For this week’s assignment I selected to review the UNESCO’s
website on early childhood. UNESCO has provided a wide variety of information
on early childhood. UNESCO advocates on Early Childhood Care and Education by
focusing on health, nutrition, security and learning. My professional initial
goals from the course “Early Childhood Foundations” was (1) to advocate on
behalf of early childhood education; (2) to make positive impact on the lives
of practitioners and caregivers and; (3) to help form support groups for parents
and guardians. At the end of the course my redefined goals were (1) To advocate
for funding to support medicals and nutritious meals for early childhood
children within early childhood institutions;(2) To support groups within the
early childhood institutions such as the Parent Teacher’s Association by
providing with information on health care and developmental stages of children
and (3) To create and information booth at a designated area or through the use
of the internet to collect information on early childhood. The information on
early childhood from UNESCO ECCE is overwhelming, so much to learn, so much to
digest and so much to execute or to put into action. UNESCO ECCE discusses topics
such as access and equity and quality. As you know quality, access and equity are all early childhood issues that affect us internationally and UNESCO ECCE discusses the initiative
they have taken to promote deal with all these issues in early childhood education internationally.
ECCE examines factors such as pedagogy materials, personnel training, service
setting, parental education and involvement. I believe these factors relate to
all of my three goals. One insight I have surely garnered from reading this web
site is the sharing of information on quality early childhood education. My
goals 2 and 3 relates to information sharing. For the past three and half years
I have realize enough is not being done on the local level in my country to promote
information about early childhood. I believe UNESCO ECCE has vital information
that various stakeholders could use to invest more in early childhood and
contribute to policies that will eventually lead to long term positive benefits
for early childhood education. I might not have a lot of resources but I can start in my small circle by promoting my goals; making my voice be heard in church groups, PTA's, council meetings etc. about the importance of our children gaining access to quality early childhood education and that early childhood gets the attention it deserves.
Reference
http://www.unesco.org/new/en/education/themes/strengthening-education-systems/early-childhood/quality/
Judy
ReplyDeleteYou are absolutely right, the information is and can be overwhelming. We need to be the advocate for children and their families and translate the literature for them so they understand their rights and what resources will work for them!
Hi Judy,
ReplyDeleteIts seems as though many of us looked at this organizations website. I just took and they offer a lot of information. I plan on spending some time today on learning more about them. Thanks for sharing.
Hi Judy,
ReplyDeleteI think you have an interesting topic and should find some great insights on this topic. I found one article on Google Scholar that may help you in your quest for quality research from:
Parenting during middle childhood: A review of the evidence at http://books.google.com/books?hl=en&lr=&id=PuDNMmug0AgC&oi=fnd&pg=PA73&dq=cognitive+development+in+middle+childhood&ots=rBE9fN7yUT&sig=_xFy5MCBoed0EFAjC69lvx4VDUk#v=onepage&q=cognitive%20development%20in%20middle%20childhood&f=false