Three consequences of learning about the international early childhood field:
1) It has opened my eyes to the idea of early childhood education in locations other than the United States. Yes, I freely admit that I always concern myself with what is happening in our country before I consider what is going on in other places. I am trying to take into consideration children around the globe, but it is very hard to do when I see so much pain, injustice and suffering in "my own back yard."
2) I have learned that other countries are having the same issues in terms of professional development and training for early childhood teachers. It seems like some countries are making some headway in this area and I think we need to develop (if it does not already exist) an international group to bring together the best practices from around the world.
3) Although I cannot reach out to international contacts, I can reseach several of the international websites and learn about the advances and challenges around the globe. Learning from the successes and challenges of others can help us advance our goals here.
Goal for the field related to international awareness of issues and trends and the spirit of collegial relations:
Develop
working groups with as many international partners as possible to discuss
challenges and successes in order to develop a Best Practices Handbook for
Early Childhood Education that we can use to help push Early Childhood
Education to the forefront in discussions at the senior leadership level.
Friday, August 23, 2013
Saturday, August 17, 2013
Hopes and Dreams from Switzerland
Speaking to my contact in Switzerland, she said there is no
requirement to have a degree to teach in the childcare centers. They do have specialized training and
classes that you can take if you want to advance to the leadership positions
(class leader or assistant director).
You can attend a university for a degree and that will help you get a
director position, but again, it is not required. They do a lot of internal “teach the teacher” type
training. (One or two teachers
attend a training and then come back to train everyone else). She wishes there were more
training/educational opportunities available because she would really like to
open her own childcare center one day.
Her family has a very large farm with plenty of room to build a
childcare center that would service the village. He challenges right now are saving enough money and furthering
her education to make this a reality.
She is still very young so her dreams may change.
In talking to our friends from Switzerland and Sweden, I am noticing the same trend that we find here in the US. There is no standardization and no requirements for early childhood educators. In Sweden, there is a requirement to have specialized training and education to work with special needs children (which there should be!!), but not for working with typical children. It is still being viewed by many as babysitting. I find this very sad and disheartening, especially in light of all of the research we have learned about in this class and the classes we have taken since starting this program in January. Are we just not being vocal enough? Are we not fighting this at the highest levels possible? I want to shake the senior leadership of this country and shout "Do something!"
Saturday, August 10, 2013
Additional Information on NIEER
- Follow some of the outside links that you have not yet explored. Where do they lead?
There are many links on the NIEER website. Some of the ones I found interesting
were:
National
Center for Early Development & Learning - Administratively based at the Frank
Porter Graham Child Development Institute, NCEDL was a collaboration with the
University of Virginia and University of California, Los Angeles.
The center was created to provide national leadership and advance new knowledge
in the field of early childhood development and learning. Goals of NCEDL were
to: determine the state of the nation and conduct research on critical issues
in early childhood practices; develop partnerships with diverse constituencies;
synthesize knowledge and recommend future directions; and translate research
into practice and disseminate information to diverse audiences.
Children,
Youth and Families Education and Research Network (CYFERnet) - CYFERnet's Web site brings together the
best, children, youth and family resources of all the public land-grant
universities in the country. Materials are carefully reviewed by college and
university faculty. Through CYFERnet you can also interact with your colleagues
and share your work nationally.
CYFERnet
provides:
- information on for child
and youth devleopment, parenting, families, and community development.
- practical research-based
tools, curricula and activities for working with children, youth, families
programs.
- a database to help you
identify experts in the areas of children, youth, and family across the
country.
- opportunities to interact
with CYFAR professionals in our webinars, blogs, online communities.
- access to the latest
research, statistical, and demographic information.
- resources and instruments
for program evaluation.
- information on 3000 community-based programs serving
vulnerable populations.
- information on the
programmatic use of the latest technologies.
I
really enjoyed the Activities, Lesson Plans and Learning Resources page. It gave non-formal education resources
for child and youth after-school programs, summer programs, camp and special
events. It included lesson plans, activities, instructions, curriculum, videos,
and tips that even parents can use at home.
