"People who fly into a rage always make a bad landing."
–Will Rogers
INTERNATIONAL TRENDS
IMPACTING YOUNG CHILDREN
UNESCO has just released "Policy Brief No. 8 on Early Childhood".
This paper reflected on international trends that will have an impact on the
demand for early childhood care and education. Included among the trends considered
were rapid urbanization, movement of men and women from agricultural to nonagricultural
work, and the need for a more highly educated work force in order for nations
to compete effectively in a globalized economy. The paper concludes:
"First, transformations in the nature and location of parental work are
limiting the availability of both fathers and mothers to care for young children.
Second, extended family members are often not filling the gaps in care for young
children because urbanization is separating nuclear and extended families in
the location of their residence and because adult members are also often
working. Third, in the absence of services, preschool children's health and
development are placed at risk when they are left alone, in the care of
other young children, or brought to work settings where parents cannot adequately
care for them. Together, our findings document a large and growing need for
improved care for young children in working families. This care should include both
the opportunity for parental care made possible by paid parental leave....and
ECCE services. Not only do the demographic trends underscore the large
and growing demand for ECCE, but extensive research documents the enormous
cognitive, social, and emotional developmental benefits of quality early childhood
care and education. Moreover, both because of its role in supporting parental
work and in improving children's educational outcomes, affordable, high quality
ECCE plays an essential role in increasing countries' ability to compete in
the global economy."
To read the complete, policy brief, click on the following address:
http://www.unesco.org/education/educprog/ecf/pdf/brief8en.pdf
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