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Six Signs of Quality Early Childhood Education/Childcare For Children (Birth to 6 Years)
Six Signs of Quality Early Childhood Education/Childcare For Children (Birth to 6 Years)
© ChildForum
What is "quality"? This is a difficult question to answer because there are many different perspectives on quality and as Dr Sarah Farquhar, an international expert in Quality ECE originally argued in her Ph.D. thesis in the early 1990s, "quality is in the eye of the beholder".
An early childhood service that claims to provide quality early childhood education and care may do so by meeting government standards for being a licensed service but may be far from providing quality from the perspectives of children who attend it.
Dr Sarah Farquhar, recommends parents and others look for what she termed the "Six Signs of Quality Early Childhood Education" as together these signs provide the strongest indication of whether an early childhood service is good for children and will have positive benefits.

The Six Signs of Quality Early Childhood Education
1. The child is happy at the ECE service and wants to be at it. The child shows lots of smiles and laughter, receives and gives hugs, builds friendships, and is always keen in the morning to get ready to go to the service.
2. The child's health and safety is ensured. There is a high level of child supervision, knowledge among the adults as to what to expect developmentally of children in their abilities and reactions, and a high standard of hygiene along with practises that ensure children do not get preventable diseases. Potential safety risks are carefully managed but not totally eliminated (for example, you would expect to see a 4 year-old being encouraged to climb a low tree with supervision and support from an adult).
3. The child’s learning is supported and enriched. The child is exposed to learning and experiences beyond what the child already knows and experiences at home and in other settings.
4. The environment is stimulating and suits the child. There are lots of things which the child is interested in to keep the child busy and occupied. What is provided at the service for the child to do, gives the child a sense of being able to push oneself towards doing things at a higher level of difficulty and to try new things.
5. Family values, beliefs and language are truly supported. There is consistency between what the parents and family value and their aspirations for their child and the views, expectations and practices of the people caring for the child in the early childhood programme.
6. Parents' needs for support with childcare and early childhood education are fully met (parents don't feel grumpy about anything that happens or is expected at the programme - instead parents feel delighted that they have enrolled with the service and feel like shouting from the roof-tops about how great it is for them and their child).
These six signs of quality are inter-related, for example if a child is not happy then the child will gain less from attending the educational programme.
It is essential for an early childhood service to fully meet expectations for (1) children’s happiness and (2) safety and health. If a service has some deficiencies in the other areas (i.e. provisions for children’s learning, environmental stimulation, supporting family culture and language, and parents’ needs) and if these deficiencies are considered minor and can be made-up for at home or elsewhere then the service may still be acceptable for the child and family.
Further Reading
Discussion and information on how to tell good childcare from bad childcare.
Research on the quality of ECE programmes and philosophical discussion about the concept of quality click here.
A summary of minimum standards/regulations for licensed Home-based and ECE centres in NZ versus quality standards.
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