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Early childhood development programmes for the developing world

International agencies have stressed the importance of early childhood development in improving child well-being and combating poverty. Many such programmes, however, are shaped by western models of parenting and child-rearing. Exaggerated claims of success may also lead to inappropriate interventions.

The first goal of the World Education Forum’s Education for All initiative is “expanding and improving comprehensive early childhood care and education, especially for the most vulnerable children”. Early childhood development (ECD) may take the form of nursery education, child care and health programmes. But little progress is being made. As currently delivered, ECD is not challenging inequality.

Most evidence about the effectiveness of ECD in influencing cognitive, social and economic outcomes for children is taken from experiments with white middle class children in North America and Europe. Across the world, ECD programmes are designed using a standard manual from the United States. Using the same methods in developing countries is likely to be simplistic, inaccurate or ineffective.

A paper from the Childhood Poverty Research and Policy Centre in the UK examines how development agencies design health, nutrition, education and parenting skills programmes. Case studies look at ECD in two middle-income states. In Kazakhstan, the Soviet system of kindergartens has broken down. In Swaziland’s hierarchical society kindergarten services are limited to children whose parents can pay for adequate services.

The author shows that:

On its own, ECD in its current form is unlikely to reduce poverty or improve the long-term prospects of individual children.

Policy makers need to realise that:

Source(s):
‘Childcare and early childhood development programmes and policies: their relationship to eradicating child poverty’ by Helen Penn, CHIP Report 8, Childhood Poverty Research and Policy Centre, 2004 Full document.
'Unequal Childhoods: Young Children's Lives in Poor Countries', by Helen Penn, Routledge, 2005

Funded by: Save the Children UK

id21 Research Highlight: 25 July 2005

Further Information:
Helen Penn
School of Education and Community Studies
University of East London
Longbridge Rd
Essex RM9 2AS
UK

Tel: 44 (0) 208 223 7672
Fax: 44 (0) 208 223 2882
Contact the contributor: h.penn@uel.ac.uk

University of East London, UK

Childhood Poverty Research and Policy Centre (CHIP)
c/o Save the Children UK
1 St. John's Lane
London EC1M 4BL
UK

Tel: 44 (0) 20 7703 5400
Fax: 44 (0) 20 7793 7630
Contact the contributor: chip@scfuk.org.uk

Childhood Poverty Research and Policy Centre, UK

Other related links:
'Make childhood poverty history'

'Is subsidised childcare working in Guatemala City?'

'‘We were born poor and we’ll die poor’ - Escaping poverty cycles'

'Preparing for Schools and Schools for Children' from The Consultative Group on Early Childhood Care and Development

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