Tuesday, April 23, 2013

Final Assignment

The first way learning about the early childhood field around the world has impacted my personal and professional life is by getting a clearer picture of how other governments approach educating their young people. Learning about the Pastoral del Nino project in Paraguay or the efforts of UNESCO in other countries makes it feel as though I am working toward a common goal with people I have never met.  Another way I have grown is by becoming aware of useful websites like Harvard's Center for the Developing Child, UNESCO, and UNICEF and reading about their work globally.  I will make it a point to go to these websites and read about projects these organizations are involved in.  The last way is that I have grown personally by reading articles and watching videos of children around the world and their eagerness to learn despite their often poor circumstances.  I don't often stop and think about the conditions in other countries but by reading our assignments or visiting websites, I have had the opportunity to do so and get a sense of the challenges many children and families have in the world.

I have appreciated reading and learning from my classmates during this class.  The summaries of what they have read has given me more information about early childhood education globally.  A goal I have for myself is to continue to read about international efforts for children and monetarily support an organization in their work.  I may not be able to personally visit and teach in another country but by donating to those who do I can help them continue their work.  

Thursday, April 18, 2013

UNESCO's Website

On the UNESCO website, the education tab holds my insights for this week.  The Global Action Week slogan for 2013 is "Every Child Needs a Teacher."  The article I read discusses the importance of teachers in the lives of children.  It talked of UNESCO's support to teachers around the world in their efforts to reach every child.  One of my goals is to educate future teachers to take on this same challenge.  Current and future teachers will help mold the future of all countries.  I hope to be part of many teacher candidate's preparation. 

 The second thing I learned about was UNESCO's Teacher Strategy.  The priorities for this program are "bridging the teacher gap through activities that strengthen national capacities, reinforcing teacher training institutions and teacher educators, and supporting policy formulation, monitoring and implementation, improving teacher quality by developing standards for teachers and recommendations for use in policy development, and informing the global debate, generating research and knowledge about effective teaching through exchanges between UNESCO practitioner networks, including the UNESCO Chairs , UNITWIN networks and the UNESCO Associated Schools Networks (ASPnet)" (UNESCO, 2012). 

The last thing new to me was the "Education for All" and "Millennium Development Goal" projects.  UNESCO held a meeting of global education experts in Paris on October 3-4, 2012 which was to "serve as the basis for building a global indicator development agenda and facilitate broader coordination related to cross-national indicators on teachers and teaching. Also, it would provide the opportunity to propose how practical results from new measurement initiatives could be used by UNESCO to take forward its phased regional and global measurement efforts" (UNESCO, 2012).  I was unaware these efforts existed and would like to find out what was discussed and decided on and what impact the decisions would have on education in the United States. 

Saturday, April 13, 2013

Sharing Web Resources

I have been learning about the National Association of Early Childhood Teacher Educators (NAECTE).  On the website, I learned through the link entitled "Annual Conferences" that the organization meets during the fall and spring NAEYC conferences and that there is no registration fee for the NAECTE meeting because it is included in the NAEYC registration fee.  On the "Affiliates" link, 13 states are listed as having affiliation with the organization and 11 of them list contact emails for the state's representative.  The site provides a "ResearchNet" link where teacher educators can form relationships with other professionals and work together to perform research at their respective universities.  The "Awards and Funding" tab details the names of recent recipients of the various awards NAECTE gives.  Other tabs have book titles members have published, information for members, and a link where members can submit journal entries for publication.  

The tab for the position statement, by-laws, and policies states the organizations' emphasis on qualified early childhood educators being knowledgeable about development and learning in the early years.  The position statement re-states the impact of high-quality early education on a child's life.  It also highlights the importance of public schools making it a priority to hire staff that has an early childhood endorsement for positions in the lower grades to help close the achievement gap and meet the needs of lower income and ESLchildren. 

There is no new information from the e-newsletter.  It is published quarterly and the last installment was February 2013.

After reading the position statement, I have learned that the organization supports high-quality programs and highly educated early childhood staff.  The statement included the importance of all children receiving a positive education from a teacher who knows how young children learn best and what is age-appropriate and developmentally appropriate material.  It also addressed the importance of social/emotional development in young children and stated that caring relationships with teachers will help children develop the way they need to. 

Because the information on the website is informational and the newsletter is published quarterly, there wasn't any new insights I received this week.

I am going to the NAEYC spring conference in June.  I hope to stop by the NAECTE meeting while I am there and talk to some of the representatives.















Saturday, April 6, 2013

The Developing Child website

Harvard University's Global Children's Initiative website states how new scientific research continually emphasizes the importance of early childhood.  In high-income countries around the world, the information has led to better prevention, diagnosis, and treatment of childhood diseases and has initiated a concentration on learning and development in the early years.  In middle-to-low income countries, the information has resulted in a reduction of childhood malnutrition and child mortality.  Poverty still exists but the knowledge can promote new approaches to reduce or prevent problems for children.  Poorer countries can use the new information to help integrate services for children to give them the best possible chance for success.  In Zambia, a new assessment called ZamCAT was developed and completed in 2010.  It is used to analyze and evaluate anti-malaria efforts on preschool children's physical/socio-emotional/cognitive development.  In Brazil, a new project, Nucleo Ciencia Pela Infancia, aims to create a supportive early childhood base of scholars and scientists, work to change social policy with new scientific knowledge, develop early childhood leadership that can effectively make policies benefiting children, and traslate The Center's wealth of early childhood information for Brazilians.