National Center for Children in Poverty - Identifies
and promotes strategies that prevent child poverty in the US and improve the
lives of low-income children and their families. The site allows you to research each state independently as
well as produces reports that cover the entire country.
- Thoroughly search one area of the site. What do you find?
I am most interested in the Special Education
section of the website. It has
many publications and links to other websites that have a tremendous amount of
information on various special needs.
It also gives links to news articles from various media sources across
the country on special education issues.
- If you receive an e-newsletter, follow a link related to one of the issues you have been studying. What new information is available?
Unfortuately, I have not received a newsletter
or email from the site in more than 2 weeks.
- Does the website or the e-newsletter contain any information that adds to your understanding of equity and excellence in early care and education?
Since the website is basically a database of
publications and research initiatives, you can find various articles about
equity and excellence. Two
sections in particular that has a lot of information on these topics is the
Governance and Accountability section and the Quality and Curriculum section.
- What other new insights about issues and trends in the early childhood field did you gain this week from exploring the website and/or the e-newsletter?
Of interest, there was an article about a child advocacy
group that filed a lawsuit against Fisher Price for their claims that their Laugh
& Learn mobile apps teach babies language and counting skills. According to
the complaints, the companies say in marketing material that their apps teach
infants spatial skills, numbers, language or motor skills. But, the complaints
claim, there is no rigorous scientific evidence to prove that these kinds of
products provide those benefits.
In addition, there was an article about how the
middle class gets priced out of preschool. According to NIEER, access to
preschool across the country is actually lower for the middle class than for
the poor. Middle-income families don’t have access to Head Start, like poor
families, and they can’t afford expensive places, either.
Saturday, August 3, 2013
Excellence and Equity in Switzerland
Below is the response I received from my contact in Switzerland on the topic of excellence and equity in early childhood education:
So where i work, in the childcare, we take the babys from 3month
old to 4years old. Here in Switzerland mothers get just 3month free time
after the baby came. That's the time you got to stay home and get paid.
If you want to stay home longer, you can if you talk with your boss for
a working break or something. The good part in my childcare, we have a
special programm, and there every child can play what he wants. Our
house has 10 different rooms with different things (baby room, coloring
room, reading room, jumping room...and more..) All the kids can go to
the different rooms like they want to (in every room is someone to take
care of them)
The kids learn to help themselves and figure out stuff without
hundred of ideas from me They learn to think about what they're doing
and how they're gonna do that.
At the same we have the
programm to watch 2 kids (in 14days), how they play, what they play, how
they act in the group and a lot more. The whole team does that about
those 2 kids and after that time, we're having a meeting about that. We
talk about the things that the kid likes to do, and does really good.
(we take the positive things - everything is positive in a way)
That's how i can say we take a look at every kid and talk about
their needs and help them where they need it. The whole team knows a lot
about kids and do special activitis to work with the kids.
i love that programm, the parents love it and the kids love it.
We really take each child and work with them...
The
childcare is pretty expensive, but i've you don't get like 60'000francs
money as a family from your work the city is helping you to pay it.
They look at your work, how much you get and then they do some crazy
math to figure out how much you get for the childcare.
Every village/city in switzerland needs a place, where parents can bring their kids.
I
know too, that if your child has a handicap the city is gonna help you
to pay all those therapys and special schools. There are schools (my
cousin is at one like that) where just AD(H)S and autism kids can go to.
They have room for therapy rooms and everything, so you dont have to go
from one place to the other with your kid. Thats pretty cool. I know
from my cousin that the teachers there so good, they really take care of
each kid and ask them about their thougths and needs.
At my childcare we have one person who comes like
once or twice a month to help us with kids with special needs or if i
have a kid in the childcare and i think he/she needs to start talk and
he/she wont, i can call her and she comes to help me figure out the next
steps that we've gonna do.
From my correspondence with her, I have learned that the government really helps families get children into early childhood programs. It seems like there is much more support from the government in other countries than there is here in the US. I assume a lot of that has to do with the higher tax rates in other countries. Still, it seems like we put so many other things ahead of education on our priority lists in this country and we wonder why things are so messed up!
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