Sunday, August 25, 2013

Farewell

This program has brought some ideas and inner passions out of me for the field of early childhood. I learned that my passion for early childhood is still there. I want all the students that I come in contact with know that I am there for them and I want the best for them. I am going to do whatever it takes to make their early childhood experience a great one.




My second learning is that early childhood is the root to each child’s education. It is important that we get parents involved early on so that they know their learning starts now and will continue to grow. Parents and teachers must have a relationship with the child at the center.



My last learning is my job is forever changing. I must keep dong research and learning about the field of education. I want the children I come I deal with to have the best developmental appropriate practices that they are going to learn from with fun.



My long term goal is to be the director of the early childhood department in my district. I feel this course of study has taught me a lot and I feel some things in our district need to change for the best.



To my Professor and colleagues, I wish all of you the best of luck in your future endeavors. May God continue to bless each of you. I have enjoyed our time in our course of study!!!!!

Saturday, August 10, 2013

ECE Community on the International Level

The UNICEF:




There focus areas stood out to me. The fact that they want all of their children to have a free quality education is wonderful. We as adults have to stand up for our children. They work with governments, civil society, and communities to make sure that young children get a quality early childhood care. That is very important because that is where the foundation starts.



Job: Early Childhood Development Specialist



Advanced university degree in: Education

8 years relevant work experience

Communicate effectively

Work effectively in a multi-cultural environment

Good leadership and supervisory skills





Save the Children:



The focus of this group is to create a lasting change in needy children lives in the US and around the world. There mission is to inspire ways in which the world treats children. They are creative and they respect and value each other. They are having a love for what they do and they are honest.



Job: Education Programme Manager



Degree in a related field

Experience with staff training

Results orientated

Ensure implementation of education activities

Produce education situation reports

Work with education advisor





OECD:



They want to improve the economic and social well being of people around the world. They measure trades and investments. They also analyze date and compare data to predict the future.







Job: Director for Education and Skills



Advanced degree

Keep the education and skills work of the OECD at the forefront

Ensure the work of the Directorate is fully aligned

Identify challenges and develop OECD can assist economies









Saturday, July 27, 2013

Jobs/Roles in ECE Community: National and Federal Level

NHSA: provides opportunity to participate in making public policy that will affect a generation of Americans. You get up to the minute information about what is happening on Capital Hill and can participate in the activities that help protect the program and the children in my community. They have trainings that I can benefit from.






NAECS-SDE: Their goal is to enhance education on behalf of the children. The organization wants to strength communication among states. It influences and support policies that affect education, children, and families. Standards and assessment are one of their projects.





NEA: The vision, mission, and values stood out to me. Their vision is to have a great public school for every student. Their mission is to advocate is for every student to be prepared to succeed. The organization gives lesson plans, strategies, and classroom management ideas.





Jobs:



Director of Education and Resources

A leading non-profit child care support agency who serves our community by supporting and educating people who provide child care has an opening for a Director of Education and Resources. This individual will directly manage, monitor and evaluate the performance and development of the Education and Resources Program. They will be responsible for preparing, implementing and interpreting contracts, proposals and budgets for funders and contractors.

This position requires a MA in Early Childhood Education or related field; at a minimum 3 years working with children, managing staff, and instructing adults in an educational setting.



EC3 Teacher

EC3 intends to increase its staff of professional, educated, experienced early childhood teachers by hiring a full-time preschool teacher in our multi-age (3-5) classroom. The right person for the job will have a college education (Associates degree or higher) in child development or family studies and at least three years successful lead-teaching experience in a full-day, center-based early learning program. This warm, positive, responsive caregiver will provide a variety of safe experiences that allow young children to develop physically, emotionally, socially, and intellectually, according to their individual development and in partnership with their families. Major job functions also include lesson planning, supervising classroom support staff and volunteers, evaluating students, communicating with parents, and collaborating with coworkers through staff meetings and other activities.











Saturday, July 13, 2013

Exploring the World of ECE

South Carolina Education Association: The association gives you a variety of benefits that will help you be successful in your career of education. The benefits include representation, professional development, legal assistance, news and information, and liability insurance to name a few.




NAEYC: It gives you great content based on research. It helps you to have money on materials for the classroom. You will receive discounts on conferences that will assist you with doing your job better. It will give you information about the education field and build your understanding of early childhood.



Southern Early Childhood Association: The association will provide discounts to conferences and professional products. You will receive free magazines and newsletter with information pertaining to early childhood. The website will give you valuable resources for your classroom and parents.



Jobs that I have interest in:



-Head Start Director: administers the overall operation of the program. The primary focus is on planning, organizing, and leading the activities of the program within the guidelines established by the Office of Head Start, the Head Start Policy Council, and Board of Directors.



-Early Childhood Director: The Early Childhood Director is responsible for the organization, delivery and quality of all early childhood/pre-K programs to the membership and the community. This is an extremely hands on position requiring a passion for youth, a high level of energy and strong administration skills. You must be able to thrive a fast paced, non-profit environment. This position is part of our staff leadership team.





Saturday, March 2, 2013

The End of Class

I would like to thank everyone who posted on my blog and discussion posts. This has been a great experience. I hope to see you all in my next class. It seems that we are a long distance family that is there for one another. I pray that you all have a great future. I hope we can get in touch so we can continue to help one another. My personal email address: chastityfrazier@yahoo.com.

Sunday, February 17, 2013

Adjourning

There was a group that I was involved with at my church where we would pick up children in the community on Friday nights to teach them the Word of God and to have fun in a safe and supportive enivornment. We would have anywhere from 50-200 children a night. We all loved what we did from feeding them to just playing games or talking with them on their level. We would meet once a month to discuss our focus for the next month and the progress that we were seeing. Everybody that was a part had a positive insight and enjoyed it. We did not have to deal with any negative vibes because we are all in support on the changes we were seeing in the children. The director of the group(my mom) passed away in ‘09 so the group broke apart. It was hard for me to be apart of the group when I knew my mom started it and that she was no longer with us. To this day it is still hard for me to think about the group when I know the main person is no longer here on earth. Since ‘09, I stopped with the group. The group started back about a year ago but the turn out is not the same and it is hard for me to even be apart of the group again so I just fell back.


I think adjourning from my colleagues will not be hard. I do not really know any of them because I only see their pictures on their blog spot. Even though we do have some connection because we had a few classes together so we got to know about each other through discussions and blogs. I feel that we adjourn when we leave the class and thank each other on our blog spots. Adjourning is important because it brings closer to the group.

Sunday, February 10, 2013

Nonviolent Communication

I recently had a disagreement with a colleague who just started teaching PreK for the first time this year. She allowing one of her parents still to come in her classroom and just sit around until they get ready to leave. I told her there is nothing wrong with the parents walking their child to the classroom but they do not need to sit around every morning because it makes it hard on the child. When the parents do leave you hear the child crying in my classroom. This has been happening since August. She said she sees that it is becoming a problem but she is afraid to tell the parent. I told her just to be nice about it and show her that it is affecting her child in the long run. I also told her that I would sit in the conference just to be the mediator. Well, she had the conference and it was a win-win result. The parent thought that it was making the transition easy for her child but after the teacher told her what the child was doing when she left. It made the parent feel bad. I stepped in and told her it was okay and I understood because I did the same thing with my first child.