Saturday, April 12, 2014

Sharing Web Resources - Early Childhood Australia



This week I answered questions based on the organization I have been following - Early Childhood Australia. 


Follow some of the outside links that you have not yet explored. Where do they lead?
I clicked on the mychild.gov link and learned about the Australian online child care portal. This website is a great tool for educators and families and contains a number of resources to best support young children. On this site there are links to finding preschools and Kindergartens, ways to get “fee assistance” and guidelines for quality education and care. All of this information can be found at http://www.mychild.gov.au/


Thoroughly search one area of the site. What do you find?
One tab of the ECA (Early Childhood Australia) website I found interesting brought me to the position statement on children of asylum seekers. One part read
“Refugee children share certain universal rights with all other people, have additional rights as children and particular rights as refugees.
This is an issue that I’ve only thought about from the view of the United States. It was eye opening to read about this issue from Australian educators. This position statement lists a number of principles that will support the best interests of children when dealing with asylum issues. To view this page visit http://www.earlychildhoodaustralia.org.au/position_statements/eca-position-statement-children-of-asylum-seekers.html


If you receive an e-newsletter, follow a link related to one of the issues you have been studying. What new information is available?
There has been a number of articles on the ECA website recently about e-bullying. The ECA has called for education on online safety to begin in the early years. They believe that as soon as children are old enough to use technology they should learn about positive online behavior. One quote I’d like to post is as follows:
A greater focus on socio-emotional skills like resilience supports children to better manage relationships with their peers and resolve conflicts which may include future incidents of cyber-bullying.” To read more about this issue visit http://www.earlychildhoodaustralia.org.au/early_childhood_news/early_childhood_news/march-media-release-fight-against-e-bullying-needs-to-start-early.html



Does the website or the e-newsletter contain any information that adds to your understanding of equity and excellence in early care and education?
One section of the website was about AEU (Australian Education Union) has been reviewing a report called “Equity, Excellence and Inclusiveness in Education.” The report looks at the negative effects of disadvantage for school performance and stresses the importance of equitable school funding. I read parts of the report and was especially interested in Chapter 5 which is about ways to create an equitable, excellent and inclusive education system. A few of the suggestions include hiring qualified teachers, allocating resources equitably, making pre-primary education accessible to all and more. This report fits exactly into the readings for this week.


What other new insights about issues and trends in the early childhood field did you gain this week from exploring the website and/or the e-newsletter?
Childhood obesity is one issue that is discussed throughout the website and newsletters. According to ECA) there is no early childhood issue that is covered more widely in the media than childhood obesity.  The ECA website has a number of quality resources for educators, families and children on this issue.


3 comments:

  1. Laura - It sounds as if Australian children and educators are dealing with some of the same issues we are here in the states. The assistance provided for families with child care needs would be interesting to investigate just to see if their standards for income qualification are similar to ours. I enjoyed gaining knowledge about Australia this week. Thank you

    ReplyDelete
  2. I agree child obesity is something that really should be discussed. It plays a big part.

    ReplyDelete
  3. Thanks for the insight on the obesity of Australia. I did not know that they were also having an obesity problem. It si an issue that we should look at as a whole.

    Great Job as usual.

    ReplyDelete