Abstract:
This article examines the curriculum and pedagogies for ethical practice in a childcare centre
in Vancouver, Canada. I draw on Smith’s new model of childhood to examine narratives and
practices around the ‘responsible child’ in a context where child developmental theories continue
to influence pedagogical decisions. I argue that the elevation of self-regulation strategies as a
pedagogical approach narrows children’s sense of responsibility to a mere individual trait. In
addition, it fails to cultivate children’s interdependence and multiple relationships with humans
and more-than-human others. Self-regulation-centred pedagogies also reinforce neoliberal
and colonial discourses of the child anchored in human exceptionality, choice, autonomy and
rationality. This article proposes that pre-service and in-service early childhood education needs to
support educators in doing the analytical, embodied and reflective work to shift from educational
paradigms founded in neoliberal and colonial rationalities towards an ethic that acknowledges
children and educators’ interdependence and that cultivates good relations with humans and
more-than-human others.