Bobrowicz Katarzyna, Gracia Pablo, Teuber Ziwen, Greiff Samuel
Department of Behavioural and Cognitive Sciences, University of Luxembourg, Esch-sur-Alzette, Luxembourg.
Psychology and Neuroscience of Cognition, Faculté de Psychologie, Logopédie et Sciences de l'Éducation, Université de Liège, Liège, Belgium.
PLoS One. 2025 Jul 2;20(7):e0326021. doi: 10.1371/journal.pone.0326021. eCollection 2025.
Governments worldwide have reformed early childhood education (ECE) to equip young people with competitive skills for an increasingly specialized workforce. These reforms have coincided with a widespread acceptance of meritocratic beliefs holding that talent and effort, rather than uncontrollable factors (e.g., luck, social context), determine individuals' lifetime success and achievement. This study examines whether recent ECE reforms may have promoted an economic meritocratic mindset that favors skills linked to individual competition for future achievement. Data came from a total of 92 documents published between 1999 and 2023, including ECE advisory reports from international organizations and government-endorsed ECE curricula from 53 countries across Africa, the Americas, Asia, Europe, and Oceania. A step-by-step thematic analysis was conducted through combining qualitative text coding with statistical analyses applied to the emerging themes. Findings show that: (1) while experts and policymakers recognized the importance of ECE access and quality, they defined social cohesion primarily through economic indicators; (2) ECE documents prioritized cognitive skills and -mostly among international organizations- socioemotional skills as key for individual achievement, but citizenship skills were largely omitted; (3) individual agency and responsibility within ECE contexts were defined as central to educational and lifetime success, while uncontrollable factors (e.g., intergenerational transmission of advantage, family origin) were largely neglected; (4) both international organizations and governments strongly embraced an economic meritocratic mindset in ECE, implying that life outcomes mainly depend on talent and effort, obscuring the role of support and solidarity from peers, relatives, communities or institutions. Overall, this study suggests that ECE reforms have globally reinforced the pitfalls of meritocracy by promoting educational policies that prioritize competition over cooperation, individualism over solidarity, and the widespread notion that talent and effort, rather than uncontrollable factors such as luck or social context, determine individuals' lifetime success in society.
世界各国政府都对幼儿教育(ECE)进行了改革,以使年轻人具备竞争技能,适应日益专业化的劳动力市场。这些改革恰逢精英主义信念的广泛接受,即认为天赋和努力而非不可控因素(如运气、社会环境)决定个人一生的成功和成就。本研究探讨了近期的幼儿教育改革是否可能促进了一种经济精英主义思维模式,这种思维模式有利于与个人为未来成就而竞争相关的技能。数据来自1999年至2023年间发表的总共92份文件,包括国际组织的幼儿教育咨询报告以及来自非洲、美洲、亚洲、欧洲和大洋洲53个国家的政府认可的幼儿教育课程。通过将定性文本编码与应用于新出现主题的统计分析相结合,进行了逐步的主题分析。研究结果表明:(1)虽然专家和政策制定者认识到普及幼儿教育和提高其质量的重要性,但他们主要通过经济指标来界定社会凝聚力;(2)幼儿教育文件将认知技能以及(主要在国际组织中)社会情感技能列为个人成就的关键,但公民技能在很大程度上被忽视;(3)幼儿教育背景下的个人能动性和责任感被定义为教育和一生成功的核心,而不可控因素(如优势的代际传递、家庭出身)在很大程度上被忽视;(4)国际组织和政府在幼儿教育中都强烈接受经济精英主义思维模式,这意味着生活结果主要取决于天赋和努力,从而掩盖了同龄人、亲属、社区或机构的支持和团结所起的作用。总体而言,本研究表明,幼儿教育改革在全球范围内强化了精英主义的弊端,推动了优先考虑竞争而非合作、个人主义而非团结的教育政策,以及天赋和努力而非运气或社会环境等不可控因素决定个人一生在社会中成功的普遍观念。