Quality resources of early childhood policies case study: Unesco headquarters in Kenya

dc.contributor.authorEsther, Bosire Moraa
dc.date.accessioned2020-07-24T09:45:30Z
dc.date.available2020-07-24T09:45:30Z
dc.date.issued2009-04
dc.descriptionA research report submitted to the faculty of business administration in partial fulfillment of the award of a Bachelor of education degree of Kampala international university.en_US
dc.description.abstractThe vision of early childhood development (ECD) The MOEST's mandate has been expanded to cater for the early care, development and education needs of young children. Awareness has been raised with regard to the importance of an integrated approach to the holistic development of the child. Yet gaps appear in practice. Services for children under three are not well developed, and the activities of ECD Centers focus heavily on teaching young children basic learning skills. Many stakeholders still view ECD as "early schooling". Parenting education could be a good strategy for enhancing the care and education of younger children, and training is needed for ECD teachers. ECD arul Free Primmy Education policy Since the introduction of the Free Primary Education (FPE) policy, poor parents have tended to keep their children at home until they reach the entitlement age for FPE. Consequently, ECD teachers, whose salaries are mostly dependent on parental contributions, are leaving their jobs, and ECD is reportedly on the verge of collapse. A proposal to provide one year of free ECD services for five-year olds should be viewed with caution, as this could trigger a similar collapse of services for younger children within ECD. The problem of unprepared Standard One pupils should be handled and resolved within the framework of FPE, and ECD should be reserved as a place and time for the child's holistic development. The service structure for the care and education of younger children must be developed and reinforced in order to save the ECD system. Participation A major decline in enrolment occurred before the FPE policy was implemented, suggesting that FPE may not be the only reason for this decline. Access to ECD Centres is inequitable, with poor children from semi-arid, arid and urban slum areas less likely to enrol in them. A relatively large gap between gross and net enrolment ratios implies the presence of over-age and under-age children in ECD Centres. The presence of over-age children explains, in part, the heavy focus on pre-primary education. The presence of under-age children points to the difficulty of delivering quality ECD services. Equity should be a key policy objective. Workforce arul resoJUCeS The World Bank investment in training ECD teachers is at risk of being wasted as trained ECD teachers leave their jobs complaining of poor and irregular pay. Integrating ECD teachers in the Govermnent pay scale determined by the Teachers Service Commission, though desirable, seems to be a financially difficult option. A minimum salary guarantee from the Govermnent, supplemented by parental contributions, would be more feasible. In-service ECD training for primary teachers needs further support. Parental pressure for pre-primary education prevents ECD teachers from delivering pedagogically correct services; but there are innovative pilot initiatives that work and that can be implemented elsewhere.en_US
dc.identifier.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/20.500.12306/11086
dc.language.isoenen_US
dc.publisherKampala international international: College of Education, open and distance learningen_US
dc.subjectEducationen_US
dc.subjectQuality resourcesen_US
dc.subjectEarly childhooden_US
dc.subjectPoliciesen_US
dc.subjectUnesco headquaters in Kenyaen_US
dc.titleQuality resources of early childhood policies case study: Unesco headquarters in Kenyaen_US
dc.typeOtheren_US
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