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Saturday, October 27, 2012

International Early Childhood Field


Three consequences of learning about the international early childhood field for your professional and personal development:

1.      I now have a need to learn more about child development in other countries.

2.      One day I would like to start a non-profit agency to help develop early childhood education centers in 3rd world countries that will also help to educate the whole family and community on the importance of early development and health.

3.      It has given me a better appreciation of the country that I live in. We are much better off in our development than some countries.

Post one goal for the field related to international awareness of issues and trends and the spirit of collegial relations:

 

One goal would be to have a program for students of early childhood to have the opportunity to become exchange students in 3rd world countries. I feel that this would not only help the student become a better teacher and have a better understanding of the importance of early development it will also help families and communities in these countries learn about the importance of early development and ways that they can help their children.

Saturday, October 20, 2012


Three new insights that I have gained about issues related to international early childhood education from the UNESCO web site are:

 

 

I didn’t know that Vietnam had early childhood education are that all the teachers are women.

 

 

VIET NAM

Early Childhood Education and Care (ECCE) programs

Total number
Of whom
Percentage of
Percentage of
Percentage of
of teachers
female (%)
trained
trained
trained
teachers (all)
teachers
teachers
(males)
(females)
123,517
100
75
75
 
Children enrolled in ECE Programs
 
 
Less than 3
Age 3
Age 4
Age 5
Age 6
Age 7
 
16
62.6
62.6
92
93.4
 

 

 

In 1999, budget for early childhood education was only 5.4% of the national budget

for education. From 2002, the Government regulates that budget for early childhood

education must be at least 10% of the national budget for education, however, only

18/64 provinces and cities have been able to invest this much, there are still 17

provinces that provide only 5 to 7%, many other provinces don’t invest their budget

for early childhood education as planned.

 

Holistic Early Childhood Development Index

The development of the Holistic Early Childhood Development Index was first proposed at the World Conference of ECCE organized by UNESCO in September 2010, in cooperation with the Russian Federation. At this conference, an action agenda was adopted, entitled the Moscow Framework for Action and Cooperation: Harnessing the Wealth of Nations.

This action agenda called upon UNESCO “to convene a working group to explore the development of an instrument capable of tracking progress towards EFA goal 1, with particular attention to quality and the holistic aspects of ECCE.” UNESCO is working with a wide range of partners to develop the Holistic Early Childhood Development Index (HECDI).

In June 2012, an important milestone was reached with the agreement of 6 core indicators: health, nutrition, education, parent support, equity and social protection, and alleviation of poverty.

UNESCO is now planning the pilot phase, which will involve working closely with ten countries to use the proposed indicators to holistically assess early childhood development. Following the pilot, the estimated publication date of the HECDI technical manual is in 2013.

The Memory of the World exhibition is something I would love to see one day. I wonder if it also tells the story of children in the older times.

"Memory of the World" Exhibition
A pictorial exhibition of collections and items listed on the Memory of the World Register, as well as a selection from projects, contributing to preserving the documentary heritage of humanity will be displayed on the fences of UNESCO's Fontenoy Building from 17 October to 14 November 2012.
The Memory of the World Programme was launched by UNESCO in 1992 in order to protect precious documentary heritage items that were recorded from the beginning of human existence up to the present. It includes events and discoveries that have transformed the world. It tells of their triumphs and finer moments as well as the horrors they have experienced. Documentary heritage is recorded on audiotapes, woven into tapestries or handwritten in a diary. It serves to transmit the histories of slaves or social group that no longer exist to provide a better understanding of the world’s cultural diversity.


 

It has been a pleasure sharing with all of you during this class. I hope to have more classes with you and wish you the best in your journey.

 

 

 

 

 

 

Saturday, October 13, 2012

Sharing Resources

At the start of class I chose National Black Child Institute to follow. I have not received a newsletter yet. I have explored the site and the only outside links that are there are to their sponsors such as Walmart and Mc Donald's. There is no link to past newsletters. I have learned nothing new from the web site. I honestly wish I had chosen another site.

Saturday, October 6, 2012

Getting to Know Your International Contacts—Part 2


Susan Lyon
Susan Lyon was intrigued by a small child’s conception of the word “city”, and began pondering how children think, eventually visiting Reggio Emilia and then bringing the “100 Languages of Children” exhibit to the San Francisco Bay area.  She founded Innovative Teacher Project: ITP strives to create a culture of dialogue and research in Northern California that promotes the pleasure of inquiry among children and adults. The cornerstone of the Reggio philosophy is an image of the child as competent, strong, inventive and full of potential – subjects with rights instead of need.
Like Ms. Lyon, I have a new way of looking at young children. I would like to learn to see into the window of children’s mind and to see how they see their world.
The Hundred Languages of Children is a continuously updated traveling exhibition that, translated into various languages, has been telling the story of the Reggio educational experience worldwide to thousands of visitors for over 25 years (Autumn 1981-Spring 2008).
  
