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Preschool At Three Cultures : America, Japan, And The United States

Decent Essays

In the book Preschool in Three Cultures Revisited, the authors, Joseph Tobin, Yeh Hsueh, and Mayumi Karasawa, look into preschools in three cultures: China, Japan, and the United States. Prior to writing this books, the authors did research on one preschool in each of the countries to see what the learning styles were and how they compared to one another. Then they went back some twenty years later to see if there were any changes in the preschools. The changes, or lack thereof, brought about the book Preschool in Three Cultures Revisited. I had a lot of reactions to this book. Each culture had things that kind of stood out to me as different and similiar, but first I will talk about the Chinese preschool, Daguan. One changes that stool out in particular to me was the sections where the authors talked about the toilets. In 1985, the children were brought to a latrine with long troughs on either side of the room (Tobin, Haueh, & Karasawa, 2009, p. 45). None of the children were talking during this time and the teacher just went around handing out toilet paper to the children (Tobin et al., 2009, p.45). Later upon revisitation, the bathrooms still had troughs but there is plumbing and children are more social during this time (Tobin et al., 2009, p.45). The children still go to the bathroom in groups but there is more of a separation between males and females, and I read that there were some separate stalls (Tobin et al., 2009, p. 45). The whole thing that kind of stood

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