http://lattes.cnpq.br/9770764248889043; FARIAS, Fernanda Gomes de Andrade.
Resumo:
This work presents an analysis of research groups related to Early Childhood Education
registered in the Directory of Research Groups of the Brazilian Council for Scientific and
Technological Development. The main objective was to provide an overview of the knowledge
production in Early Childhood Education carried out in Brazil. This study is a survey because
it used a large amount of numerical data to deduce the understanding of this social reality.
Specific objectives included identifying the location and the type of institution to which the
groups belong; historical evolution of studied themes; formation and scientific production of
groups’ leaders; and other particularities. Concepts of the Sociology of Childhood and the
history of Brazilian Early Childhood Education - which rose from a welfare practice to the right
to education promoted by law for all Brazilian children - sustain the theoretical frameworks of
this research. Primarily, the methodology consisted of characterizing the research groups
associated with Early Childhood Education based on data from the Brazilian Directory of
Research Groups' website. Afterward, we surveyed the academic trajectories and scientific
production of the groups' leaders. For this, the study used the information available at the Lattes
platform, which belongs to the Brazilian Council for Scientific and Technological Development.
Categories for the groups' analysis covered: location and legal status of the institution of origin,
date of creation, human resources, and research lines. As for the groups' leaders, we investigated
gender, academic background, and their technical-academic productions. The results indicated
the growth of the Early Childhood Education studies in Brazil, which today holds at least 413
teams of researchers. The Southeast and the Northeast regions of Brazil accommodate most of
these groups, with national prominence for São Paulo State. Comparing a relation between
numbers of research groups and graduate programs, teams from the Northeast and North regions
of Brazil seem to be more enthusiastic about the area of Early Childhood Education. Public
institutions hold 90% of the studied groups. Regarding the groups' leaders, 79% are women,
94% have a doctorate, and most graduated in Pedagogy (48%) and Psychology (15.2%). The
current number of groups and the preparation and productivity of their leaders suggest that the
contribution of Brazilian researchers to Early Childhood Education is significant. The findings
of this research may help in reflections on the history and current reality of scientific production
in Early Childhood Education in Brazil. Moreover, we expect that this panorama reinforces the
importance of guaranteeing autonomous and democratic public institutions for developing the
field.