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Five Non-Negotiables Needed to Move Early Childhood Education Beyond Its Rhetoric

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To facilitate interaction among ideas presented in Moving Beyond False Choices for Early Childhood Educators, Series Editor Stacie G. Goffin offers opening comments. For readers new to the Series, her introduction explains the series’ intent. 听

In her role at the National Association for the Education of Young Children, Marica Mitchell is heavily involved with , a national collaboration focused on defining and advancing early childhood education (ECE) as a professional field of practice. Drawing from extensive experiences with the initiative, Marica identifies five non-negotiables she believes all of us need to accept if we are to unravel ECE’s thorny knot and advance ECE as a profession.


What a time to be alive! As a NAEYC staff member conceptualizing and informing the direction of听,听a 15-member national collaboration defining and advancing early childhood education (ECE) as a profession, it鈥檚 exciting to experience the synergy across the country as we advance toward becoming a unified, effective, and accountable profession. I do not, however, speak on behalf of NAEYC or the Power to the Profession Taskforce. My perspective, as expressed below, draws from personal reflections about the听 complexities, frictions, and mistrust embedded in this discourse.

Two 鈥渒eep it real鈥 advocate groups routinely energize me 鈥 ECE workforce policy veterans and practicing educators. The veterans have experienced more than four decades of what they see as minimal progress and can quickly point to self-inflicted barriers impeding our progress. The practicing educators (including faculty and administrators) are living the field鈥檚 identity and compensation crisis. They鈥檝e lost patience with the field鈥檚 seemingly never-ending rhetoric.听From ongoing conversations with these individuals, I鈥檝e concluded that addressing ECE鈥檚听 thorny knot depends on grappling with what I鈥檝e personally come to think of as five non-negotiables essential to the field鈥檚 advancement as a profession.

1. Advancing ECE as a profession requires creating a stable 1.0 version, inclusive of compensation, before building towards more visionary versions.

As the field embarks upon building a unifying framework for an ECE profession, I believe its first iteration must be capable of lifting up the field across all sectors, while also paving the way for future, enhanced versions. For educators and administrators living daily with ECE鈥檚 crisis, moving forward with a version 1.0 is imperative. They have neither the financial nor social privilege to wait decades for a bold, future vision to materialize. They want a 鈥渞ight now鈥 movement that guarantees compensation parity.

In contrast, my workforce policy veterans are driven by a more daring and visionary future. They鈥檝e experienced too many incremental and isolated wins and want assurances that version 1.0 will be neither static nor regressive. They want the visionary seeds they鈥檝e been planting for decades to be harvested. I think of them as the optimists听 Luis Hernandez describes when he shares his cautions about unrealistic expectations for academic uniformity. Still, since their leadership has contributed to the field鈥檚 considerable progress over the past decades, there鈥檚 reason to believe their vision, however lofty, is attainable.

2. Advancing the profession means naming inequities and using an equity lens for driving decisions about ECE鈥檚 future as a profession.

Organizing as a profession can lead to becoming insular and exclusive. In my review of organized professions, I鈥檝e seen that reliance on social structures like higher education and state licensure can unintentionally and intentionally produce cultural, linguistic, and racial inequities. Consequently, advancing as a profession can be treacherous territory. The risks of decreasing ECE鈥檚 diversity are real. As advocates, we must be prepared to name and disrupt structural inequities and ensure that targeted supports are in place to recruit and retain a diverse profession.

3. Advancing ECE as a profession means we have to confront the field鈥檚 biases.

We are products of the same racist, sexist, and elitist systems we are seeking to disrupt. This means we need to interrupt structural inequities external to ECE, as well as confront our own implicit and explicit biases. When, for example, I visit rural communities and observe that universities or practicum teaching sites aren鈥檛 a few train stops away, I have to confront my city bias. Disparaging comments about Child Development Associate (CDA) Credential鈩 holders and associate degree graduates and their faculty expose a more global example of our field鈥檚 elitist sentiments. 听听

4. Advancing ECE as a profession means we need to be more intentional about policy and financing decisions within our control.

鈥淐an somebody just teach me how to work the system?鈥 is what a frustrated practicing educator asked towards the end a three-hour conversation about ECE鈥檚 movement toward becoming a profession. Because we have some agency over systems that influence our work, we can 鈥 and should 鈥 be more strategic and intentional about ECE policies and funding decisions. For example, are we funding 鈥渋ndustry recognized鈥 degrees and credentials that are high-quality, portable, and stackable or are we funding state credentials that may be more accessible but have minimal value in the wider market? Do the QRIS and pre-k systems we design and finance support the coaching and quality assessment industry while only minimally supporting educator compensation and working conditions?

5. Advancing ECE as a profession means we respect and leverage the profession and profession-led standards and systems.

In the research, policy, and practice triad, we must ensure that ECE鈥檚 expertise is not marginalized. As听 Sherri Killins Stewart pointed out, policymakers need to challenge their assumptions about 鈥渇rontline providers.鈥 While research and policy should inform practice, they, in turn, should be informed by our practices.

State and federal agencies intentionally leverage the standards and systems developed by professions. They don鈥檛 spend limited public dollars duplicating (or worse disregarding) profession-led accreditation systems or ignore industry credentials. We can鈥檛 denigrate profession-led systems or organizations and then expect ECE to be an influential player.

In closing, if ECE is to realize its aspirations to become a recognized profession, these five non-negotiables must undergird our decision-making. They highlight the complexities involved with moving forward as a profession and also identify the mental shifts we collectively need to make. To move beyond听 false choices, we must be willing to practice what we preach. If we want the public to adopt new mental models about financing ECE, we too must be willing to shift our mental models.

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Five Non-Negotiables Needed to Move Early Childhood Education Beyond Its Rhetoric