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Investing in Quality

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Title: Investing in Quality


1
Investing in Quality Early Childhood
Education Kathleen McCartney, Ph.D. Dean of the
Faculty of Education Gerald S. Lesser Professor
in Early Childhood Development
2
What is early childhood education?
  • Nursery school
  • Preschool
  • Childrens centers
  • Pre-kindergarten
  • Center-based child care
  • Informal child care
  • Head Start

3
Early childhood education supports two national
priorities of industrialized countries
  • Helping families work.
  • Ensuring that children enter formal school ready
    to succeed.

4
Purposes and goals of early education
  • All children will have access to high-quality
    preschool programs.
  • Every parent will be a childs first teacher.
  • Children will receive the nutrition, physical
    activity experiences, and health care needed to
    arrive at school with healthy minds and bodies.

National Education Goals Panel, 1997
5
Culture and context matter
  • The purposes and goals of early education vary by
    culture and context and are driven by factors
    such as policy initiatives and demographic
    shifts.
  • The effects of early childhood education programs
    must be interpreted within the context of the
    goals, values, and practices established by each
    country.

OECD, 2001 Lamb, 2006
6
Common indicators of quality
Hofferth Chaplin, 1994 NICHD ECCRN, 1999, 2000
7
Features of quality programs
  • Learners must be healthy, well-nourished, and
    ready to learn.
  • Environments must be healthy and safe and provide
    adequate resources and facilities.
  • Content must reflect appropriate and relevant
    curricula and diverse materials for the
    acquisition of basic skills.
  • Teacher education must focus on child-centered
    teaching approaches.
  • Outcomes must encompass knowledge, skills and
    dispositions.

Adapted from UNICEF, 2000
8
Developmental benefits of high-quality early
childhood education programs
  • Reduces inequalities
  • Gaps in school readiness for children at risk are
    reduced.
  • Provides foundational skills for learning and
    life success
  • Children exhibit higher verbal, cognitive and
    social outcomes.
  • Strengthens families
  • Families exhibit increased knowledge and more
    positive attitudes about child-rearing as well as
    decreased stress.

Benasich et al., 1992 Bowman, 1997 McCartney et
al., under review Myers, 1995
9
Economic benefits of high-quality early childhood
education programs
  • Schooling
  • Children are less likely to be retained a grade
    or be placed in special education.
  • Welfare
  • Children are more likely to obtain better paying
    jobs and earn more money.
  • Criminal justice
  • Children are less likely to break laws or engage
    in other delinquent behaviors

Barnett Hustedt, 2003
10
Strategies for investment
  • Government regulation
  • Ratio/group size
  • Teacher education
  • Accreditation
  • National Association for the Education of Young
    Children (NAEYC) model
  • Teacher education
  • To build capacity
  • To support quality programs

11
Government regulations Ratio/group size
aAmerican Public Health Association bModigliani
Bromer, 1997
12
International comparisons of child-adult ratios
for 3-6 year olds
OECD, 2001 Weikart, Olmsted, Montie, 2003
13
Government regulations Teacher education
OECD, 2001 Weikark, Olmsted, Montie, 2003
14
NAEYC accreditation standards
  • Standard 1 Relationships
  • Standard 2 Curriculum
  • Standard 3 Teaching
  • Standard 4 Assessment of Child Progress
  • Standard 5 Health
  • Standard 6 Teachers
  • Standard 7 Families
  • Standard 8 Community Relationships
  • Standard 9 Physical Environment
  • Standard 10 Leadership and Management

NAEYC website
15
Teacher Education
  • Inservice programs workshops
  • Higher education programs
  • Online programs

16
Universal challenges
  • Fragmented delivery systems
  • Access
  • Equity
  • Cost
  • Practitioner education
  • Implementation

17
Principles for policy-making
  • Support families in making the best choices for
    their children.
  • Tax incentives and subsidies can encourage
    families to use high-quality programs.
  • Ensure that high-quality settings are available
    to all families.
  • Teacher education efforts.
  • Subsidy systems.
  • Support family employment.
  • Parental leave policies.

Cost, Quality and Outcomes Study, 1995
McCartney, 2006 Waldfogel, 2006
18
Lessons from Early Education for All in
Massachusetts
  • Begin with an assessment of early education and
    care data.
  • Supply side What is the current status of early
    education and care workforce?
  • Demand side What are the needs and preferences
    of families?
  • Align early education standards with K-12
    standards.
  • Provide continuity for children.
  • Standards inform teacher education.
  • Involve leaders.
  • Engage influential unlikely allies to work in
    partnership with likely allies.
  • Powerless children need powerful friends.

Early Education for All, 2006
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