Research Networks, Farhana Wan Yunus, Carmen Dalli.
publisher Common Ground Research Networks
issn 23277939
language English
format Article
accesstype
record_format scopus
collection Scopus
_version_ 1820775468430786560