A Golden Opportunity for Early Childhood Apprenticeships
Why the Bank Street College of Education believes the time is right
Apprenticeships are practically as old as civilization, a concept normally associated with trades like blacksmithing and tailoring rather than child care. If things go right, however, we may be on the brink of a resurrection of this old idea for the contemporary dilemmas faced by this sector.
Both of the Early Apprenticeship Acts ( and ) under consideration can expand capacity of the child care system and create a pipeline for new teachers. The legislation could unlock the transformative potential of apprenticeships to professionalize the child care workforce and position the mostly female, mostly minority educators for career longevity. According to the experts at the , passage would also demonstrate an unprecedented recognition of the importance of the sector and those who work in it. And it just might lead to future public investment.
Brandy Jones Lawrence, senior director of Birth-to-Three Communication & Partnerships with Bank Street鈥檚 Birth-to-Three Policy Initiative, appreciates the acknowledgment that those who care for young children are, in fact, educators, just as those who teach children in grades K-12. 鈥淚t is a profession,鈥 she says, 鈥淭hese women are supporting the most dramatic brain-building years of a child鈥檚 life. And yet they are so underpaid today that 40% are on public assistance.鈥
If we want our children to build meaningful relationships with the adult in whose care we entrust them, we should want that adult to have access to high quality training, earn a sustainable wage with benefits and to view their position as a viable lifelong career pathway. Ideally, these professionals will get progressively better at their jobs, feel supported in their roles and, in turn, support others in their line of work.
In recent years, supporters of all political leanings have embraced the ancient apprenticeship as a way to keep America鈥檚 workforce up to date with the skills needed in the 21st century. The calls them 鈥渁n overlooked solution for creating more access to quality jobs.鈥 The Trump Administration鈥檚 Department of Labor said they 鈥渃lose the skills gap and strengthen the greatest workforce in the world鈥攖he American workforce.鈥 鈥渁n idea to reinvent postsecondary skills for the digital age.鈥
The Bank Street team notes that, in the early education field, the concept caught on via a February 2019 paper by the New America鈥檚 Emily Workman, which concludes, 鈥淎n earn-while-you-learn training model is ideal for the largely low-income, low-wage workforce. State and local leaders should consider the Registered Apprenticeship model as an effective tool for teacher development.鈥 (Fun fact: didn鈥檛 attend college or law school. He apprenticed in a Springfield, Illinois, attorney鈥檚 office.)
an apprenticeship model in Philadelphia worth replicating. Four key components in the District 1199c Training and Upgrading Fund are academic supports, community college enrollment, on-the-job learning and mentorship and compensation increases. Thanks to the 1199c program, a teacher named Corinne Bale has been able to build upon 15 years of on-the-job experience to earn an associate degree鈥攁nd more money. 鈥淚鈥檓 getting the schooling toward my degree and I鈥檓 still able to work,鈥 . 鈥淚鈥檝e been working for so many years with the pre-toddler class and through this apprenticeship, and going to classes, I鈥檓 able to come back to my own classroom with new ideas.鈥
The measures represent an opportunity 鈥渢o expand access to care while investing in quality,鈥 says Jones Lawrence, but she emphasizes that the implementation of apprenticeships will determine their success. 鈥淭he goal is to first empower and retain the existing workforce first and then to bring more people into the field. This sequence is critical if we are to build upon the experience and knowledge of those who have been doing the work during this extraordinary period.鈥
Courtney Parkerson, a consultant with Bank Street鈥檚 Birth to Three Policy Initiative, mentions two additional dimensions that could further strengthen apprenticeships for early educators: coaching, which promotes what she calls 鈥渞eflective supervision,鈥 along with personal and professional growth; and compensation increases tied to credentials and education.
鈥淲e do not pay our early educators what they deserve. Apprenticeship programs need to focus on wage increases to attract participants.鈥 highlighted this issue: child care teachers make an average of only $28,500 each year. Parkerson also stressed the importance of focusing on infant/toddler teachers, who are often paid the least and have the most limited options for high quality training.
Apprenticeships are a step in the right direction for a profession that has endured too many years of being undervalued, financially and otherwise. 鈥淚t鈥檚 in the best interests of our children,鈥 summarizes Parkerson, 鈥淲hen we invest in child care teachers as educators and professionals, children thrive.鈥
This story originally published on Early Learning Nation and is now archived on 蜜桃影视. Learn more here.