A conversation with Gloria Quiñones
Manage episode 501131164 series 3569718
Early Childhood Innovation Across Borders
In this episode, Gloria Quiñones—Associate Professor at Monash University and originally from Monterrey, Mexico—takes us on a cross-cultural journey through early childhood education. Drawing from her experiences in both Mexico and Australia, she redefines pedagogical innovation as something deeply personal: “doing something new for you”—no grand gestures required. Instead, the magic unfolds through reflective, child-led, and collaborative processes that honor context, relationships, and the everyday.
Gloria explores the contrast between Australia’s play-based curriculums—steeped in outdoor and bush kindergartens—and Mexico’s more structured, motor-skill-oriented approaches, particularly in urban and private educational settings. Yet, in rural Mexican communities, she observes a beautiful freedom in child-led, exploratory play.
As an immigrant, Gloria describes her dual cultural lens as a powerful asset—fostering empathy, openness, and the ability to see strengths across systems, without placing one above the other. She emphasizes that true innovation isn’t only about outcomes—it’s about the process, the relationships, the space for ideas to surface through slowing down and being responsive.
“Slowing down and having those supportive conditions are really important… innovation in early childhood for me is really allowing that space for exploration, creativity… it shouldn’t be rigid, it should be about the process.”Gloria frames slowing down as essential for giving innovation the time and space to emerge, rather than forcing it into quick, outcome-driven timelines.
Whether it’s navigating different educational traditions or crafting new, meaningful connections with families and children—Gloria’s reflections invite us to embrace pedagogical innovations as a deeply relational, inclusive, and context-sensitive practice.
19 episodes