Stacie G. Goffin
Principal, Goffin Strategy Group, LLC
As readers may be aware, I鈥檓 an advocate for shifting early childhood education鈥檚 (ECE)[1] developmental trajectory toward recognition as a professional field of practice. Presentations on this topic frequently are followed by questions related to inadequate compensation. The need for formal preparation prior to entry into practice, a 鈥済iven鈥 for recognized professions, adds to some listeners鈥 discomfort, followed by anxiety that new expectations might reduce the field鈥檚 present diversity and inclusivity.
I experienced similar rejoinders over a decade ago when overseeing the reinvention of the National Association for the Education of Young Children鈥檚 (NAEYC) early childhood program accreditation system, which also sought to elevate the field to a new level. With the 2015 publication of and its recommendation that lead educators have four-year degrees, and the launch in 2017 of , a collaborative effort focused on ECE鈥檚 advancement as a profession, these tensions have escalated, despite growing acknowledgment that the status quo of ECE as a field of practice is 鈥渘ot okay.鈥
Moving Beyond False Choices for Early Childhood Educators is being launched to delve into the complexities, frictions, and mistrust embedded in the interplay among (1) preparation and education, (2) compensation and status, and (3) diversity and inclusivity. These strands have come together and created an increasingly difficult knot to disentangle as factions too often grab tightly onto one or another of these three strands. Loosening this knot will allow common interests and new possibilities to emerge and make progress more likely.
At a time when ECE is receiving growing recognition 鈥 in contrast to its practitioners, it should be noted 鈥 internally fractious debates over preparation and education, compensation and status, and workforce diversity and inclusivity threaten to block the field鈥檚 way forward. Whether one aspires to upgrade early childhood educators鈥 occupational knowledge, skills, and stature or to advance the field鈥檚 competence through restructuring it as a recognized profession, competition among these three strands are impeding ECE鈥檚 ability to fulfill its long-standing commitment to young children and achieve status as a well-respected field of practice.
The time is ripe for the field鈥檚 forthright engagement with differing and daring thinking about this conundrum. Moving Beyond False Choices for Early Childhood Educators is a bi-weekly forum for probing co-existing perspectives, accruing new insights, and evolving different ways for thinking about our challenge. Viewpoints are being explored with the intent of increasing ECE鈥檚 options for generating a well-prepared, well-compensated, and inclusive workforce.
Increasing Early Childhood Teachers鈥 Education, Compensation, and Diversity, a blog post written in June 2017 for 麻豆果冻传媒鈥檚 weekly magazine by Albert Wat, provided the series鈥 impetus. Wat鈥檚 contention that early childhood educators鈥 education, their compensation, and the field鈥檚 workforce diversity need to move forward in tandem offered a platform for launching this much-needed field-wide conversation.
A blog series obviously won鈥檛 resolve such a complex issue. Instead, we hope to refashion a debate too often subject to polarization into an exploration that opens the way for strategically calibrating a balance among the ECE field鈥檚 aspirations for children鈥檚 educators, the credibility of ECE as a field of practice, and current realities.
Over two-dozen authors[2] already have agreed to help bring this goal to fruition. Occupying different roles across ECE鈥檚 multiple sectors, they are early childhood educators in center and home-based settings, center directors, higher education faculty, and individuals in senior positions in organizations involved with practice, policy, and advocacy.
Authors have been asked to share their views on the complex interactions between and among preparation and education, compensation and status, and diversity and inclusivity in conjunction with their implications for ECE as a field of practice. Authors鈥 blog posts will present personal viewpoints, not those of their organizations. Risk-taking is encouraged, and authors will be responding to, building upon, and adding to the chain of ideas and viewpoints presented by authors who鈥檝e preceded them. Avenues for identifying patterns and themes as the series progresses are being explored.
We鈥檙e hoping the series will be conversationally interactive and dynamic, rather than a static sequence of stand-alone opinion pieces. Interaction with one another鈥檚 thinking begins with the authors of the first five blogs, each of whom will address the question: 鈥淗as ECE created a false dichotomy among increasing early childhood educators鈥 preparation and education, compensation and status, and the field鈥檚 diversity and inclusivity?鈥
If the series鈥 intentions are realized, its breadth and scope will circumvent Wat鈥檚 apprehension that ECE鈥檚 future becomes a choice between a well-paid, predominantly white workforce that has high levels of education, and one that is cash poor, less educated, but rich in diversity. Given ECE鈥檚 long-standing commitment to children鈥檚 well being, it鈥檚 our obligation to rise above this possibility. A new framework is needed for understanding and addressing the defining issues of preparation and education, compensation and status, and diversity and inclusivity 鈥 for forging a deeper understanding of the perceptions and beliefs too frequently holding ECE in check as a field of practice.
The views expressed here are those of the author.
[1] For the purposes of this blog series, early childhood education (ECE) refers to early learning programs for children from birth to the start of kindergarten. 麻豆果冻传媒鈥檚 Early and Elementary Education Policy Program overall policy focus, however, encompasses early education for children birth to age 8.
[2] These authors were identified by Laura Bornfreund, Stacie Goffin, and Albert Wat.