Lack Of Early Childhood Workforce Strategy Hurts Children’s Education

Search Newsroom Posts
Early Childhood Education Press Releases NZ

Monday, 16 December 2024
Press Release

A plan for building a sustainably supported and qualified early childhood teacher workforce is long overdue, but still nothing is being done.

In May this year, our early childhood advisory committee provided Minister’s Willis, Stanford, and Seymour each with a copy of a briefing paper on ECE workforce challenges and solutions.

Nicola Willis’s office forwarded her copy of the briefing paper to Minister Seymour because to quote: “the issues raised fall within the portfolio responsibilities of Hon David Seymour, associate Minister of Education”.

Our Committee’s Chair, Bonnie Te Ara Henare said that there had been no response from David Seymour and not from Education Minister Erica Stanford either.

Ms Te Ara Henare said that the government’s main approach to the teacher shortage had been to put funding toward supporting service owners to bring in teachers from overseas and not on supporting kiwi teachers to remain in the New Zealand ECE workforce.

Changes had also been made to regulations and funding to count primary trained teachers as teachers trained for working with under-fives, and centres were no longer required to have an ECE qualified teacher be a person responsible for supervising children and staff.

But such measures have not adequately addressed ECE qualified teacher-supply and retention issues.

“You only have to look at what they are doing over in Victoria, Australia to support the growth of a qualified ECE workforce, to see why kiwi teachers are attracted to work there. They are valued for their qualifications,” said Ms Te Ara Henare.

In our briefing paper we have recommended that government develop a strategy for building a sustainable, knowledgeable, skilled and ECE qualified workforce, by

  • reviewing teacher supply initiatives, including the Overseas Teachers Finders’ Fee
  • valuing the qualification of ECE teaching by ensuring that the qualification recognised for working in ECE settings is one of ECE teaching
  • ensuring full pay parity for all ECE qualified teachers with school teachers
  • recruiting men and more Māori Teachers for ECE to better reflect the characteristics of enrolled children
  • addressing the causes of high staff churn or turnover
  • improving data collection and reporting.

Ms Te Ara Henare said that the solutions put forward in the briefing paper to the Ministers were straightforward and achievable.

“We have expected to see prompt urgent government action. This has not been forthcoming.”

Dr Sarah Alexander said that this was concerning particularly now and in the light of Minister Seymour’s stated intentions to deregulate the early childhood sector.

She said, “there had better be a very high proportion of early childhood qualified and experienced teachers in every centre if the risk that deregulation poses to children is to be managed or mitigated. But there is not. ECE centres can (legally) operate without there being even one ECE qualified teacher present in the centre with children.

“The Ministers need to make sure that they do not worsen the crisis by making workplaces more stressful and less safe for teachers than they already are, and causing teachers to burnout even faster,” said Dr Alexander.

Ms Te Ara Henare added that having enough skilled, knowledgeable, and early childhood education qualified teachers, had been an ongoing issue in the sector for many years.

She called on the government to “please build the quality of the early childhood teaching workforce – not diminish it!”

View the Ministerial Briefing Paper on the ECE Teacher Workforce

END.

Leave a Reply

Already subscribed?
ECE Newsroom

NZ’s own specialist ECE newsroom. 
Access national and local stories, in-depth analysis, & original commentaries.  

Membership Support for Teachers & Educators

(Comes with free Newsroom and Research access)

Membership Support for ECE Service Owners, Managers, & Community Organisations

(Comes with free Newsroom and Research access)

Researchers & Tertiary Education Libraries

Full access to over 25 years of ECE academic research articles – NZIRECE Journal.
Plus, guidance and resources on doing and publishing research

Has this been useful?  Give us your feedback.

You are welcome to add a link to this page on your website. Copyright belongs to the OECE so please do not copy any content without our written permission.

Information provided is of a general nature. It is provided ‘as is’, and we accept no liability for its accuracy or completeness. See our Terms and Conditions.

Related Posts

teacher wages, pay scales, in childcare and early childhood education

What ECE Teachers and Workers Earn: Pay, Benefits and Conditions

Anyone thinking about getting a job in ECE working in ECE or thinking about moving to a different service will find clear, practical information in this article about pay rates, employment conditions, and what to expect in different roles. It explains everything from starting salaries and pay‑step calculations to workplace rights, benefits, and how to recognise a supportive, professional environment.

Read More »
child up high on wooden fort at early childhood centre

“Reaching the Foothills of Everest” Ethics Approval

Getting Ethics Approval. By Chris Jenkin. Published in NZ Research in Early Childhood Education Journal, 2005, pp. 103-111.

Abstract

I am currently working on my doctorate entitled ‘Enhancing the Bicultural Curriculum in Early Childhood Education’. Part of the process of this study was making an application to the Auckland University of

This is a member/subscriber only post. To access it, please see the message below for details on access and joining.

Read More »
two toddlers touch hands

Say Sorry – Asking a Child to Apologise

Ask a Child to Say Sorry. By Warwick Marshall

Some early childhood service teachers do not want to ask a child to say sorry. They avoid this.

But why?

And what if anything is wrong with supporting children to say ‘sorry’?

Here is some reasoning on the matter.

No doubt there’s some kind of reasoning for it but this articl

This is a member/subscriber only post. To access it, please see the message below for details on access and joining.

Read More »
early childhood research journal online

Constructing Teacher Identities across Different Learning Paradigms

Abstract:

This article discusses one key finding from a qualitative study that investigated the experiences of overseas-born, ethnic minority early childhood pre-service teachers in New Zealand. Data were collected through interviews with recently graduated Bachelor of Teaching (Early Childhood Education) teachers and early childhood lecturers

This is a member/subscriber only post. To access it, please see the message below for details on access and joining.

Read More »
The Office of ECE

Share This Information

Table of Contents

Table of Contents

The Office of ECE Login

Take Action!

Help spread this vital ECE information, join our free social and email groups and become a member of OECE.

pay parity funding policy

1. Share This Information

2. Follow Our Social Pages

3. Get Regular Updates

Sign up to our free newsletters.

4. Become a Member