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Saturday, October 4, 2014

Getting to Know Internation Contacts Pt 2


 

As I have not heard from anyone regarding my requests for international contacts, I opted to explore the website http://developingchild.harvard.edu/index.php/activities/global_initiative/. The Global Children’s Initiative was born out of a realization that we have an obligation to see that all children worldwide are healthy: physically, mentally, and developmentally.

The first thing that stuck me while reading the website is that they base their work on what they learned while working in the United States. I find this funny, as much of what I have read lately says that the United States is trying to catch up to the rest of the world. The recent battles over the Affordable Health Care Act are proof that the health system in the U.S. is clearly not ideal, and the push for standardized testing is an attempt to improve education to be more like other countries.

The next thing which struck me was the fact that this Global Children’s Initiative is using the science of early childhood development to create early childhood programs worldwide. We don’t even do that in the United States! We IGNORE the science, and instead focus on the methods with quickly reportable assessments.

Un Buen Comienzo (A Good Start) is another program—this time in Chile—that resembles the Head Start Program here in the United States. They focus on educating not only the children, but the families as well. This is great—except that my recent research into Head Start shows that they are so severely underfunded, that they hit up the very people they serve and the people who work for them to raise funds!

While I know that the need for early childhood education and healthy development are an important need worldwide, I find it ironic that an American University is working on improving other countries, when our own country is so desperately in need! I am certainly not saying that we should ignore the plights of other countries. What I am saying is that maybe we should spend some of those resources fixing what is wrong here before we start telling other countries how they should be doing things.

3 comments:

  1. Fortunately for Head Start 2014 there was in increase of 1 billion dollars this year... What source did you see that they hit up the people who work for them? Each program has a delegate agency that receives funding. I did do fundraising only with the YMCA but all other programs I worked for I did not. I was never asked in those programs to donate. We were asked but not required to donate. But the revenue that was generated went directly back into the programs I managed to provide scholarships. I oversaw HS, preschool and school-age programs.

    I will never understand the research and dollar amounts that we put in other countries either as our own are suffering.

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  3. I feel that America spends more time helping others and than focusing on our own problems. How can we fix some place else when we need help ourselves. I feel with the wave of educators coming out that we have the power to change things and hopefully we can make a difference for the next generation.

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