Record numbers for Early Childhood Council's Conference
24 May 2012
For immediate release
Record numbers for
Early Childhood Council's Annual Conference in
Auckland
The organiser of a conference for early childhood centre managers and teachers to be run in Auckland this weekend, has struggled to accommodate the numbers seeking to attend.
Early Child Council CEO Peter Reynolds said delegate attendance was up almost 100 per cent from last year, with total numbers including speakers and others set to top 800.
‘We are struggling to accommodate the numbers, and if we were at a smaller venue, as we are for many of our conferences, we would be turning away potential delegates,’ Mr Reynolds said.
The conference's popularity this year could be attributed, he said, to centres seeking knowledge to deal with ongoing Government revenue cuts, the practical nature of many workshops, and the popularity of Auckland as a destination.
Scheduled to run at Auckland’s Sky City Convention Centre from tomorrow (25 May) to 27 May, the conference includes a keynote address by Minister of Education Hekia Parata (25 May, 1pm) that is expected to address the meaning of the Budget for early childhood education centres and the families they serve.
Keynote speeches include also:
• Early
Childhood Council President Maria Johnson on the damage done
to early childhood centres unable to be certain that current
levels of Government funding will be maintained; (25 May,
11am, phone 021-741321)
• Early Childhood Council CEO
Peter Reynolds on the past year in early childhood
education; (25 May, 11.20am, phone 028 258
22322)
• Psychologist Nigel Latta on what science has
to say about the effectiveness of modern approaches to
parenting and the implications of these lessons for early
childhood centres; (25 May, 3.25pm)
• Associate
Professor Martin Devlin on the value of enrolling a child in
early childhood education from the parents’ perspective,
and the possible future of childcare; (26 May, 1.50pm)
• The 2010 New Zealander of the Year Sir Ray Avery on
how leadership and innovation, together with improved
anthropological profiling, can lead to improved educational
outcomes. (27 May, 8.50am)
The conference includes
workshops on the following.
• The more than 160,000
children in New Zealand considered to be ‘vulnerable’ at
any one time, and how early childhood teachers can recognize
and support these children and their families. (Ruth Ham,
phone 0275047293 and Lynda Harris, Auckland Kindergarten
Association, phone 0211834595 - 25 May, 9.15am)
• The
experience of a Christchurch early childhood centre, which
has sought to ‘keep it positive’ despite, since August
2010, being subject to a fire that caused extensive damage
and consequential temporary closure, four large earthquakes
that also caused closure, two tsunami warnings, three-weeks
of closure due to nearby flooding (which stopped only two
houses away), and closure due to snow. (Paula Robinson, New
Brighton Community Preschool and Nursery – 26 May, 11am,
phone 0274541227.)
• The growing use of iPads and iPods
in early childhood centres and how they are being used to
develop literacy, numeracy and creativity. (Ann Hatherly and
Tania Coutts, CORE Education, phone 021-477753 or 021-594830
- 26 May, 11am)
• The outcomes of a research project
that investigated both how and how much Auckland men engage
with their children’s early childhood centres. (Dr Geoff
Bridgman Unitec, phone 0220119838 and Elaine Dyer, Violence
Free Waitakere, phone 022-0119838 – 26 May,
2.55pm)
• The outcomes of the Government’s
‘participation projects’, designed to lift the number of
children participating in early childhood education in
communities in which participation is low. (Karl Le Quesne,
Group Manager, ECE, Ministry of Education – 26 May,
2.55pm, phone 027 451 0959)
The Early Childhood Council is the largest representative body of licensed early childhood centres in New Zealand. Its 1100 member centres, a third of which are community-owned and two thirds commercially owned, employ more than 7000 staff, and care for tens of thousands of children.
The full conference programme can be found at http://www.ecc.org.nz/Category?Action=View&Category_id=43.
ENDS