Friday, 6 March 2015

Teacher to Child Ratios for Under Twos

Kia ora, 


My name is Catherine Hawes and I am in my third year of study at the Eastern Institute of Technology in Taradale, Hawkes Bay. This blog is for one of my third year assignments and comments and feedback will be gratefully received.

Teacher to child ratios in early childhood centres play an important role in the quality of care available for very young children throughout New Zealand. The ratios are bound by government regulations and dictate how many teachers (adults) must be physically on the floor working with the children at any given time. Currently the legal requirement for how many adults must be engaged with children’s care and learning for children under two, sessional or all day centres are one adult for every five children. Children in over two care, sessional or all-day centres are one adult for every six children (My ECE Website, 2015: Parliamentary Council Office, 2013).

I chose this topic because I feel that teachers are being put under more and more stress to cope with larger numbers of infants, toddlers and young children in early childhood settings. I feel that the 'care' becomes the primary function and outweighs the teaching opportunities. I wonder if the ratios were lower would teachers have time to engage in meaningful teaching and learning experiences with children.

I am interested in learning more about how the teacher to child ratios impact, positively and/or negatively, on teacher’s abilities to provide a good level of care, an experience rich curriculum, and a low stress environment for infants and toddlers.

Some parents are choosing to or needing to go back to work after their babies born. Many of which do not have the luxury of having families that can look after the children. Parents are having to looking to institutional care to meet their needs. So the real political issue is; should very young children be engaged in group care and education, is it in the best interests of infants and toddlers or would very young children benefit from being at home with a primary caregiver instead. If infants and toddlers must be in institutional care then what optimizes the quality of care for them? 

Please note that this blog is going to be graded for an assignment I am completing through Eastern Institute of Technology.

References

Parliamentary Council Office. (2013). Education Early Childhood Services Regulations 2008. Retrieved from


My ECE Website. (2015) Adult child ratios: Minimum number of adults to children permitted. Retrieved from
http://www.myece.org.nz/centre-mininum-legal-requirements/129-minimum-adult-child-ratios

7 comments:

  1. Good to see you have responded to the feedback. The scene is set for your research into this topic, I look forward to reading more and what you conclude.

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  2. Catherine, I agree with you when you say you think that we should have a lower child to teacher ratio.If this was the case then we would be able to spend more time engaging in meaningful coversations and giving children rich experiences. It isn't so easy to be able to do that when we have 5 or 10 children to care for per teacher.

    I would like to see the changes from children's learning and progress to the teacher's views on caring for less children if the ratios were to ever change. I wonder if the ratios will ever change? I hope that they will!

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  3. Wow Catherine! I am excited to keep reading this blog. You have chosen a really interesting topic here. I agree with you also, that we should have lower teacher to child ratios. Currently teachers are over worked, and stressed out. Centres that care for under two's become more of a factory run (nappies- bottle- bed and so on) rather than a place that provides rich learning opportunities.
    I hope to see change in the future, as we only want the best for our children... so we need to provide it!

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  4. Thanks for your feedback Emma. :)

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  5. Thanks for your feedback Emma. :)

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