Spotlight on early childhood education. A newspaper coverage analysis of universal preschool debate in Argentina

Abstract Throughout the past decade, the Argentinean government has lowered the starting age of compulsory education and early childhood education enrollment has been growing steadily. However, ECE services have evolved in a fragmented manner, leading to an unequal and inequitable scenario: while pr...

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Main Author: Carolina Snaider
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: SpringerOpen 2018-03-01
Series:International Journal of Child Care and Education Policy
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40723-018-0045-2
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spelling doaj-fe8a8d26816441b991dd3e6dabb8305a2020-11-24T22:03:53ZengSpringerOpenInternational Journal of Child Care and Education Policy2288-67292018-03-0112112110.1186/s40723-018-0045-2Spotlight on early childhood education. A newspaper coverage analysis of universal preschool debate in ArgentinaCarolina Snaider0Teachers College, Columbia UniversityAbstract Throughout the past decade, the Argentinean government has lowered the starting age of compulsory education and early childhood education enrollment has been growing steadily. However, ECE services have evolved in a fragmented manner, leading to an unequal and inequitable scenario: while private education supports the largest part of the growth, children from low-income families are less likely to attend preschool and more likely to receive low-quality service. Through a newspaper coverage analysis, I explore how these problems are addressed in the public debate on universal preschool. Results show that the voices of policy-makers and “experts” are prominent while teachers’ and parents’ views are ignored; I found a widespread consensus for universal preschool and a scarcity of arguments against. I suggest the need to draw on research findings in ECE more critically and posit that the need to ensure high quality preschool for all children should be central in the debate.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40723-018-0045-2ArgentinaEarly childhood education (ECE)Education policyUniversal Pre-K
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Carolina Snaider
spellingShingle Carolina Snaider
Spotlight on early childhood education. A newspaper coverage analysis of universal preschool debate in Argentina
International Journal of Child Care and Education Policy
Argentina
Early childhood education (ECE)
Education policy
Universal Pre-K
author_facet Carolina Snaider
author_sort Carolina Snaider
title Spotlight on early childhood education. A newspaper coverage analysis of universal preschool debate in Argentina
title_short Spotlight on early childhood education. A newspaper coverage analysis of universal preschool debate in Argentina
title_full Spotlight on early childhood education. A newspaper coverage analysis of universal preschool debate in Argentina
title_fullStr Spotlight on early childhood education. A newspaper coverage analysis of universal preschool debate in Argentina
title_full_unstemmed Spotlight on early childhood education. A newspaper coverage analysis of universal preschool debate in Argentina
title_sort spotlight on early childhood education. a newspaper coverage analysis of universal preschool debate in argentina
publisher SpringerOpen
series International Journal of Child Care and Education Policy
issn 2288-6729
publishDate 2018-03-01
description Abstract Throughout the past decade, the Argentinean government has lowered the starting age of compulsory education and early childhood education enrollment has been growing steadily. However, ECE services have evolved in a fragmented manner, leading to an unequal and inequitable scenario: while private education supports the largest part of the growth, children from low-income families are less likely to attend preschool and more likely to receive low-quality service. Through a newspaper coverage analysis, I explore how these problems are addressed in the public debate on universal preschool. Results show that the voices of policy-makers and “experts” are prominent while teachers’ and parents’ views are ignored; I found a widespread consensus for universal preschool and a scarcity of arguments against. I suggest the need to draw on research findings in ECE more critically and posit that the need to ensure high quality preschool for all children should be central in the debate.
topic Argentina
Early childhood education (ECE)
Education policy
Universal Pre-K
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s40723-018-0045-2
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