Meera, a software engineer and a
young mother was distraught when she had met us a year ago. She was at her
wit’s end trying to get her child, Kiara (3.5 years) enrolled into a ‘good’
playschool. She had already tried two preschools – one a smaller establishment
closer to her locality and another a larger one integrated within a renowned
K-12 school, though the traveling time doubled. None worked. One had failed to
engage Kiara at a holistic level and the other was a gigantic system which threatened
to engulf Kiara’s uniqueness at such a young age. Having met and counselled
numerous parents, it definitely wasn’t the first time I had encountered such
agony. And a valid one.
Being a mother foremost and an educator,
I can empathise and appreciate the concerns parents like Meera have. For a
simple reason - it reverberates with the need to provide holistic, inclusive,
quality and research-based education especially, Early Childhood Care Education
(ECCE) programmes, which has been a personal two-decade mission. It is an irony
that even though the demand for ECCE has shot up considerably with numerous
preschools and K-12 schools sprouting in every corner, parents are still devoid
of options when choosing good ECCE programmes which are accessible, affordable,
engaging, developmentally-centric and relevant. Most are compelled to
compromise at some if not various levels, albeit critical. Many garner
admissions in K-12 schools to avoid admission hassles later on without even
checking if the school’s ECCE programme is relevant, enriching and suitable for
their tots. At others, parents enrol their children in preschools with great
infrastructure but poor ‘learning’ outcomes. The glut of poor-quality preschools
due to lack of regulations in the sector compounded by lack of awareness among
parents about benchmark practices has led to this vacuum. The cost of this
oversight is unfortunately being borne by the children.
What defines a good preschool? There
are a myriad of factors. However, according to me, it must definitely measure
against these key three factors – Focussed and constructive attention to
children, Enabling of Holistic growth, and one that facilitates seamless
integration of the children into the primary programme. It is critical to
ensure that every child is given the requisite attention to develop as per
his/her potential and through methods that aren’t standardised. Perhaps opting for
a preschool affiliated with a good K-12 school would be the best choice
considering the focussed objectives, customised processes, guaranteed admission
into the primary section of the affiliated school and ease of operations
facilitated by the smaller setup as against a large K-12 school. However, undoubtedly,
a well-researched, relevant and developmentally-appropriate curriculum, teacher
qualifications and training, and an enabling environment are non-negotiable
when it comes to choosing a good preschool.
The government needs to urgently look
at setting policies and regulations for the setting up of a preschool while
also expanding accessibility and provision of such ECCE programmes to all
children. While the NPE (National Policy on Education) 1986 stressed upon the
holistic nature of ECCE, and has been successful in bringing ECCE in balwadis
through ICDS (Integrated Child Development Services), vast majority of such
programmes are running as little primary schools, both in the government and
private sector. Such formal didactic methods of teaching three-six year olds
can actually prove detrimental to their overall development. A sound ECCE
programme is critical for the success of the universal elementary education
under the SSA, taken up by the government. Bridging the large gap in terms of
skilled teachers, administrators, therapists etc. also need to be pursued
doggedly (Read - Bridging the Skilled Resource Gap in ECCE) . In fact, it
would do a lot good to have a minister of state for ECCE education, considering
the significance, growth and expanse of this sector.
Every society’s abilities and
resources are being constantly tried and tested to cope with the needs and development
of our young generation. The need to make them future ready in this dynamic,
ever-changing 21st century should be the one guiding factor for our
policy makers. Research after research has indicated that neurons and positive
brain connections are critical in this age bracket between 0 to 6 years.
Neurons that are wired together fire together! Without a doubt, there is hardly any other surpassing
need than the urgent one to invest in our young. NOW.
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