Reggio Emilia

Reggio Emilia Approach to Education


Teatro Valli

Piazza Prampolini

Piazza Prampolini

The foundation for the Reggio Approach started in Reggio Emilia, Italy, at the end of the Fascist dictatorship and the Second World War. It was a moment when the desire to bring change and create a new, more just world, free from oppression inspired women and men to gather their strength and build schools for their children with their own hands. This area has a long history and tradition of cooperative work done in all areas of the economy and organization: agriculture, food processing, unions, entrepreneurship, and so forth. More specifically, teachers worked to develop new ways of teaching, which would support the new democratic society. Influenced by Dewey, Piaget and Vygotsky, among many others, the teachers created schools that were also non-selective and nondiscriminatory, and that took into account the human desire to “when possible, do nothing without joy” (Gandini, 1997).

The experience of the Municipal Infant Toddler Centers and Preschools of Reggio Emilia began in 1963 with the opening of the first preschools (children ages three to six), followed in 1970 by the infant toddler centers (children three months to three years old). Within this experience, a pedagogical and cultural project was developed and implemented that has continued to provide a point of reference of intense vitality for the City of Reggio Emilia. It is the subject of interest, research and exchange on the part of teachers, teacher educators, researchers, administrators, and political and cultural figures from all over Italy and throughout the world.

The international recognition of the Reggio preschools exploded in 1991, when a panel of experts commissioned by Newsweek magazine identified the preschools of Reggio Emilia as the most avant-garde early childhood institution in the world. Other important recognitions followed immediately. In 1992, the schools in Reggio were awarded the Danish Lego Prize. Also in 1992, an analogous award was made to the Reggio Municipal infant-toddler centers and preschools by the Kohl Foundation in Chicago. In 1994, the Hans Christian Andersen Prize was awarded to the Reggio institutions. In the same year, similar recognition was given by the Mediterranean Association of International Schools. In 1997, the Municipal Preschools and Infant Toddler Centers at Reggio Emilia started a collaborative project with the Harvard Graduate School of Education. The first phase of this collaboration resulted in a book titled “Making Learning Visible: Children as Individual and Group Learners” and the second phase resulted in a book entitled “Making Learning Visible: Documenting Individual and Group Learning as Professional Development."

The Reggio Emilia approach to education is committed to the creation of conditions for learning that will enhance and facilitate children’s construction of “his or her own powers of thinking through the synthesis of all the expressive, communicative and cognitive languages” (Edward and Forman 1993). The Reggio Emilia approach can be viewed as a resource to help educators, parents, and children as they work together to further develop their own educational programs.

Reggio Emilia welcomes educators from all over the world in the Study tours. The Reggio Emilia approach is based upon the following principles:

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