Early life and education
Helen Bradwell was born inThis asa few extraordinary years that shaped my perceptions of people, places, cultures, and geography forever… I had long been cognisant that my childhood experiences and perceptions had been shaped by colonial politics that had taken my father to Kenya. We were living in Kenya during the worst of the European-termed ‘Mau Mau Emergency’ or ‘Troubles’; although there were uprisings, slaughter, repressions, and incarcerations, they were mainly distant from theHer schooling in Kenya was initially provided by the New Zealand correspondence school, with her mother organising lessons and materials sent from New Zealand; however, it was impractical to send work back to New Zealand to be marked. From the age of almost 7 she attended Kericho School, a Kenyan boarding school, which provided a progressive education. In 1955 the family returned to New Zealand, initially to Oamaru and then in 1958 to Christchurch. While her parents easily returned to their former lifestyle, centred on teaching and the Salvation Army, Helen found it "very strange ... and somewhat constraining after my experiences in Africa". The schooling she found to be regimented and narrow minded, compared to that of her school in Kenya. From 1960 to 1963 she attendedKisii Kisii may refer to: * Kisii, Kenya, a municipality and the capital of Kisii County * Kisii County, one of the 47 counties of Kenya * Kisii District, a former district of Kenya * Gucha District, in Kenya, also known as ''South Kisii District'' * Nya ...district and its Gusii people. My childhood understandings of these times were limited and selective.
Academic career 1964–1982
Primary school teaching career
Helen trained as a primary school teacher at Christchurch Teachers' College in 1964 - 1965. She recalled:Having survived secondary school, all of my sixth form girlfriends and I went to Teachers' College. We went for interviews in our school uniforms, and we all got accepted. Years later I found out that theShe receiving her Trained Teacher's Certificate in 1966, and from then to 1974 taught classes mainly of 5 to 6-year-old children, in Auckland and Wellington, as well as spending 1971 - 1972 teaching in British infant schools, where she found:962 Year 962 ( CMLXII) was a common year starting on Wednesday of the Julian calendar. Events By place Byzantine Empire * December – Arab–Byzantine wars – Sack of Aleppo: A Byzantine expeditionary force under General Nike ...Currie Report actually recommended that 50% of sixth form girls go into teaching. They more than met their goal at our school - an indication of the lack of good long-term careers advice about what was possible for a young woman in the 1960s.
Unlike New Zealand schools, where there were so few opportunities and role models for women, there was a complete career structure, and you could become a headmistress.
Student, mother and childcare worker
Helen's first child was born in 1974, 18 months after her return to New Zealand, and although she wanted to continue her teaching career, the reality was that in Wellington there was no childcare for babies. This ended her career as a primary school teacher. She said:I still feel angry about trying to talk with the headmaster of my school. I was on maternity leave. He urged me to resign and, silly me, I did - with tears I might add.Helen then concentrated on finishing her B.A. in anthropology at
Activism in childcare
In 1979 Victoria University financially supported Helen to attend both the ''First Early Childhood Convention'' in Christchurch (a feature of the ''The NZ Association of Child Care Centres
The NZACCC, set up in 1963 by a group led byThe Early Childhood Workers Union
At the 1979 annual conference of the NZACCC, Helen met... the Employers' Association upset conciliation proceedings in Hamilton by forcing the issue to go to the Arbitration Court.The ECWU and the Hamilton Daycare Centres Trust ... were willing parties to a conciliation council. The Employers' Association is concerned that an award settled, say in Hamilton would act as leverage for the settlement of a national or other awards.Although in the Arbitration Court the Union and the Trust won the right to negotiate, the 1982 wage and price freeze (see
Life in Hamilton, 1983–1995
At the end of 1983 Helen left her marriage and Wellington and moved to Hamilton, where her new partner, and later husband, Crispin Gardiner was located. Her third child was born there in 1986. She continued her engagement in childcare politics, commenced, and in 1988 completed aAcademic career, 1987–2016
Hamilton Teachers' College and University of Waikato
In 1987 Helen was appointed as a lecturer in early childhood at Hamilton Teachers' College, and later, after an institutional merger at the beginning of 1991, became a senior lecturer and head of the Department of Early Childhood Studies at theAt that stage amilton Teacher's College wasonly doing kindergarten training, and my background was childcare. The college was reluctant to employ me, but I knew the world was about to change, and within a few months of being there the new three-year training was announced by the Lange Government. ... there would be integrated training for childcare and kindergarten services. This was an ideal opportunity to be in at the ground floor and a crucial area for a more political approach.In 1989, paralleling the Tomorrow's Schools reforms of Education, the Before Five reforms of Early Childhood Education took place, with the principal aim of unifying the disparate forms of Early Childhood education in New Zealand, in terms of funding, regulation and teacher training. Helen chaired the working party on National Guidelines, Regulations and Charters. The recommendations resulting from the Before Five process were broadly speaking implemented by the Lange-Palmer government, with regulations implementing quality standards and substantial funding increases. The funding was to be implemented via a four-year staged plan.
