Saturday, 27 July 2013

Sharing Web Resources


This week I found the information shared by Dr Grace on the media segment most relevant to my current professional development. The Zero to three website shares much information that also connects what I have leaned this week about the new supporters of early childhood. The website provides facts about the early years and the importance of investing in early childhood.  For example, an article on  human brain development  illustrates that during the remarkable first three years of life, the brain creates 700 new neural connections every second.Synapse formation for functions such as hearing, language, and cognition peak during this period before children reach preschool. These peak periods create the important foundation for higher level functions that will be built on top of them. During this sensitive period, early experiences influence whether this important foundation will be strong or fragile. The early years thus present a prime opportunity to positively influence the course of a young child’s life. 

The article also highlights the support of the politicians. Matthew Melmed, Executive Director of ZERO TO THREE.  applauded  President Obama for his leadership in emphasizing how important it is as a nation for us to begin where learning begins – at birth. He shared that the President’s plan for Early Education for all Americans is the road map for the early learning components of the budget. The budget includes $1.4 billion to expand the comprehensive supports offered to the most vulnerable families through Early Head Start – which for almost 20 years has proven it improves both child and parental outcomes. The plan would provide $200 million in 2014 specifically to create more high-quality child care options for babies and toddlers with working parents, using Early Head Start’s quality benchmarks, expertise, and resources. Looking ahead, the budget proposal provides for $7 billion over 10 years to ensure young children and families have access to high-quality child care.

There are many other insightful pieces that are found on the website, however the one that I found most interesting is the the article on child mental health. I learned that infant and early childhood mental health includes a full spectrum of social and emotional functioning. This ranges from the ability to form satisfying relationships with others, play, communicate, learn, and express emotions, to the disorders of very early childhood.

















Tuesday, 23 July 2013

                 Getting to Know Your International Contacts—Part 1

I have been fortunate to make contact with one of my conversation partners. She is Mrs Michelle McBean, an early childhood professional. She works with the UNICEF Office in Guyana and she also heads the Early Childhood Department at the University of Guyana.She believes that UNICEF has been outstanding in its work to reduce poverty in Guyana and around the world. I was directed to the UNICEF website Guyana to read about what has been happening specifically in Guyana. Mrs McBean is currently spearheading a UNICEF funded project that  provides training opportunities for caregivers who work with children in the 0-3 age category since most caregivers who work at this level are untrained. She believes that the early years are critical and persons who work with children during the early years need to be well trained.
 I was pleased to learn that among the many goals that UNICEF is working towards achieving is the  elimination of poverty and hunger.There are several programs that place emphasis on monitoring the situation of children and women in Guyana, and on the continuous improvement of monitoring and evaluation systems, which can produce reliable disaggregated data and analysis, to help better understand and address the issues of poverty affecting children and women. Education is the way out of poverty and UNICEF has partnered with the government to propel primary education. Currently, Guyana is on track to achieving universal primary education with net primary enrolment rates consistently above 95% since 2000 (MDG Report 2011).

I look forward to hearing from my other contacts during the weeks ahead.






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Saturday, 13 July 2013


              ZERO TO THREE








The organization I selected is Zero to Three. The link for this organisation is http://www.zerotothree.org/
ZERO TO THREE is a national, nonprofit organization that provides parents, professionals and policymakers the knowledge and know-how to nurture early development.  It plays a critical leadership role in promoting understanding around key issues affecting young children and their families, including child care, infant mental health, early language and literacy development, early intervention and the impact of culture on early childhood development. Their mission is to ensure that all babies and toddlers have a strong start in life. ZERO TO THREE is unique in their multidisciplinary approach to child development. Their emphasis on bringing together the perspectives of many fields and many specialists is rooted in the robust research studies showing that all domains of development—social, emotional, intellectual, language and physical—are interdependent and work together to promote a child’s overall health and well-being in the context of his family and culture.
A current issue that I found interesting is 'The Rally 4 Babies. Rally 4 Babies seek to bring awareness to the importance of early stimulation for babies (0-3) and hopefully get states to allocate funds for projects that will teach parents and other programs that work with young children how to provide stimulating, secure environments for the child from the prenatal period to approximately three years(Zero to Three).
Another issue that I found quite interesting is school readiness
School readiness is best conceptualized as a process that occurs over time, in the context of caring relationships with informed and supportive adults who can nurture both the qualities and the developmental skills that help children become successful learners. We know that kindergarten is not the beginning of a child’s educational experience, nor is it the endpoint for school readiness. We know that infants and toddlers 
explore, process, and understand their world differently than older children. Furthermore, infants and toddlers are dependent on their relationships with adults in distinct ways that have an effect on their learning and development. In addition to unique cognitive and developmental processes, infants and toddlers are developing the foundational qualities of curiosity, mastery motivation, and other approaches to learning that are critical precursors to school success. Finally, social and cultural contexts add another layer of complexity to early development that further influences the goals and expectations for early development, learning, and school readiness (Zero to Three).

I am very impressed with the strides that Zero to Three is making to improve the lives of young children and their families. After attending the Rally 4 Babies. I wish I was living in America so that I could sign the petition to make my voice heard. Those who can, please support this campaign!,

Saturday, 6 July 2013

My professional contacts


Establishing Professional Contacts

Hi Colleagues,
This week I emailed two early childhood professionals from the Caribbean Region.One is from Haiti and the other from Jamaica. I met both of them at the last Meeting of Caribbean Professionals in Saint Kitts and Nevis and I was very impressed with their presentations on their various programs on Early Childhood. I  am  interested in knowing how their programs have been doing. I have not yet gotten responses from either of them, but I hope that I will very early in the new week. If I do not, then I may be forced to do the alternative assignment. I have chosen to focus on and explore the Zero To Three: National Center for Infants, Toddlers, and Families because it seems interesting and it is packed with information about the dynamic world of early childhood. Hope blogging will be fun over the next eight weeks.