One consequence of learning about the international early
childhood field for my professional and personal development was learning how
other countries feel as though high-quality education for young children is
just as important as the early childhood professionals in the United States and
therefore go to great lengths to provide professional development for the teachers.
Another was learning that the girls in the United States should not take
education for granted as I found out that there are countries who do not
encourage educating girls and in fact refuse to educate girls in some cases. Lastly, I learned that there are so many
different variables that prevent young children from receiving, not just
quality education but, education period. Things such as poverty, distance to the
school, illness and diseases, and having to enter the workforce to help provide
for the family all play a role in the children not receiving an education. One goal for the field related to international
awareness of issues and trends and the spirit of collegial relations would be
continued communication and networking with early childhood education
professionals in other countries in an attempt to all get on one accord and
have the same standards set in place to ensure all young children receive
high-quality education……as my colleagues continue in their professional path I wish
them great success. It has been a pleasure learning from them all, gaining new
insights, receiving support, encouragement, and constructive criticism through
posts, and providing support to them as well.
....a blog created to allow Early Childhood professionals the opportunity to share resources and collaborate on ideas designed to improve the quality of care for young children. Every child deserves to grow up in an environment promoting the encouragement of their success while giving them hope for a bright future. HELP MAKE THIS POSSIBLE!!!
Saturday, December 22, 2012
Saturday, December 15, 2012
Getting to know your international contacts part 3
The
conclusion of the Sub Saharan Arica 2012 Education for All Report that was presented
in November states that never in African history has so much been
achieved in education over such a short period of time and governments are
legitimately proud of their achievements. But the gap between the have and
have-nots in education remains too large. Across Sub Saharan Africa, there is a general
awareness that the last decade has witnessed unprecedented progress in the
development of education. Net Enrollment Ratio in
primary education had increased from 58% in 1999 to 76% by 2010 and the Gender
parity index from 0.85 to 0.93 over the same period of time. Enrollment in secondary
education more than doubled from 20.8 million to 43.7 million to grasp the full
significance of the dividends yielded by the Education for All effort across
the region within a decade. Despite the great achievements however, very few
countries in the sub Saharan African region will reach the Education for All
goals by the year 2015. The international community set the goals in 2000
during the World Education Forum in Dakar.While the prospects are positive for
Universal Primary Education and Gender equality, the challenges are
particularly daunting for the remaining four goals, namely early childhood care
and education, youth and adult skills, adult literacy and the issue of quality.
Here again the figures from Africa speak for themselves: 31 million children
are out of school, 35% of the youth has no access to secondary education or
technical skills development, and 163 adults are illiterate. 36% of the
children in eastern and southern Africa reaching the minimum required level of
maths competences against 43% in central and West Africa. 35% of children in
west and central Africa acquire the minimum level of reading at the end of
primary education against 64% of the children in eastern and southern Africa. “The
gaps are simply too large and with the decreasing international assistance to
education, resources are just not enough to bridge the differences,” comments
Rodrigues. “Urgent action is needed to improve the quality of education in
sub-Saharan Africa.
"
The scale and diversity of mobile learning
projects in the United Kingdom and Denmark indicate that sustained government
investment is necessary to roll out large projects which effectively use mobile
phones for learning. Secondary school teachers in Europe, beyond using
mobile phones to enrich the delivery of education, have recently begun asking
students to practice technical and critical thinking skills by designing their
own mobile applications. These trends and illustrative projects, among others,
are detailed in the newly released papers about mobile learning in Europe. The
papers are an essential component of the broader UNESCO Working Paper Series on
Mobile Learning. The Series scans the global to provide concrete examples of
how mobile technologies, due largely to their availability and affordability,
can respond to unique educational challenges in different contexts; supplement
and enrich formal schooling; and, in general, make learning everywhere more
accessible, equitable, and personalized.
“Stand up for Malala -- Stand up for girls’ right to
education!” is the rallying cry of an advocacy event, taking place at UNESCO’s
Paris Headquarters on 10 December, the United Nations Human Rights Day.
Organized by UNESCO and the Government of Pakistan, the event will accelerate
political action to ensure every girl’s right to go to school, and to advance
girls’ education as an urgent priority for achieving Education For All.The event pays tribute to
Malala Yousafazi, an astonishingly brave 15 year old girl who survived an
assassination attempt for her determined efforts to defend girls’ education in
Paskistan, after the Taliban outlawed schools for girls in her native Swat
Valley. The human rights to education and gender equality were both
violated by this action. “Whenever and wherever a young girl is forbidden from
going to school, it’s an attack against all girls, against the right to learn,
the right to live life to the full; and it is unacceptable,” declared UNESCO
Director-General Irina Bokova last month in an official
manifestation of support for Malala. Indeed, there is no
justification – be it cultural, economic or social – for denying girls and
women an education. Humanity stands as a single community when united around
human rights and fundamental freedoms. Malala’s struggle highlights a
devastating reality: Girls make up the majority of the world’s 61 million
out-of-school children. They are less likely than boys to enter primary school.
Harmful practices such as early marriage, gender-based violence, discriminatory
laws, prevent them from enrolling in or completing
school. Educational disparities start at the youngest ages and
continue into adulthood. Women represent two thirds of the world’s 775 million illiterates.
Despite making breakthroughs in higher education, women still account for just
29 per cent of researchers.
Saturday, December 8, 2012
Sharing Web Resources
The outside links I explored led to issues about free parent brochures and guides, maltreatment, child abuse and neglect, school readiness, and impact of trauma to name a few. The area I chose to search was school readiness. This issue is important to me because I mentor teachers and assist in preparing young children for kindergarten on a daily basis in my profession. The link contained a web-based, interactive tool designed to help parents and caregivers support their young children's early learning. You'll find age-based information on how children develop the four key skills - language and literacy skills, thinking skills, self-confidence and self-control that are critical to later school success. No new information was available on school readiness, nor was there any information pertaining to or adding to my understanding of equity and excellence in early care and education to be found in any of the links.
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