 
Harvard University’s “Global Children’s Initiative
The Center's Global Children’s Initiative has begun to build a portfolio of activities in three domains: early childhood development; mental health; and children in crisis and conflict situations. Each of these domains is being guided by a faculty working group that will facilitate continuing cross-disciplinary collaboration; design and implement new projects; and engage additional faculty, students, and collaborators beyond the Harvard community.
UN BUEN COMIENZO
Un Buen Comienzo (UBC), “A Good Start,” is a collaborative project in Santiago, Chile, to improve early childhood education through teacher professional development. The idea is to improve the quality of educational offerings for four-to-six-year-olds, particularly in the area of language development. This project is also designed to intervene in critical health areas that improve school attendance as well as socioemotional development, and it seeks to involve the children's families in their education.
UBC, which has received some funding from the Center on the Developing Child, is an example of the kind of integrated child development work that is central to the Center’s mission.
The project, which began in 2007 with four demonstration sites, will eventually encompass 60 schools. National and international actors from both the public and private sectors are participating in the effort, which involves two years of intervention for each site.
UBC also incorporates a comprehensive evaluation: a cluster-randomized experiment in all 60 schools. This type of longitudinal evaluation in early education has not been carried out in any other country in Latin America and will place Chile at the forefront of demonstrating the impact of a high-quality early education.
As part of its Global Children’s Initiative, the Center is launching Núcleo Ciência Pela Infância, its first major programmatic effort outside the United States. In collaboration with local experts, this project aims to use the science of child health and development to guide stronger policies and larger investments to benefit young children and their families in Brazil.
inbrief-health-thumb.gif
 
 APPLYING THE SCIENCE OF EARLY CHILDHOOD IN BRAZIL
Núcleo Ciência Pela Infância is a collaboration between the Center, the David Rockefeller Center for Latin American Studies at Harvard University, Fundação Maria Cecilia Souto Vidigal, the Faculty of Medicine at the University of São Paulo, and Insper. This project represents a unique opportunity for the Center to work with Brazilian scholars, policymakers, and civil society leaders to adapt the Center’s programmatic model for the local context in order to catalyze more effective policies and programs that will, ultimately, foster a more prosperous, sustainable, and equitable society.
 Together, these organizations will engage in the following activities:
 •Building a scientific agenda and community of scholars around early childhood development;
 •Synthesizing and translating scientific knowledge for application to social policy. This will include working with the Center’s longtime partner organization, Frameworks Institute, to effectively communicate the science of child development in the Brazilian cultural context;
 •Strengthening leadership around early childhood development through an executive leadership course for policymakers;
 •Translating and adapting the Center’s existing print and multimedia resources for a Brazilian audience.
ZAMBIAN EARLY CHILDHOOD DEVELOPMENT PROJECT
zambia-image.jpg
While a large number of studies have investigated the impact of early childhood experiences on children’s developmental, health, and educational outcomes in developed countries, relatively little evidence is available on early childhood development in sub-Saharan Africa. To address this knowledge gap, the Zambian Ministry of Education, the Examination Council of Zambia, UNICEF, the University of Zambia, and the Center on the Developing Child at Harvard University launched the Zambian Early Childhood Development Project (ZECDP) in 2009, a collaborative effort to measure the effects of an ongoing anti-malaria initiative on children’s development in Zambia.
In order to measure the full impact of the anti-malaria campaign on Zambia’s human capital development, the ZECDP created a new comprehensive instrument for assessing children’s physical, socio-emotional, and cognitive development before and throughout their schooling careers—the first assessment tool of its kind in Zambia. Completed in May 2010, the Zambian Child Assessment Test (ZamCAT) combines existing child development measures with newly developed items in order to provide a broad assessment of children of preschool age in the Zambian context.
After careful calibration of the new survey tool through two rounds of piloting, a first cohort of 1,686 children born in 2004 was assessed between July and December 2010. In 2011, successful follow-up occurred with 1,250 of those children, and an additional follow-up is planned for June-August 2012. The early stages of the project demonstrate that comprehensive child assessments are feasible within standard population-based household surveys.
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