TY - JOUR
T1 - "Making a mess in the mud"
T2 - The discovery of toddlers' special needs by child scientists in the 1930s in the Netherlands
AU - Bakker, Nelleke
PY - 2012
Y1 - 2012
N2 - In this article, the author discusses plans that were launched at three consecutive conferences on care for toddlers between 1929 and 1938 in the Netherlands. These plans and their realisation are evaluated in terms of what was seen as the missing link in the supply of institutional care for young children. The author identifies the professional forces and their concerns, as well as their chosen techniques and cognitive forms. The "discovery" of toddlers' "special" needs was initially inspired by paediatricians' concern about the relatively high mortality and morbidity rates of children aged one to six. An age-specific hygienic shield was created, which produced graphs and charts and consequently, the normal child. During the 1930s, when toddlers' physical health improved rapidly, a shift toward mental health and development became manifest. Developmentalism and psychoanalysis inspired a concern for this age as one of crisis and risk. Therefore, prevention of neuroses was now presented as a major challenge for professionals in toddlers' welfare centres, health colonies, and nursery schools, who were supposed to best understand young children's needs. One of the consequences was that, unlike in the post-war years, experts became convinced that small children were better off in institutions than at home.
AB - In this article, the author discusses plans that were launched at three consecutive conferences on care for toddlers between 1929 and 1938 in the Netherlands. These plans and their realisation are evaluated in terms of what was seen as the missing link in the supply of institutional care for young children. The author identifies the professional forces and their concerns, as well as their chosen techniques and cognitive forms. The "discovery" of toddlers' "special" needs was initially inspired by paediatricians' concern about the relatively high mortality and morbidity rates of children aged one to six. An age-specific hygienic shield was created, which produced graphs and charts and consequently, the normal child. During the 1930s, when toddlers' physical health improved rapidly, a shift toward mental health and development became manifest. Developmentalism and psychoanalysis inspired a concern for this age as one of crisis and risk. Therefore, prevention of neuroses was now presented as a major challenge for professionals in toddlers' welfare centres, health colonies, and nursery schools, who were supposed to best understand young children's needs. One of the consequences was that, unlike in the post-war years, experts became convinced that small children were better off in institutions than at home.
KW - child health
KW - institutionalisation of childhood
KW - child scientists
KW - developmentalism
U2 - 10.1080/00309230.2011.644630
DO - 10.1080/00309230.2011.644630
M3 - Article
SN - 0030-9230
VL - 48
SP - 67
EP - 83
JO - Paedagogica Historica
JF - Paedagogica Historica
IS - 1
ER -