Sunday, April 20, 2014

Getting to Know Your International Contacts~~Part III



So still no words from my international counterparts…starting to feel as though that assignment was a little unreachable. Thank goodness there was always and alternative assignment available.  I was sort of surprised that I still haven’t even got a response from the World Forum Foundation question I submitted a while ago.  Oh well I guess everyone is really busy making the world a better place for children.
This week we were to explore “UNESCO” ECE website as an alternate. I looked around a bit and right away an article snagged my attention.  It was titled “What Are the Three Most Important Skills for a Child?” Unfortunately, like with most sites I have been exploring in the ECE the article could not be found.  That lead me to remember that this week in our discussion board the conversation came up about some early childhood teacher seeing themselves as non-professional in their work with children and how it holds the field back as a whole. This sort of thing, putting resources out there that are not accessible, makes us look also as though we don’t have our ducks in a row.  I think sometimes in our attempt to prove our worthiness we cut our noses off to spite our faces…and we really need to stop.
         So onto another wild goose chase it was. I found another article that I read called “Bite Off Only as Much as You Can Chew”: Gambia’s Policy for Early Childhood. It began with a brief background of the early childhood education program being set up in Gambia. I have included a little snip it of the transcript of the conversation, it is quite interesting to read…

C: When early childhood is embraced within the formal education system, the idea of universal provision is often debated. Was the idea of universalising one year of
early childhood not considered?
S: Yes, it was considered. We examined the possibility of lowering the entry age into primary school to 6 years, universaling 6-year-olds’ access to education. But
according to projections it would be too costly for the Government to handle without external support. The idea was dropped because of the problem of sustainability.
C: I guess the education sector’s plan to expand the current free compulsory education from 6 years to 9 years must have been another factor discouraging
universalisation at the early childhood level.
S: That’s right. The Sector was clear about its priority, but it was fully convinced of the importance of early childhood and tried to find an alternative way to
promote it, which was to set up ECD Centres on the premises of primary schools.
C: If the ECD Centre option was deemed less costly, where would the presumed savings come from?
S: Though the word centre may conjure up in people’s mind a building, the ECD Centres that we are considering are more like playgrounds, with sheds
contributed and set up by the communities. So there is a cost saving for building infrastructure.
C: But even in sheds, in order to have a programme you need materials and, especially, trained teachers.
S: As we do not yet have a curriculum for the ECD Centres, 7 they will run, for the time being, more like playgrounds, with no fixed programme, with the teachers
C: But even in sheds, in order to have a programme you need materials and, especially, trained teachers.
S: As we do not yet have a curriculum for the ECD Centres, they will run, for the time being, more like playgrounds, with no fixed programme, with the teachers responsible more for child-minding than for their learning process.
C: How would you supply the teachers?
Senghore: We have introduced a polyvalent teacher training framework, under which primary school teachers are now certified by the Government to teach early
childhood as well. Once the plan is approved and implemented, each school principal will assign one of these polyvalently trained teachers to the new ECD
Centre.
C: This is a strategic way of securing at least one government-paid and -trained teacher for each ECD Centre, but in order for it to happen, the primary schools
will each have to lose a teacher to the ECD Centre in the shed.
Sanneh: In the absolute sense, yes. So the Government plans to recruit more primary school teachers. But we figured that it would still be more cost effective
than to meet the workforce needs of early childhood through early childhood specialists.
C: What is your plan for 0-2-year-olds?
S: They are taken care of by other sectors and the  education sector does not plan to involve itself with them.
C: Is parenting education the major approach for 0-2-year-olds?
S: It is, but parenting education is an important component stressed in all services provided by all stakedholders of the multi-sectoral framework including
the education sector.
C: Do you think it is necessary to be concerned with younger children?
S: It would be ideal for the education sector to be equally concerned with the earlier years. But in terms of the sector’s resource capacity, that is not possible, at least for now. One should bite off only as much as one can chew. We have taken up the responsibility for 3-6-yearolds; it is our priority to fulfill this responsibility of ours as best as we can.

       The first thing I had to look up was the word polyvalent, and consider what it meant as a descriptor for a teacher of young children, which by the way, given the definition I was unable to figure it out.

POLYVALENT: ADJECTIVE
1. Chemistry having more than one valence.
2. Bacteriology (of an immune serum) containing several antibodies, each capable of reacting with a specific antigen.

        I also took away from the conversation transcript that infant toddler care is neither accessible or being prioritized. In addition, that due to lack of qualified teachers they were going to you “elementary education” type teacher in these rolls more as babysitters than early childhood teacher, with no curriculum planned. Moreover, something that really made me think even more critically about was that they did not want to invest money in training ECE teachers specifically. Now because I do not have any concept about what education in general looks like in Gambia, I can only assume that it is similar to the US.  I would question why an elementary teacher would be acceptable to place in a preschool setting.  I have seen how it does not necessarily work here, this makes for unattainable, inappropriate goals and standards for the children, right? Although I know it happens here, quite frequently I think we can all agree it is not best practice.
I guess in my mind this thinking defeats our purpose of having quality teacher education, accessible and developmentally appropriate programs for children…much the same as we have previously seen in the U.S.—they really are not much different than us. Sad. Let’s not strive for excellence; let’s not bite off more than we can chew…

References

http://www.unesco.org/new/en/education/themes/strengthening-education-systems/early-childhood/access-and-equity/

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