Skip to content
Ethical Research Involving Children
  • Home
  • About
    • About
    • Philosophy
    • Project Partners
    • Acknowledgements
  • Charter
  • Guidance
    • Guidance
    • Harms and Benefits
    • Informed Consent
    • Privacy and Confidentiality
    • Payment and Compensation
  • Good Practice
    • Reflexive Tool
    • Responsibilities
  • Case Studies
  • Library
    • Library
    • Glossary
  • Blog

Tag: early childhood

Exploring the nexus between participatory methods and ethics in early childhood research.

Graham, A., Powell, M., & Truscott, J. (2016). Exploring the nexus between participatory methods and ethics in early childhood research. Australasian Journal of Early Childhood, 41(1), pp. 82-89.

Research work as curriculum work in New Zealand early childhood settings: What should be taught and learned?

Gunn, A. C. (2015). Research work as curriculum work in New Zealand early childhood settings: What should be taught and learned? Journal of Pedagogy, 6(2), pp. 103-117.

Interrupting listening to children: Researching with children’s secret places in early childhood settings.

Moore, D. (2014). Interrupting listening to children: Researching with children’s secret places in early childhood settings. Australasian Journal of Early Childhood, 39(2), pp. 4-11.

Working With young children as co-researchers: An approach informed by the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child.

Lundy, L., McEvoy, L., & Byrne, B. (2011). Working With young children as co-researchers: An approach informed by the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child. Early Education and Development, 22(5), pp. 714-736.

Seeking children’s perspectives: A respectful layered research approach.

Merewether, J., & Fleet, A. (2014). Seeking children’s perspectives: A respectful layered research approach. Early Child Development and Care, 184(6), pp. 897-914

Introducing children’s perspectives and participation in research.

Harcourt, D., & Einarsdottir, J. (2011). Introducing children’s perspectives and participation in research. European Early Childhood Education Research Journal, 19(3), pp. 301-307.

Infants as Others: Uncertainties, difficulties and (im)possibilities in researching infants’ lives.

Elwick, S., Bradley, B., & Sumsion, J. (2014). Infants as Others: Uncertainties, difficulties and (im)possibilities in researching infants’ lives. International Journal of Qualitative Studies in Education, 27(2), pp. 196-213.

Video observations of children’s perspectives on their lived experiences: Challenges in the relations between the researcher and children.

Pálmadóttir, H., & Einarsdóttir, J. (2016). Video observations of children’s perspectives on their lived experiences: Challenges in the relations between the researcher and children. European Early Childhood Education Research Journal, 24(5), pp. 721-733.

Ethical considerations of children’s digital image-making and image-audiancing in early childhood environments.

Eckhoff, A. (2015). Ethical considerations of children’s digital image-making and image-audiancing in early childhood environments. Early Child Development and Care, 185(10), pp. 1617-1628.

The rights of pre-verbal children involved in video-recorded research.

Mudaly, N. (2015). The rights of pre-verbal children involved in video-recorded research. The International Journal of Children’s Rights, 23(2), pp. 391-404.

← Previous
Next →

Partners

Centre for Children and Young People
UNICEF

Contact

General
FAQ
Take Down Notice

Socials

Linkedin X-twitter Instagram

ERIC

The ERIC website emerged primarily through a collaboration between the Centre for Children and Young People at Southern Cross University, Australia, and UNICEF’s Office of Research, Innocenti. The website content is based on the following publication: Graham, A., Powell, M.A., Taylor, N., Anderson, D. & Fitzgerald, R. (2013). Ethical Research Involving Children. UNICEF: Florence. (Available in English, français, español, 한국어, Türkçe and Bahasa Indonesia).

All case studies, blogs posts, photos and library material remain the property of the cited author or publisher.

Other website content is licensed under a Creative Commons Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License (CC-BY licence) © UNICEF 2022. Subsequent website updates are undertaken by the ERIC team at Southern Cross University in line with this license. Questions can be directed to ccyp@scu.edu.au.

Newsletter

© 2024 Child Ethics . Made by c55 Creative
All Posts
  • All Posts
  • Posts (1023)
  • Pages (28)
  • CM Tooltip Glossary Pro+ (73)