Encouraging Quality in Early Childhood Education and Care

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Transcript Encouraging Quality in Early Childhood Education and Care

Encouraging Quality in Early Childhood Education and Care

Deborah Roseveare Head, Education and Training Policy Division Israel Accession Seminar 22-23 November, 2011

Why invest in high quality ECEC?

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ECEC has significant economic and social payoffs 2.

ECEC supports parents and boosts female employment 3.

– ECEC is part of society’s responsibility to: educate children – – combat child poverty help children overcome educational disadvantage

Benefits of high quality ECEC

 better child well-being and learning outcomes as a foundation for lifelong learning      more equitable child outcomes and reduction of poverty increased intergenerational social mobility more female labour market participation increased fertility rates better social and economic development for society at large

Why does quality matter?

Studies show  ECEC quality impacts children’s cognitive and socio-emotional outcomes at later ages and stages  Poor quality ECEC provision can have lasting detrimental effects on children’s development  Quality impact often comes through socio-emotional channels

What is quality?

• Quality means different things to different people • Can be defined in terms of child development outcomes or quality of services • General agreement that high quality involves social, cultural, educational and economic outcomes for children

What is OECD doing?

Developing an Online Policy Toolbox for identifying how to improve quality in ECEC Policy levers: 1. Setting out quality goals and regulations 2. Designing and implementing curriculum and standards 3. Improving workforce conditions, qualifications and training 4. Engaging families and communities 5. Advancing data collection, research and monitoring

Policy Lever 1: Setting out quality goals and regulations

 align resources with prioritised areas  promote more coordinated child-centred services   level the playing field for providers help parents make informed choices

Policy Lever 2: Designing and implementing curriculum and learning standards

   ensure consistent quality for ECEC provision across different settings help staff to enhance instruction strategies help parents to better understand child development

Policy Lever 3: Improving qualifications, training and working conditions

 ECEC staff play the key role in ensuring healthy child development and learning  Areas for reform include: – qualifications – initial education – professional development – working conditions

Policy Lever 4: Engaging families and communities

 Parents and communities should be regarded as “partners” working towards the same goal  Home learning environments and neighbourhood matter for healthy child development and learning

Policy Lever 5: Advancing data collection, research and monitoring

 Data, research and monitoring are powerful tools for  improving children’s outcomes  driving continuous improvement in service delivery

What children should learn in ECEC and how?

Curriculum and standards can reinforce positive impacts on children’s learning and development    Ensure even quality across different settings Guide staff on how to enhance children’s learning and well-being Inform parents of their children’s learning and development Countries take different approaches to designing curriculum  Academic approach makes use of staff-initiated curriculum with cognitive aims to prepare children for school  Comprehensive approach is child-centred and focuses on holistic development and well-being

Effects of academic and comprehensive curriculum models

Which "model" is most likely to improve a child's... Academic Comprehensive IQ scores Motivation to Learn Literacy and Numeracy Creativity Independence Specific Knowledge Self-confidence General Knowledge Initiative Short-term outcomes Long-term outcomes X X X X X X X X X X X X

Source

: Barnett

et al

., 2010; Eurydice, 2009; Laevers, 2011; Schweinhart and Weikart, 1997.

Blending both cognitive and socio-emotional development in an integrated curriculum may be best But consensus not yet reached: • American researchers more likely to support academic approach • European researchers more likely to emphasise non-cognitive learning Cultural aspects and value systems also play a role • Asian value systems emphasise group interests which may not mesh well with an individual child-centred approach Evidence from neuroscience also suggests that both cognitive and socio emotional development are important

Sensitive periods in early brain development

Source

: Council for Early Child Development (2010).

How countries approach curriculum – age ranges

Birth to 2 ½-3 years 2 ½-3 years to compulsory school Birth to compulsory school 2 ½-3 years to compulsory school Birth to compulsory school Birth through early years of school 3 years through to 18 years

Content of ECEC curriculum

Source: OECD Policy Toolbox, forthcoming

Curriculum subjects

Source: OECD Policy Toolbox, forthcoming

Strategy options for developing and implementing curriculum

Challenge 1: Defining goals and content • Setting out clear curriculum goals and guiding principles • Developing standards or attainment targets • Reviewing or analysing curriculum to improve relevance • Supporting local initiatives in setting up their own curriculum • Involving stakeholders in the design process

Strategy options for developing and implementing curriculum

Challenge 2: Curriculum alignment for continuous child development • Aligning curriculum with broader quality goals and assessment practices • Adopting a unified curriculum for care and early education • Aligning ECEC curriculum with other levels of education

Strategy options for developing and implementing curriculum

Challenge 3: Dissemination and communication about the framework • Informing stakeholders about curriculum change through seminars and meetings • Communication with staff through written forms of dissemination • Communicating with parents

Strategy options for developing and implementing curriculum

Challenge 4: Effective Implementation • Ensuring stakeholder buy-in by involving them in the design process • Piloting before implementing nation-wide/state-wide • Providing practical support materials • Setting out guidelines for materials or prescribing materials • Revising initial education, designing and providing demand-driven training • Providing expert assistance to ECEC providers • Improving working conditions to stimulate effective implementation

Strategy options for developing and implementing curriculum

Challenge 5: Systematic evaluation and assessment • Integrating curriculum as part of monitoring process • Link evaluating/reviewing the curriculum framework with quality improvement

Lessons learnt in developing and implementing curriculum and standards

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Orient the curriculum reform to focus on “child” and “holistic development” Engage key stakeholders and relevant experts in the process Ensure coherence in learning and broader social environment for continuous child development Adopt a planning timetable that allows sufficient time for consultation, awareness raising and implementation Ensure that ECEC centre leaders can effectively manage financial and human resources as well as pedagogic practices and, in addition, train staff for effective implementation Use simple and common language to draft the curriculum that can be easily understood by staff and parents

Thank you!

www.oecd.org/edu/earlychildhood