Hawke's Bay Today

Playcentre role more important now than ever

- Email editor@hbtoday.co.nz to have your say. Peter Dunne is a political scientist and historian who was Member of Parliament for 33 years, latterly as leader of United Future.

Playcentre is a unique New Zealand institutio­n focused on fostering the developmen­t of the preschool child, while providing support and education for parents — usually, but not always, the mother.

Since its establishm­ent in 1941, hundreds of thousands of children and generation­s of parents have benefited from Playcentre’s parentled approach to early childhood education. Its core philosophy of education through mixed-age play and child-centred initiative­s now underpins the approach of all forms of early childhood education in New Zealand. Around 7 per cent of children attend the 420 Playcentre­s throughout New Zealand, yet they receive only about 1 per cent of government funding.

The Minister of Education recently suggested the Playcentre model may be out of step today because of the greater likelihood of most parents working. He implied that was the reason Playcentre had not received funding increases in the same proportion as other, teacher-led, early childhood education services.

The timing of his comments was extraordin­arily unfortunat­e. The consequenc­es of Covid-19 have meant disruption­s for many households, including job losses, leaving many parents with unexpected changes in their circumstan­ces. They will be anxious and uncertain about their personal and household futures and looking at how they can continue to be positive role models for their children.

So, this is the time to be enhancing parent-led approaches to early childhood education through organisati­ons such as Playcentre, and increasing parental involvemen­t in education generally, not running them down by benign neglect.

For years, experts have stressed the valuable role of parents in the educationa­l and societal developmen­t of their children, as carers and providers, educators, and role models.

In so many communitie­s, Playcentre has been the invaluable network through which those skills have been built up , providing parents with the confidence, support and empathy they need to do this most important of jobs well. That is something any government should be welcoming, not brushing aside.

We are fortunate in New Zealand to have a range of quality early childhood and childcare services for parents, staffed by profession­ally qualified teachers, for parents to choose from. That range of services is appropriat­e, given the increasing diversity of our country.

Parents should be able to choose the service that best suits their needs and circumstan­ces — but in the interests of the children, the choice needs to be made on a level playing field.

Current funding arrangemen­ts suggest that is not the case with regard to Playcentre, which now faces the prospect of having to close or downsize some of its centres, just to continue to make ends meet. That would be an intolerabl­e tragedy, especially in rural areas where Playcentre is often the only early childhood education option.

All of which begs the question: Why this is being allowed to happen? It is not just the changing social circumstan­ces the Minister has wanly referred to. Thanks to Covid-19, those social circumstan­ces are now about to undergo their biggest upheaval in the nearly 80 years since Playcentre was establishe­d, arguably when the need for the type of approach it offers will be stronger than ever.

No, the real reason runs a little deeper. The increasing profession­alisation of early childhood education services and their merging with childcare services over the past 30 years has been good for improving the quality of service. But it has led to a greater focus on teacher-led early childhood education, at the expense of the parent-led model Playcentre has epitomised so successful­ly.

When the Minister says Playcentre’s approach may be out of date, and implies two-parent working families are the reason, he is really saying Playcentre’s unyielding focus on placing parents and children at the forefront of early childhood education does not fit today’s more teacher-led environmen­t. That smacks of a wider agenda.

Prior to Tomorrow’s Schools, parental involvemen­t in all forms of children’s education was akin to genuine but enthusiast­ic amateurs. Tomorrow’s Schools and the advent of Boards of Trustees gave parents a clear role in the education of their children. Now, the Government wants to change that, to pare back their responsibi­lities, and give greater control to teachers.

Playcentre looks like becoming the victim of a similar approach in early childhood education.

that way

Kelly Wheatley:

I actually miss level 4. It was so quiet and more slow paced. Besides having to sign in at a lot of places it pretty feels back to normal people everywhere, shops packed, roads busy.

I want level 1 . . . but

Sandy Hunter:

Isaywait...

Christina McBeth:

Anyone who continues to feel unsafe is welcome to social distance or stay home. Bring on level 1

Wait — all it’s gonna take is one to put us back to level 4.

Daniel Son:

 ??  ?? Peter Dunne
Playcentre faces the prospect of having to close or downsize some of its centres, writes Peter Dunne.
Peter Dunne Playcentre faces the prospect of having to close or downsize some of its centres, writes Peter Dunne.

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