UNESCO advocates for Early Childhood Care and
Education (ECCE) programs that attend to health, nutrition, security and
learning and which provide for children’s holistic development. I was able to
find some information about access and equity in early childhood education on
their website which are some of the issues we have been discussing about in
this course and related to my professional goals.
The 1990 Jomtien Declaration for Education for All stated
that learning begins at birth. A decade later, the 2000 Dakar Framework for
Action reaffirmed the importance of early childhood by including the
development of early childhood care and education as the first of its six main
goals.
Participating countries committed themselves to “expanding
and improving comprehensive early childhood care and education, especially for
the most vulnerable and disadvantaged children.” Governments were particularly
urged to expand equitable access to quality early childhood services
underscoring the importance of instituting policy in favor of the poor.
Countries often promote alternative services for poor
children with limited or no access to mainstream early childhood services which
can be cost-effective and pedagogically innovative, but often raise concerns
about sustainability and quality. In cases where the government has
limited resources, a pro-poor policy can redistribute resources by reducing
state support for the more privileged.
Central governments must ensure an equitable distribution of
resources among different populations and especially those who live in the most
disadvantaged regions. This approach aims to expand access without creating
serious regional inequities. However, where there is universal provision for a
certain age group while the overall enrollment in other age groups is low, this
policy can create inequity.
Privileged children of the target age group benefit from
state investment, while poor children of non-target ages receive scant
government attention. A policy of universalization with targeting can minimize
inequity where governments aim for universal access among the target age group,
but simultaneously priorities the poor.
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