David Clark argues that the Government's early education
cuts will hit Dunedin families and children especially
hard.
Yesterday, $400 million in cuts came into effect in the early
childhood sector.
These cuts will affect Otago disproportionately.
A survey found that 54 centres across Otago will lose an
average of $48,500 each per annum.
Fees will be raised by between $5 and $40 per child per week.
In Dunedin alone, 2900 children currently enrolled in
high-quality early childhood education will be immediately
affected by the cuts.
This is because Dunedin city has the largest proportion of
children enrolled in centres employing 100%
tertiary-qualified teaching staff.
In overwhelming numbers, Otago's early childhood centres have
committed to a high-quality model.
And, until now, they have been able to provide 20 hours of
teaching with qualified teachers to all 3 and 4-year-old
children free.
Some parents will be able to cope with the price rises that
centres are introducing to make ends meet.
Others will struggle, particularly at a time when costs are
rising faster than wages.
The GST rise has hit, and inflation is at a 21-year high.
Family stress levels will rise.
For some people, the cuts imposed by the Government will be
too much.
It will be easier for them to quit part-time jobs to spend
day and night with the kids.
They will end up drawing a benefit, and lose the opportunity
to have their children engage with trained teachers for four
hours each day.
So why has the Kindergarten Association, many of the
community-based child-care providers and even many of the
for-profit centres committed to the qualified teacher model
of education and care?Longitudinal studies have documented
the significant relationship between the quality of early
childhood education and a child's literacy and numeracy
scores once they reach school.
The early years are the most important for a child's brain
development. Quality early childhood education improves
cognitive ability in school-aged children: full stop.
For me, the big question is: what do we value most as a
society?Early childhood experts argue that because brain
development is happening at its fastest rate during the
pre-school years, there is a strong argument for as many
qualified teachers as possible.
Why would you expect unqualified teachers in the preschool
years when you wouldn't tolerate unqualified teachers in your
primary and secondary schools? Anecdotally, it seems, centres
with some unqualified staff tend to put them with younger
rather than older preschool children.
The science suggests it should be the other way around.
Either way, the literature consistently identifies higher
proportions of qualified teachers as one of the persistent
structural features of quality centres that lead to higher
literacy and numeracy scores.
In this case, more seems to be better.
Providing more, quality early education is a smart thing for
any government to do.
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