What Happened to the Creative in the Creative Curriculum?
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Description
This empirically-grounded commentary questions the basis for New York City Public Schools’ (NYCPS) adoption of the Teaching Strategies products—the Creative Curriculum (CC) and Teaching Strategies GOLD—as the mandated curriculum and assessment systems for early childhood education (ECE) programs administered by the New York City Public Schools. In an analysis shaped by our hybrid positionalities as early childhood educators, parents, policy makers, and researchers, we argue that this decision is a local case of neoliberalism’s simultaneous narrowing of educational quality and a transfer of public funding into private hands under the guise of the free market. Our commentary, which is augmented by examples from our research and practice, begins with an overview of New York City’s (NYC) ECE system, contextualized within national systems issues in ECE. This provides important framing for discussing the evolution of NYC’s ECE curricula and assessment as the city expanded its public preschool programs. We end by considering how U.S. ECE was ensnared by the Global Education Reform Movement (GERM), sounding a call to action for scholars, advocates, and educators to mobilize against a (seemingly) unassailable GERM through organizing and coalition-building.
Publication Date
Summer 7-21-2025
Publisher
Global Education Review
City
New York
Disciplines
Curriculum and Instruction | Early Childhood Education | Education Policy | Social and Philosophical Foundations of Education
Recommended Citation
Peters, L., Nagasawa, M. K., Mavrides Calderon, M., Kerlin, A., Frazier, H., Ferholt, B., Clarke Yardy, E., Brickley, M., & Algava, A. (2025). What Happened to the Creative in the Creative Curriculum?. Global Education Review. https://educate.bankstreet.edu/sc/17