No Time for Gloom in Early Childhood Education
No Time for Gloom in Early Childhood Education – Commentary
27 March 2012
ChildForum ECE
Network
It is not all gloom in early childhood education services as the recent Early Childhood Council (ECC) employers lobby group survey of business confidence amongst its members has made it out to be, ChildForum says.
“Children are still enrolling and children are
attending for longer hours while the number of early
childcare centres opening up is continuing to increase,”
ChildForum’s National Co-coordinator Sarah Farquhar says.
According to the lobby group’s survey, fear of further
government revenue cuts is undermining the confidence of
those running early childhood centres. The ECC portrays
early childcare centres as grappling with both the revenue
cuts of the Government’s last term and the widespread fear
of new ones, excessive red tape, ‘unaffordable’ pay
demands from teachers, and struggling parents unable to pay
their fees.
However, Dr Farquhar says demand for
childcare in particular is growing and there continues to be
more new early childhood centres opening.
“Anxieties
around uncertainties over funding are just that --
anxieties. But many operators are nevertheless getting on
with their business and have learnt that business planning
needs to take into account changing economic circumstances
and government funding.”
A ChildForum similar survey last year showed that uncertainty was a big issue and what would happen to ECE funding continued to worry some ECE operators.
In regard to earlier cutbacks in funding, early childhood services have made adjustments and we have not seen large scale closures, Dr Farquhar says.
“There has already been a definite trend toward employing cheaper and part-time staff over full-time staff over the past two years. The supply of teachers has caught up with demand and now teachers are accepting whatever the employer is willing to offer or they will not get a job.
“So what the ECC employers’ lobby survey is showing is nothing new and nothing which is not already known.”
Dr Farquhar says the Government has already acted on concerns expressed by the ECC lobby about red tape.
It has cut the number of licences an early childhood service with more than 50 children must have, allowing centres to have up to three times the number of children if they wished. The government has held back from making improvements in regulation that would impact financially on service budgets such as reducing the number of infants per adult in the regulations or lifting the minimum percentage of qualified teachers required in centres.
“ChildForum suggests that the sooner the Government brings certainty to the funding situation, the better.
“With the elimination of stress in not knowing what further changes in funding might be around the corner, the Government and ECE services will then be able to work better together on the quality of care and education of children rather than the on-going focus on money, Dr Farquhar says.
Here are four quotes from ChildForum’s ‘State of the ECE Sector in 2011’ Survey::
• “The ECE Taskforce report has
placed a good deal of anxiety on educators, families and
business. We have had to work extremely hard to keep
everyone positive and upbeat.” (The ECE Taskforce was
commissioned by the Government in 2011; the Early Childhood
Council lobby was part of the Taskforce)
•
“To provide the best service for all, we need to be able
to focus on providing great programmes that inspire and give
children the best opportunities to achieve and have
fun!”
• “We are thriving with a full roll,
small waiting list and very happy families.”
•
“We have a new business and we are growing in numbers
steadily week by week.”
A review of the latest
statistics on changes in the early childhood sector and more
information about how things are going in the sector is
available at www.childforum.com
ENDS