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The SAGE Handbook of Early Childhood Policy
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The SAGE Handbook of Early Childhood Policy

First Edition
Edited by:


December 2017 | 664 pages | SAGE Publications Ltd
Recent authoritative evidence suggests that an estimated 200 million children under five fail to achieve their developmental potential due to factors including poor health and nutrition and the lack of stable high quality care. A significant number of the world’s children today lack the basic rights to health, development and protection.

In light of such statistics, early childhood services for young children have expanded around the world. The SAGE Handbook of Early Childhood Policy draws critical attention to policy in Early Childhood Education and Care (ECEC), its relationship to service provision, and its impact on the lives of children and families. The perspectives of leading academics and researchers from Europe, North America, South America, Africa, Australasia and Asia have been arranged around five key themes:
  • Part 1: The Relationship Between Research, Policy And Practice: Country Case Studies
  • Part 2: Equitable Early Childhood Services: Intervention to Improve Children’s Life Chances
  • Part 3: Extending Practice: The Role of Early Childhood Services In Family Support
  • Part 4: Participation, Rights and Diversity
  • Part 5: Future Directions for Early Childhood Policy

This handbook is essential reading for practitioners, stakeholders and others committed to working within early years services to achieve an awareness of policy and its implications for services and practice.


Linda Miller, Claire Cameron, Carmen Dalli and Nancy Barbour
Introduction: Exploring the landscape of early childhood policy
 
PART 1: THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN RESEARCH, POLICY AND PRACTICE: COUNTRY CASE STUDIES
Nora Milotay
Chapter 1: Scientific advice, policy formation and early childhood education and care (ECEC) in the European Union (EU): the intersection of research, policy and practice
Venita Kaul and Shipra Sharma
Chapter 2: Early Childhood Policies in India: A Historical Analysis
Birgit Riedel and Nicole Klinkhammer
Chapter 3: An incomplete revolution? Changes and challenges within German early childhood education and care policy
Jytte Juul Jensen
Chapter 4: A Danish perspective on issues in early childhood education and care policy
Yoshie Kaga
Chapter 5: The relationship between early childhood and primary education in France and Sweden: a policy focus
Lynn Ang
Chapter 6: Early childhood policy in East Asia and the Asia Pacific region, with reference to Myanmar
Hui Li and Jingying Wang
Chapter 7: Implementing Free Early Childhood Education in a Completely Privatized Market: A Case Study of Hong Kong
Jacqueline Jones
Chapter 8: US Early Childhood Policy: Towards a More Coherent Early Childhood Policy in the US
Helen May
Chapter 9: Documenting early childhood policy in Aotearoa New Zealand: Political and personal stories
Jennifer Chen
Chapter 10: Chinese Early Childhood Policy
Cynthia Adlerstein & Marcela Pardo
Chapter 11: Highlights and shadows in ECEC policy in Latin America and the Caribbean
 
PART 2: EQUITABLE EARLY CHILDHOOD SERVICES: INTERVENTION TO IMPROVE CHILDREN’S LIFE CHANCES
Teresa T. Harris & Nkidi C. Phatudi
Chapter 12: Equitable early childhood services: intervention to improve children’s life chances, South Africa
Martin Woodhead, Jack Rossiter, Andrew Dawes and Alula Pankhurst
Chapter 13: Scaling-up early learning as a sustainable development priority: A case study of Ethiopia
Michelle J. Neuman
Chapter 14: Doing More with Less: Innovations in Early Childhood Development from Low-Resource Contexts
Peter Moss
Chapter 15: What place for ‘care’ in early childhood policy?
Eva Lloyd
Chapter 16: Early childhood education and care: poverty and access. Perspectives from England
Christopher P. Brown
Chapter 17: School Readiness
Diane Horm, Noreen Yazejian, Portia Kennel, and Cynthia D. Stringfellow Jackson
Chapter 18: Educare: A Model for US Early Childhood Services
 
PART 3: EXTENDING PRACTICE: THE ROLE OF EARLY CHILDHOOD SERVICES IN FAMILY SUPPORT
June O’Sullivan
Chapter 19: A Childcare Social Enterprise The London Early Years Foundation Model
Merle Allsopp, Hloniphile Dlamini, Lucky Jacobs, Seeng Mamabolo & Leon Fulcher
Chapter 20: Supporting young HIV-AIDS survivors in family households in rural South Africa, the Isibindi Model
Sonia Jackson and Katie Hollingworth
Chapter 21: Children in care in early childhood
Naomi Eisenstadt
Chapter 22: Community based family support: lessons from Sure Start
Mary Young
Chapter 23: The Role of the Health Sector in Promoting Well-being in Early Childhood
 
PART 4: PARTICIPATION, RIGHTS AND DIVERSITY
Michel Vandenbroeck
Chapter 24: Supporting (super)diversity in early childhood settings
Katarzyna Gawlicz
Chapter 25: Challenges of Practicing Democracy in Polish Preschools
Mere Skerrett
Chapter 26: Te Kohanga Reo: early childhood education and the politics of language and cultural maintenance
Anne B. Smith
Chapter 27: Children’s Rights and Early Childhood Education
Emily Seulgi Lee and Shin Ji Kang
Chapter 28: The Lives of Refugee Children: A Korean Example
 
SECTION 5: FUTURE DIRECTIONS FOR EARLY CHILDHOOD POLICY
Steve Barnett and Milagros Nores
Chapter 29: Costs and Benefits of Early Childhood Education and Care
Sandra Mathers and Katharina Ereky-Stevens
Chapter 30: Quality of early childhood education and care for children under three: Sound Foundations
Jan Peeters and Brecht Peleman
Chapter 31: The competent system or the intersection between research, policy making and practice
Christine Woodrow and Frances Press
Chapter 32: The privatization/marketization of ECEC debate: social versus neo liberal models
Dawn Tankersley, Mihaela Ionescu and Zorica Trikic
Chapter 33: ISSA’s Quality Framework for Early Childhood Practices in Services for Children under Three Years Old – An invitation to policy dialogue for building integration and alignment in ECEC systems
Sharon Lynn Kagan, Rebecca E. Gomez, Jessica L. Roth
Chapter 34: Role of research in ECD policy
Claire Cameron, Carmen Dalli and Antonia Simon
Chapter 35: The development of a united ECEC workforce in New Zealand and England: a long, slow and fitful journey
Carmen Dalli, Nancy Barbour, Claire Cameron and Linda Miller
Chapter 36: Conclusion

Sample Materials & Chapters

Introduction


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