This week I spoke to Taesha Rowe who is and early
childhood professional originally from Jamaica where she was a high school
teacher. Mrs. Rowe is currently
stationed in Naples, Italy on a military base. She has three children and is a
wife to an active duty member. Mrs. Rowe’s husband has been in the Navy for 16
years. They have been together for 18 years but married for 11. Mrs. Rowe has
been with the Department of Defense (DOD) for nine years. She started working
as a flexible employees with a child development center in Connecticut. Mrs. Rowe moved to Virginia with her husband
and children and worked as a toddler program lead teacher at a DOD child
development center. Currently Mrs. Rowe
works with DOD as an Assistant Director at the child development center in
Naples, Italy (Taesha Rowe, personal communication,
November 28, 2014).
I asked Mrs. Taesha Rowe about issues in excellence and
equality in early childhood field: How do you measure excellence in Early
Childhood? Mrs. Rowe discussed how it
was difficult to do so. However, Mrs. Rowe discussed how the lives we impact are not subjected to a
particular test to measure the caregiver's success. Unlike the elementary level
where the teacher's success can be measured by the academic success of her
students, in early childhood it is usually about the parent's view on their
child's development. Not only is this the first difficulty, but there are other
obstacles. Excellence in early childhood education, I believe, is limited
because of the guardians' understanding on the service offered. Many believe
that early childhood education is about "baby sitting" and
"potty training." Caregivers may not be encouraged to strive for excellence
because of others opinions of what they do. Despite all these different pieces,
Mrs. Rowe feels there is still excellence in the field. Caregivers who have
identified each child in their care as an individual and treat him/her as such,
focuses on how individual children meet their milestones (Taesha Rowe, personal
communication, November 28, 2014).
There are a few issues with equality in the field. Gender
is certainly a consideration in the early childhood field. There are still
parents who feel "uncomfortable" with male caregivers. Mrs. Rowe
discussed how she had situations where parents have approached her and asked
"Does Mr....... change my daughter's diaper?" or "Is Mr......
allowed to be alone with my child during nap time?" In Mrs. Rowe’s
experience, early childhood is predominantly dominated by young single females.
Another issue of equality in early childhood is caregivers of the minority
groups who are in management positions. While there are many caregivers of
minority groups working in the classrooms, managerial positions are usually
held by White Americans. It is however fair to say that this trend is changing
slowly (Taesha Rowe, personal
communication, November 28, 2014).
Rowe, covered a lot of issues and ones I never would have included, far as gender with caregivers. I really like how she explained parents view on us as teachers and how it can affect our performance of wanting to become quality. This is great information thanks for sharing .
ReplyDeleteThere is a similarity in how care givers are perceived in Naples and the United States. I have had parents request that male teachers not change their little girl diapers. I like how her handle that situation.
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