Initiating interactions in the toddler peer group

Embodied conversation starters

Authors

  • Bryndis Gunnarsdottir University of Iceland
  • Amanda Bateman University of Waikato

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.1558/rcsi.22739

Keywords:

toddlers, conversation analysis, embodied interactions, peer interactions, early childhood education and care

Abstract

Two-year old children often express their understanding and intentions through embodied interactions as they co-produce social relationships. This article presents findings from an ethnomethodological study using conversation analysis to explore turn-taking in toddlers’ interactions in a preschool in Iceland. Here, we focus on how toddlers initiate interaction through touch and gaze. These findings demonstrate that toddlers are adept at reading social cues from their peers and are competent at turn-taking and repair in embodied interactions resulting in significant exchanges in the peer group. As such, this article contributes to a growing body of research that demonstrates toddler’s competencies in organizing their own social worlds through embodied strategies that co-construct peer relationships in competent ways.

Author Biographies

  • Bryndis Gunnarsdottir, University of Iceland

    Bryndis Gunnarsdottir is currently a PhD candidate and adjunct in early childhood education and care at the School of Education, University of Iceland. She was formerly a WMIER doctoral scholarship recipient at the University of Waikato, New Zealand. Bryndis has worked as an early childhood teacher in Iceland and Norway and her research interests include the toddler peer group and toddler social interactions, embodied interactions in the peer group, conversation analysis, and democracy and autonomy within ECEC.

  • Amanda Bateman, University of Waikato

    Amanda Bateman is an associate professor in early childhood education and director of the Early Years Research Centre at the University of Waikato. Her research involves collecting and analysing video footage of children’s social interactions, and teacher–child pedagogical interactions. Recent publications include the co-edited books Early Childhood Education: The Co-production of Knowledge and Relationships (2017) and Talking with Children: A Handbook for Early Childhood Education (2022). Amanda’s current research focuses on traditional oral storytelling of Welsh and Maˉori legends in relation to identity and belonging in ECEC.

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Published

2022-10-05

How to Cite

Gunnarsdottir, B., & Bateman, A. (2022). Initiating interactions in the toddler peer group: Embodied conversation starters. Research on Children and Social Interaction, 6(1), 5–29. https://doi.org/10.1558/rcsi.22739