There is an abundance of
information on The National Black Child Development Institute’s website. I found some interesting websites under the
resources tab. There are links to
different articles that give statistical information from different
states. However, there was one newsletter
that I found to be very helpful in understanding equity and excellence in early
care in education. This newsletter also
gave some insight to a lot of the issues we were discussing this week. The newsletter was titled A Call for Change: A Preliminary Blueprint to Improve
Educational Excellence and Opportunity for African American Males in Urban
Public Schools. There was a
section under Early Childhood Education that outlined the need for early child
programming. According to the Council of Great City Schools, “The need for early
childhood programming for African American males is profound and overdue. Yet
the nation has not seriously confronted or addressed the inequalities and
disparities facing some children from their earliest years—inequities that
contribute to negative outcomes over a life-time. The research indicates that
early childhood programs can produce substantial benefits for students and that
urban schools should:
1. Establish high-quality educational and
developmentally appropriate preschool and early childhood programs and supports
to which African American males have full access to. These programs should have
small teacher-to-child ratios, an age-appropriate curriculum that is integrated
across subjects, well-trained teachers in child development, and mechanisms for
engaging parents or guardians.
2. Set clear goals for the developmental progress
of African American children participating in early childhood programs. Monitor
student progress, evaluate the results regularly, and follow students as they
move up the grades.
3. Ensure that early childhood programs also
connect developmentally to kindergarten and first-through third-grade
curriculum, address social, emotional, health, nutritional, and physical
development needs of children, and use developmentally appropriate assessments.
4. Consider implementation of home visitation
efforts, pre-school centers, and pre-school classes in the schools to address
the multiple needs of some African American males.
5. Ensure that teachers and aides in early
childhood programs serving African American males are early-childhood
certified; have adequate training in child development (particularly as it
applies to African American males); understand the effects of negative
stereotyping and the appropriate use of assessments, and are compensated
commensurate with other teachers. Provide mentors in cases where teachers
struggle.
6. Make sure that early childhood programming that
serves African American males is staffed with appropriately trained teachers,
aides, parent-resource personnel, community liaisons, nurses, psychologists,
and social workers. (Early grades could use these supports as well.) Staff
compensation should be in line with others in the district.
7. Make certain that pre-school programming
includes services starting at age two and spanning two years; that parents or
guardians have the opportunity to volunteer and participate in program
decisions; that there is a curriculum in place that focuses on language and
early literacy and is aligned with the curriculum of later grades, and that
these programs offer health screenings, nursing services, and free or reduced
price meals.
8. Eliminate the use of out-of-school suspensions
to discipline students participating in early
childhood programming.” (Council of the Great City Schools,
2012, p. 4-5)
References