As the summer approaches, it is
time for me to turn away from blogging and towards more extended academic
writing. So I thought I would put together an overall reflection on some of the
issues that I have been exploring in this ‘sandbox’ blog and other blogging sites over the past academic
year. Those that stand out most prominently are ACEs (Adverse Childhood
Experiences) and a lack of understanding of child development in public policy
making, which in the past year, has given rise to the OFSTED document Bold Beginnings and the DFE plans to ‘baseline’ test 48 month old human
beings.
The more I contemplate these
points, the more I see them as related symptoms of something that is becoming
increasingly being lost in western society; a conception of ourselves as ‘real’
human beings rather than as manufactured androids; as organic creatures who have evolved to undertake a
long developmental process which
involves complex physical, social and emotional processes alongside and
interacting with the development of intellectual skills.
I have written some extensively referenced blogs on
various facets of this topic,
but here I am simply going to ask the overall question: why does our current government
insist upon wasting increasingly scare public funds on developing academic
tests for children who have only been alive for a very short period of time,
while so many families live in impoverished conditions which impact upon their
physical and mental health, and create conditions in which recent research indicates that children’s stress coping mechanisms are likely to be
poorly calibrated, predisposing them to poor mental and physical health in
later life?
It seems to me I have asked this question over and over again in
various texts over the last few years,
and never received a satisfactory answer. The most prominent response; a
proposal that such tests are necessary to
make adults ‘accountable’ is dysfunctional on several different levels, most
importantly because the children are simply too neuronally young for any accurate
projections to be made relating to their future competencies, but possibly of
even greater concern, because if a government distrusts the adults involved
in children’s care and education to such a great extent, there must be
something very wrong with the social cohesion of such a society.
When I first received my PhD, I
envisioned a very different professional environment to the one I have
experienced over the past decade. Reception, the school year in which most of
my research observations had taken place, had recently been taken out of the National
Curriculum, and placed under a new, more
developmentally informed set of guidelines created for the care and education
of children aged 3-5 called the Curriculum Guidance for the Foundation Stage (2000). The care and education for children aged birth to
three was governed by a set of guidelines entitled Birth to Three Matters, which had been drawn from an extensive state funded literature review of early
childhood development. By the end of the decade, the
two sets of guidelines were combined in The Early Years Foundation Stage (EYFS) (2007), a child-led, play-based statutory framework for practice with children birth
to five. The government had also put funding aside for
up-skilling the early years workforce, and for a new graduate role in early
years practice, the Early Years Professional
who was to be trained in the facilitation of play-based learning.
The
Children’s Plan, published in December 2007, set out the aspirations of
the Brown New Labour Government for the further development of children’s
services in England from 2008-2020, which included the provision of play areas
and a comprehensive review of the primary curriculum, including the
consideration of a more gradual transition from play-based learning to a more
formal curriculum for 6-7 year olds. There
was also a pledge to eradicate child poverty by 2020; but in reality in
2018, child
poverty levels are higher than they were in the 2000s, with children as the
members of contemporary British society most likely to be poor.
A decade later, the most obvious question is- so what
happened? A worldwide recession and a
change of government, yes, that much is obvious. The
decision to leave the European Union has also had a destabilising effect on British
society in general. But when did we start to construct our youngest, most
vulnerable children, and the adults who care for and educate them in such a
very different way, and over such a very short period of time? When did we
begin, as a society, to actually believe that it was more important to use
public money to formally test tiny children than to enhance their daily lives
and optimise their physical and emotional development? Why did this happen?
These are troubling questions for troubling times, and I am going to give them
a lot of consideration over this coming summer.
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