Early Childhood Education
Early preventative intervention on young children can reduce these future disparities and save the tremendous investment of effort involved in creating corrective plans. Evidence published by the World Bank shows that an additional dollar invested in quality early childhood programs yields a return of between $6 to $17 dollars. Economic research proves that greater investment during the early years of a child’s development is highly lucrative and will bring greater revenue and value in the long term.
The Problem
The array of services for young children in the State of Israel is divided on both the national and municipal levels amongst five government ministries, a range of local authorities, and dozens of organizations working on the ground.
Consequently, there is:
- an absence of overall government policy and responsibility for the proper development of the country’s children
- an absence of awareness of the critical importance of early childhood care and its ROI
- an absence of coordination between the dozens of government bodies that are supposed to be responsible for the various parts of early childhood care
- an absence of a continuum of care for children from birth until graduation
- an absence of vision as well as of standards and monitoring of productivity
- an absence/reduction of budgets and potential for creating a budgetary agenda
- an absence/reduction of human resources
The Solution
The Agnes and Beny Steinmetz Foundation is determined to lobby for the advancement of early childhood care by assisting in the establishment of professional municipal services within the local authorities. The foundation’s support for early childhood care as part of a framework within the local authorities is based on two demands:
- The local authority and its chairperson must have a profound dedication to the improvement of early childhood care in that respective jurisdiction.
- The department within the local authority handling children under the age of six must assume the responsibility of appointing a director employed by the authority’s Education Department.
In order to help the local authority best meet these requirements in the long run, the Steinmetz Foundation works through several channels. It facilitates a training program for early childhood care directors that is run by the local authorities themselves. It also releases comprehensive annual reports about what has been done at the municipal level. In addition, it holds seminars and professional forums to give staff the relevant professional know-how and the necessary support so that they can perform their work in the best way possible.
Director of Early Childhood Education in Local Authorities
The Steinmetz Foundation believes that the local authorities have the chance to effect profound change and encourages them to appoint an early childhood education director within their Education Departments. The director’s role would be to enable the authority to assume responsibility for the education of local children and to develop a comprehensive doctrine.
Assessment and Evaluation
The foundation’s endeavors are based on three indices that are assessed annually:
- The foundation’s own goals and objectives
- The goals and objectives of each municipal authority’s early childhood department
- The goals and objectives of the programs funded by the foundation
The assessment and evaluation processes are conducted by the municipal authorities with the results passed on to the foundation and submitted annually in a summary report.
Development of Professional Proficiency
Good leadership and high-quality human resources are the most important assets that early childhood services can have. It is for this reason that it is so important to the foundation to ensure the development of expertise in this field. Furthermore, the foundation has been working with the forum of early childhood education administrators and the forum of healthcare professionals at the Family Health Centers to spearhead a broader collaborative effort. The foundation also holds seminars some three times a year by request of municipal authority staff.