ORCID
- Verity Campbell-Barr: 0000-0002-2622-4331
Abstract
This paper considers the complexities and debates surrounding the concept of curriculum in Early Childhood Education (ECE). The paper highlights the tension between traditional, structured curriculum models found in schooling and the more flexible, child-centred and play-based approaches advocated in ECE. Starting from the premise that curriculum theory in ECE is underdeveloped, the discussion draws on Bernstein’s Pedagogic Device to provide a theoretical framework with which to analyse how knowledge is produced and recontextualised in ECE in both the official (state) and pedagogic field. Central to the recontextualisation are theories of child development and how they provide an underlying course of study for ECE curriculum. While the official recontextualising field is critiqued for a focus on developmental goals, the child-centred philosophies of the pedagogic recontextualising field create a hidden curriculum, with implicit symbolic systems (e.g. language, resources, the environment) providing signals to children as to what is expected of them.
DOI Link
Publication Date
2025-07-30
Publication Title
European Early Childhood Education Research Journal
ISSN
1350-293X
Acceptance Date
2025-07-09
Deposit Date
2025-09-19
Additional Links
Keywords
child development, child-centred, Curriculum, hidden curriculum, quality education, recontextualisation
Creative Commons License

This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.
Recommended Citation
Campbell-Barr, V. (2025) 'Early Childhood Education – A Unique and Quasi-Hidden Curriculum', European Early Childhood Education Research Journal, . Available at: 10.1080/1350293X.2025.2532557