But the hard-fought-for funding scheme was only in place ora year before the new national Government halted the staged implementation and cut back the funding where it mattered most — infant funding. It was as though the men in there got a glimpse of what it might mean for the state to take some real responsibility for sharing childrearing and didn't like it. 1991 was a year of great disillusionment for me.
Development of Te Whāriki
A significant aspect of the new Early Childhood system was the requirement for an educational curriculum for the Early Childhood sector, which by law included pre-school children of all ages, from new-born to six years old. In 1990 the Ministry of Education put out a request for proposals to develop such a curriculum. The responsibilities of the successful contractor were, in summary: * To produce a final draft of curriculum guidelines for early childhood education by a process involving 10 - 12 practitioners and experts * To select a reference group with appropriate geographical, gender and cultural balance, whose composition was to be approved by the Ministry of Education. * To consult with relevant early Childhood Organisations. Helen and her colleague Margaret Carr (a Waikato lecturer also originally in the Hamilton Teachers' College) with the overwhelming support both Early Childhood organisations and of Early Childhood academics developed a proposal and won the contract, which was signed in December 1990. In order to adequately represent Māori and kōhanga reo, they consulted with the Kohanga Reo Trust, who asked that they work in consultation withLater career
Helen was appointed to the first New Zealand professorial Chair in Early Childhood Education at Victoria University of Wellington in 1995, and in 2005 she was appointed as Professor of Education and Head of Faculty of Education at theAccolades
* 1990: Life Member NZ Childcare Association (Te Rito Maioha - Early Childhood Education) * 2014-2016: President of the International Froebel Society *Selected works
Books
May has written numerous books, mainly on subjects related to education and education policy for early-years teaching.History and politics of early childhood education
* ''Mind That Child: Childcare as a Social and Political Issue in New Zealand''; BlackBerry Press, Wellington, 1985 * ''The Discovery of Early Childhood, the development of services for the care and education of very young children'', Auckland University Press and NZCER Press, Auckland and Wellington, 1st ed 1997, 2nd ed 2013 * ''Politics in the Playground. The world of early childhood in postwar New Zealand''; 1st ed. Bridget Williams Books with NZCER, Wellington, 2001; 2nd ed. University of Otago Press, Dunedin, 2009; 3rd ed University of Otago Press, 2019 * ''Concerning Women Considering Children: Battles of the Childcare Association, 1963-2003''; Te Tari Puna Ora o Aotearoa-NZCA, Wellington, 1st ed 2003, 2nd ed (e-book on mebooks.co.nz) 2013 * ''Ngā āhuatanga hurihuri o te tiaki tamariki. The changing fortunes of childcare 2003-2013''; Te Tari Puna Ora o Aoteraoa—New Zealand Childcare Association, Wellington, 2013 (Also published as an e-book on mebooks.co.nz) * ''People, places and play in the ‘child gardens’ of Dunedin, Dunedin Kindergartens - Mana Manaaki Puawai O Otepoti 125 years old''; Dunedin Kindergartens, 2014 * ''Growing a kindergarten movement: its peoples, purposes and politics''; Wellington, NZCER Press, 2017 (with