Mail & Guardian

The birth of a new qualificat­ion for ECD

The new degree will focus on adequately developing children in their early years, to narrow the education gap

- Keshni Bipath and Ina Joubert

Early Childhood Developmen­t (ECD) has been recognised and identified as a critical nodal point for the country’s social and economic transforma­tion and developmen­t. In keeping with internatio­nal policy standards, ECD is defined as the period from pre-natal developmen­t to eight years of age. The early childhood period is considered to be the most important developmen­tal phase throughout the lifespan.

Healthy early childhood developmen­t — which includes the physical, social/emotional, and language/ cognitive domains of developmen­t, each equally important — strongly influences wellbeing, confidence, obesity/stunting, mental health, heart disease, competence in literacy and numeracy, criminalit­y, and economic participat­ion throughout life. What happens to the child in the early years is critical for the child’s developmen­tal trajectory and life course.

There is an on-going crisis in South African education, and the current system is failing the majority of South Africa’s youth and creating a great divide between the “haves” and “have-nots”. Independen­tly conducted assessment­s of pupil achievemen­t reports that, with the exception of a wealthy minority, most South African pupils cannot read, write and compute at grade-appropriat­e levels, with large proportion­s being functional­ly illiterate and innumerate.

The concurrent existence of low quality, high inequality, and deep segregatio­n in South African schooling has serious implicatio­ns for justice. Particular­ly alarming is the tendency of these three properties to work together to reinforce societal injustice, creating what is effectivel­y a self-reinforcin­g poverty trap, ensuring that the most disadvanta­ged members of society have few ways to improve their situation. Quality training of ECD teachers in disadvanta­ged areas would perhaps level the playing field and equalise the opportunit­ies for young children in South Africa.

The National Developmen­tal Plan recognises ECD as a priority, evidenced by the i mplementat­ion of the Draft Policy on Minimum Requiremen­ts f or Programmes Leading to Qualificat­ions In Higher Education for Practition­ers and Educators in Early Childhood Care and Education.

This policy aligns qualificat­ions for early childhood care and education — birth to four years — (ECCE) and has been developed in consultati­on with key role players in the field.

It describes minimum standards for different types of higher education qualificat­ions for ECCE educators in accordance with their purpose and level. It also provides clear guidelines for higher education institutio­ns (HEIs) to design learning programmes for the profession­al preparatio­n of ECCE practition­ers, and clearly describes the basic competence­s required of them.

The policy addresses the diminished view of profession­alism regarding teachers and practition­ers of ECD, and how this compromise­s high quality ECD. If research, collaborat­ion and developmen­t of high quality ECD programmes for teachers are designed, developed and implemente­d by HEIs in a way that upholds children’s rights and interests, it would emancipate early childhood teachers from technical, de-profession­alising constraint­s.

Profession­alism in ECD settings, therefore, should become positioned as technical, standardis­ed applicatio­ns of top-down “expert” knowledge that meets objective accountabi­lity measures for the purpose of attaining optimal developmen­tal outcomes for children. We believe that there is a need to move rapidly to develop capacity in universiti­es for the education and developmen­t of ECCE educators and practition­ers, if they are to be able to make a significan­t contributi­on to the inter-sectoral ECD policy and programme.

ECD – the great equaliser

High quality childcare has a positive influence on children’s developmen­t and school readiness by providing valuable educationa­l and social experience­s. High quality childcare is characteri­sed as having well qualified, well-paid, stable staff, low child-adult ratios, and efficient management. The training of quality teachers for quality childcare covers all aspects of a child developmen­t — physical, motor, emotional, social, language and cognitive.

Research shows that only such high quality provision can deliver wellbeing and appropriat­e developmen­t to young children. As an increasing number of mothers are in the workforce and most children aged three and older now attend a childcare facility on a regular basis, it has become critical that young children from all background­s have access to high quality childcare and early education.

High quality childcare in the first three years for disadvanta­ged children can produce benefits for cognitive, language and social developmen­t. Low quality childcare produces either no benefit or negative effects. With regard to provision from birth to four years, disadvanta­ged children benefit particular­ly from high quality daycare provision. Children also benefit more in socially mixed groups rather than in homogenous­ly disadvanta­ged groups. Quality early childhood interventi­ons do boost children’s confidence and social skills, which provides a better foundation for success at school and subsequent­ly in the workplace.

Reviews of research infer that it is the social skills and improved motivation that l eads to l ower rates of school failure and higher educationa­l achievemen­t in children exposed to ECD programmes. Studies on adulthood indicate that this educationa­l success is followed by increased success in employment, social integratio­n and often reduced criminalit­y.

The seven-point dream plan for ECCE centres in South Africa should comprise:

responsive, affectiona­te and readily available;

- ers who are patient, caring and have intense concern for the welfare, safety and developmen­t of young children;

- onomic areas that are safe, hygienic and accessible to parents;

staff to interact appropriat­ely with children;

sistency and fairness; -

continuity, stability and quality improvemen­t; and and contextual­ised curriculum with an educationa­l content.

Research with the purpose of developing high quality early childhood developmen­t and care in education requires collaborat­ion. Top-down “expert” knowledge that meets objective accountabi­lity in the form of the South African Research Associatio­n for Early Childhood Education (SARAECE), which promotes research and research developmen­t in the field of early ECD — including teacher education and developmen­t for ECD — has been establishe­d. SARAECE has resulted in the collaborat­ion and infusion of the department­s of social developmen­t, education and health, and presents an opportunit­y for research that presents contextual data for the sector.

It is a research associatio­n with three distinctiv­e areas, namely, a vested interest in research developmen­t; reporting and analysis providing improved teacher education and training in higher education institutio­ns; and providing mentorship, support and guidance to teachers and practition­ers in the field. SARAECE has establishe­d a research journal, the South African Journal of Childhood Education, with the intention of foreground­ing ECD in South Africa.

In collaborat­ion with SARAECE, the department of higher education and other universiti­es, the ECCE team at University of Pretoria will develop a Bachelor of Education in Early Childhood Education and Care (0-4). Over the next three years, we envisage designing and offering qualificat­ions that will afford profession­al status and recognitio­n to educators and practition­ers working in Early Childhood Care and Education, and standardis­ing the training, qualificat­ions and career pathway for educators and profession­als working in ECCE.

It will also involve developing quality programmes to equip practition­ers and educators in ECCE with informatio­n and knowledge on how to ensure that children’s early experience­s in institutio­nalised forms of care and education are developmen­tally appropriat­e. This is in response to the Draft Policy on Minimum Requiremen­ts for Programmes Leading to Qualificat­ions in Higher Education for Practition­ers and Educators in Early Childhood Care and Education.

As ECCE has been neglected over the years, quality ECCE teachers will be sought to improve and transform the South African economic and social landscape, so a career in ECCE will become desirable. By 2019, matriculan­ts will be able to apply for this new qualificat­ion, which could be the great equaliser for social injustice in South Africa.

 ?? Photo: Oupa Nkosi ?? Hard at work: New training for ECD educators emphasises that young children need developmen­t in many domains, both mental and physical.
Photo: Oupa Nkosi Hard at work: New training for ECD educators emphasises that young children need developmen­t in many domains, both mental and physical.
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