Title: Investing in Quality
1Investing in Quality Early Childhood
Education Kathleen McCartney, Ph.D. Dean of the
Faculty of Education Gerald S. Lesser Professor
in Early Childhood Development
2What is early childhood education?
- Nursery school
- Preschool
- Childrens centers
- Pre-kindergarten
- Center-based child care
- Informal child care
- Head Start
3Early childhood education supports two national
priorities of industrialized countries
- Helping families work.
- Ensuring that children enter formal school ready
to succeed.
4Purposes 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
5Culture 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
6Common indicators of quality
Hofferth Chaplin, 1994 NICHD ECCRN, 1999, 2000
7Features 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
8Developmental 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
9Economic 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
10Strategies 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
11Government regulations Ratio/group size
aAmerican Public Health Association bModigliani
Bromer, 1997
12International comparisons of child-adult ratios
for 3-6 year olds
OECD, 2001 Weikart, Olmsted, Montie, 2003
13Government regulations Teacher education
OECD, 2001 Weikark, Olmsted, Montie, 2003
14NAEYC 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
15Teacher Education
- Inservice programs workshops
- Higher education programs
- Online programs
16Universal challenges
- Fragmented delivery systems
- Access
- Equity
- Cost
- Practitioner education
- Implementation
17Principles 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
18Lessons 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