Early childhood education in Ireland: Change and challenge

Early childhood care and education in Ireland has come under increasing scrutiny in recent years, as a result of public concern about standards in some early years services. Services for children before they enter primary school are largely the responsibility of the department of health, while child...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Rosaleen Murphy
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Kura Publishing 2015-12-01
Series:International Electronic Journal of Elementary Education
Subjects:
Online Access:https://iejee.com/index.php/IEJEE/article/view/113/110
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spelling doaj-7157c71cea094ec9af2c7fa4955b5c242020-11-25T03:52:01ZengKura PublishingInternational Electronic Journal of Elementary Education1307-92981307-92982015-12-0182287300Early childhood education in Ireland: Change and challengeRosaleen Murphy0University College CorkEarly childhood care and education in Ireland has come under increasing scrutiny in recent years, as a result of public concern about standards in some early years services. Services for children before they enter primary school are largely the responsibility of the department of health, while children in the formal school system are the responsibility of the department of education. This split is reflected in the pay, working conditions and qualifications of those working in each sector. Primary education is state funded; pre-school care and education has been seen as the responsibility of parents, and is among the most expensive in Europe. Investment in early years services is low and has been focused on expanding the number of places. There is now more co-ordination at government level and improved standards and frameworks for quality in early education (Síolta) and for early learning (Aistear) have been put in place. However, expanding services without paying equal attention to quality will not bring the desired benefits either to individual children or to society. Regulation and enforcement are important but are only one element of quality, and more attention needs to be paid to developing the early years workforce and improving their working conditions.https://iejee.com/index.php/IEJEE/article/view/113/110Early childhood educationQualityIreland
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Rosaleen Murphy
spellingShingle Rosaleen Murphy
Early childhood education in Ireland: Change and challenge
International Electronic Journal of Elementary Education
Early childhood education
Quality
Ireland
author_facet Rosaleen Murphy
author_sort Rosaleen Murphy
title Early childhood education in Ireland: Change and challenge
title_short Early childhood education in Ireland: Change and challenge
title_full Early childhood education in Ireland: Change and challenge
title_fullStr Early childhood education in Ireland: Change and challenge
title_full_unstemmed Early childhood education in Ireland: Change and challenge
title_sort early childhood education in ireland: change and challenge
publisher Kura Publishing
series International Electronic Journal of Elementary Education
issn 1307-9298
1307-9298
publishDate 2015-12-01
description Early childhood care and education in Ireland has come under increasing scrutiny in recent years, as a result of public concern about standards in some early years services. Services for children before they enter primary school are largely the responsibility of the department of health, while children in the formal school system are the responsibility of the department of education. This split is reflected in the pay, working conditions and qualifications of those working in each sector. Primary education is state funded; pre-school care and education has been seen as the responsibility of parents, and is among the most expensive in Europe. Investment in early years services is low and has been focused on expanding the number of places. There is now more co-ordination at government level and improved standards and frameworks for quality in early education (Síolta) and for early learning (Aistear) have been put in place. However, expanding services without paying equal attention to quality will not bring the desired benefits either to individual children or to society. Regulation and enforcement are important but are only one element of quality, and more attention needs to be paid to developing the early years workforce and improving their working conditions.
topic Early childhood education
Quality
Ireland
url https://iejee.com/index.php/IEJEE/article/view/113/110
work_keys_str_mv AT rosaleenmurphy earlychildhoodeducationinirelandchangeandchallenge
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