Share
at least 3 new ideas or insights you gained about issues related to
international early childhood education that relate to your professional goals
from the UNESCO’s “Early Childhood Care and Education” webpage:
The first insight that
I gained relates to my professional goal of continuing to work with low-income
children and I found it in the section for the International Institute for
Educational Planning (IIEP). United
Nations Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) currently
has a research project evaluating access to quality programs for children
considered to be in vulnerable groups such as low-income children. The project “will generate a powerful means
of identifying factors that provide a more powerful explanation of the
educational achievement levels of vulnerable groups of pupils” (United Nations
Educational, Scientific, and Cultural Organization, 2013b, para. 7).
The second insight that
I gained relates to my professional goal of learning how to manage an efficient
early childhood program. The UNESCO
website provides training materials on management and supervision in the IIEP
section. The training modules include
the importance of supervision, “roles and functions”, organization, managing
staff, and many more (UNESCO, 2013a, para. 4).
The last insight that I
gained also relates to my professional goal of managing a program. I found a pamphlet in the IIEP section
entitled “Preparation, Recruitment, and Retention of Teachers”. While reading about teacher retention, I was
surprised to learn that in the United Kingdom and the United States “30 to 50
percent of teachers leave within the first three to five years” whereas “rates
in many other developed countries are low to negligible” (Cooper &
Alvarado, 2010, p. 17). Research has
found that “the primary cause of teacher turnover rate seems to be due to poor
or difficult working conditions” (p. 19).
References
Cooper, J. M. & Alvarado, A.
(2006). Preparation, recruitment, and
retention of teachers. Retrieved from http://unesdoc.unesco.org/images/0015/001520/152023e.pdf
UNESCO/International Institute for
Educational Planning (2013a). IIEP
training materials. Retrieved from http://www.iiep.unesco.org/capacity-development/training/training-materials/school-supervision.html
UNESCO/International Institute for
Educational Planning (2013b). Strategies
to improve access and retention of vulnerable students. Retrieved from http://www.iiep.unesco.org/research/equity-access-and-quality/improve-access-and-retention.html
Hello Melissa, Great Post!!
ReplyDeleteYour professional goals for yourself are amazing.
Melissa,
ReplyDeleteYou have a great post. The UNESCO website is very helpful and I enjoyed reading your professional goals.
Jasmyn
Great post! I think that it is very important to spend time and work with the less fortunate and low income children. Our society tends to focus on the children that have it "well off" because it is less work. This needs to be changed. I learned a lot from researching the UNESCO website!
ReplyDelete