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"Don’t find a
fault. Find a remedy." - Henry Ford
What Age Should Be the
Focus of Funding?
UNESCO Policy Brief on Early Childhood #23, "Early
Education Financing: What is Useful to Know?", written by John Bennett,
addresses the many issues of public financing of pre-K services. One issue
it addresses is the decision to focus on the early years or the later years
of the educational system. The report observes...
"In many countries, funding to each child in primary education is 1.5 times
greater than similar funding in early education, although younger children need
more favorable child/staff ratios. What is more surprising is that funding
per university student is generally five or six times greater than for a child
in a early education service, although the economic and educational returns
from investing in young children are well proven. This difference in funding
may be an inheritance from the past when education was conceived in rather elitist
terms, with little early education and a powerful university sector. Today,
it seems more equitable that public funding should be allocated to the base
of the educational pyramid rather than to its apex, although it is clear that
governments may need at times to stimulate through funding an increase of graduates
in certain fields. Recent experience in Australia suggests that free education
at the tertiary level may be inefficient in economic terms, as charging student
fees seems to have little effect on enrollments if appropriate student loans
are put into place. If such is the case, a gradual shifting of government
investment toward the foundation stage of lifelong learnng may take place in
future years."
To read this full policy brief, go to: http://mail.ccie.com/go/eed/0248
For more information about Exchange's magazine, books, and other products pertaining to ECE, go to www.ccie.com.
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