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World Forum Themes Unveiled
January 30, 2007
You already possess everything necessary to become great.
-American Indian proverb
The program team for the 2007 World Forum on Early Care and Education has been hard at work sifting through hundreds of program suggestions and has selected major themes the program will be built around. The overriding theme of this World Forum will be the "UN Convention on the Rights of the Child." There will be four plenary sessions focusing on the Rights of the Child (twice), the UNESCO Education for All Report on Early Childhood, and the Impact of Poverty on Young Children.

The program will include 63 sessions focusing on the following themes:
  • Peace-Building with Young Children
  • Impact of Violence in Children's Lives (including media violence, abuse and neglect, conflict resolution)
  • Nature Education for Young Children
  • Environmental Design (indoor and outdoor)
  • Professional Development (including distance education, men in ece)
  • Managing Programs for Quality
  • Threats to Healthy Childhoods (including HIV/AIDS, nutrition, poverty, care in emergencies, movement and displacement)
  • Quality (setting standards, monitoring, achieving on a budget)
  • Delivering Care (including issues around financing, gender, transitions, children in orphanages, informal care, rural care, children with special needs, infants and toddlers, and out of school care)
  • Curriculum �" Philosophical and Development Issues (including cultural context)
  • Curriculum Content Issues (including literacy, art, music, drama, play, movement)
  • Parent and Family Issues
  • Advocacy

If you are interested in being considered as a panelist for one of these themes, and if you have not already sent us your proposal or communicated through our web site, please notify us of your interest immediately at: https://secure.ccie.com/survey/index.php?survey_id=96

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Comments (3)

Displaying All 3 Comments
Vishakha Deshpande · January 31, 2007
Thane, Maharashtra, United States


I do agree with Gay Macdonald. Both maths & science are important areas & so is environmental study.These can be made strong in the early years through various playful experiences. WF organisers can give a thought to this.Academics also have importance.

Frank Winkler · January 30, 2007
SUbstance Abuse Youth Networking Org.
Montgomery, Alabama, United States


I see no mention of substance abuse as a topic of interest in your subject outline. Juvenile substance abuse is the number one contributor to juvenile crime and other personal problems. Over 70% of both adults and youth behind bars nationally are there for drug-related offenses. The positive corrrelation between drop-outs, gangs, crime, STDs, unwanted teen pregnancy and more is 70%-plus with substance abuse. Suggest you expand/ modify your program, accordingly.

Gay Macdonald · January 30, 2007
UCLA Early care and education
Los Aneles, CA, United States


This is a great list and will make for a most thought-provoking meeting, in the tradition of those already held.

I was surprised and sorry to see that neither math nor science is mentioned in the curriculum area. Although literacy is of primary importance, children without skill in math and science are at a grave disadvantage in today's world and countries without resources in this area are at a huge competitive disadvantage.



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