Abstract
Drawing on existing work in the area of creativity and early years education, this paper maps the process of an exploratory study which sought to identify what characterizes ‘possibility thinking’ as an aspect of creativity in young children’s learning. With the aim of developing a framework for identifying ‘possibility thinking’ in the contexts of three early years settings, the authors explore key tenets of a model for conceptualizing (and rethinking) ‘possibility thinking’ and attempt to reconcile some of the methodological challenges inherent in documenting this aspect of creativity in early years contexts. With the co‐participation of five early years teachers as researchers, three university‐based researchers worked collaboratively, in a funnel‐like process, over the three‐phase development of the project. With the emphasis on mapping the developing conceptualizations of ‘possibility thinking’ and the appropriateness of multimodal methods in naturalistic enquiry, the research team explicates and argues the need for sharing methodological approaches in researching young children’s thinking. The data arising from this research provide powerful insights into the characteristics of ‘possibility thinking’ which most successfully promote creativity, and the authors conclude with a consideration of the implications for future research, practice and practitioner research in early years contexts.
Acknowledgements
The authors wish to thank Susanne Jasilek, for video data collection, Anne Meredith, for detailed event analysis of part of this material, and Peter Woods, for his early involvement in the theoretical and methodological frame to the work. Their work contributed valuably to the later re‐analysis and overall synthesis undertaken by the authors and represented in this paper.
Notes
1. This transcript is cited directly and the analysis is drawn from a report on a selected section of video material, completed by Anne Meredith as research assistant commissioned to begin the event analysis phase of the project (Meredith, Citation2005). The report focused on part of the video material collected by Susanne Jasileck, research assistant.