K. Bethell) * ''A Celebration of Women in Early Childhood''; Waikato Education Centre, Hamilton, 1990 (Edited, with J Mitchell) * ''A Celebration of Early Childhood Volume II''; Waikato Education Centre, Hamilton, 1993 (Edited, with J Mitchell) * ''Kindergarten Narratives on Froebelian Education: Transnational Investigations''; London, Bloomsbury Press, 2016 (Edited with K Nawrotzki, and L Prochner) * ''For Women and Children: A Tribute to Geraldine McDonald''; Wellington, NZCER Press, 2019 (Edited with S Middleton) * ''Ngā kohinga kōrero ate aumangea: Kia mana te ara kōhungahunga ki Aotearoa. Life Stories on the Frontline: Growing a childcare movement in Aotearoa''; Wellington, Te Rito Maiaoha Early Childhodhood New Zealand, 2021 (Edited with A Card and J Carroll-Lind)New Zealand schooling and teaching
* ''Teachers Talk Teaching 1915-1995, early childhood, school, teachers college'', Dunmore Press, Palmerston North, 1997 (with S. Middleton). * ''School Beginnings: a 19th century colonial story''; NZCER Press, Wellington, 2005 * ''I am five and I go to School: the work and play of early education in New Zealand''; University of Otago Press, Dunedin, 2011 * ''Working for Children and Social Change: Tracing the endeavours of three Scottish lady teachers who immigrated to New Zealand in the early 20th century''; The Red House, Wellington, 2021 (with K Bethell)History of education
* ''Empire Education and Indigenous Childhood: Missionary infant schools in three British colonies; Ashgate , England Publishing Series on Childhood, 2014 (with B. Kaur and L. Prochner) * ''Re-imagining Teaching in Early 20th Century Experimental Schools''; Palgrave Macmillan (New York), 2020 (with A A Hai, K Nawrotski, L Prochner and Y Volkanova)Social history
* ''Minding Children: Managing Men: Conflict and Compromise in the Lives of Postwar Pakeha Women''; Bridget Williams Books, Wellington, 1992Personal memoirs
* ''Secrets Searches and Surprises: Catherine Jubilee Robertson 1890–1979, Cyril Robertson Bradwell 1916-2008''; Wellington, 2018 * ''Recollections of a Childhood in Kenya''; The Red House, Wellington, 2021Journal articles and book chapters
* May, H., & Carr, M. (2016). Te Whāriki: A uniquely woven curriculum shaping policy, pedagogy and practice in Aotearoa New Zealand. In T. David, K. Goouch & S. Powell (Eds.), ''Routledge international handbook of philosophies and theories of early childhood education and care''. (pp. 316–326). Abingdon, UK: Routledge. * May, Helen. "'Minding','Working','Teaching': Childcare in Aotearoa/New Zealand, 1940s—2000s." ''Contemporary Issues in Early Childhood'' 8, no. 2 (2007): 133–143. * Moss, Peter, Gunilla Dahlberg, Susan Grieshaber, Susanna Mantovani, Helen May, Alan Pence, Sylvie Rayna, Beth Blue Swadener, and Michel Vandenbroeck. "The organisation for economic co-operation and development’s international early learning study: Opening for debate and contestation." ''Contemporary Issues in Early Childhood'' 17, no. 3 (2016): 343–351.References
External links
* * (NZCER) * (University of Otago Press) {{DEFAULTSORT:May, Helen New Zealand women academics Academic staff of Victoria University of Wellington Victoria University of Wellington alumni Academic staff of the University of Otago Academic staff of the University of Waikato Living people 1947 births New Zealand women writers Officers of the New Zealand Order of Merit New Zealand schoolteachers Early childhood education in New Zealand