Saturday, February 1, 2014

Jobs/Roles in the ECE Community: National/Federal Level




The three organizations that I have chosen to explore are Head Start, NAEYC, and Zero to Three.  Each of these organizations are leaders in the field of early childhood and are making ongoing, sustained efforts towards the provision of  high-quality care environments and supports for children and families.
The three job opportunities that I have chosen to look into are:
Head Start Reviewer
This position requires extensive knowledge of Head Start Standards and monitoring protocol, high levels of ethics and professionalism, the ability to be flexible in work schedule, willingness to travel, and computer proficiency.
There will be training requirements specific to the position if education and experience requirements are met.

NAEYC Assessor
This position has a five step process which includes filling out the application, having a phone interview, passing a criminal background check, completing a contract for services with the NAEYC Academy, and successful completion of the Assessor tools which is to determine reliability.
Education requirements are a minimum of a bachelor’s degree that includes credit hours of specialized college-level work in child development and learning from ages birth through kindergarten levels.  Applicants must have relevant experience in early childhood settings related to ages birth through kindergarten, understanding of the NAEYC accreditation process, skill with completing observations and tools to complete them, interpersonal and communication skills, basic knowledge and skill using technology for data collection purposes, and basic administrative and professional communication skills when using technology.
Physical and travel requirements include being able to stand or sit at child level for one hour or more, ability to use stairs and walk distances up to half a mile, hold a valid driver’s license.  You must be able to make travel arrangements and accommodations for hotel.  Assessors are required to carry out about 30 assessment visits, complete trainings required for professional development, and pass evaluations.

Zero to Three Senior Writer/Training Specialist
This position requires a Master’s Degree in Early Childhood or a related field.  One must possess a strong knowledge base of Early Head Start program development, performance standards, and the EARLY Head Start Migrant and Seasonal Head Start technical assistance resources.  There is an emphasis on infant and toddler knowledge, cultural context knowledge, and adult learning.  This person must be flexible, self-motivated, able to multi-task and willing to travel. 
Duties and responsibilities include leading teams in the development of webcasts, podcasts, webinars, written products related to deepening understanding of and development of innovative approaches to the needs of the Early Head Start community.  Able to provide training for federal staff, liaison between programs, and other duties as needed.

Each of these positions would enable a professional in the field to have a substantial impact upon making positive growth and change that will benefit children, families, and the field of early childhood.  The potential for growth and professional development are limited only by oneself.

5 comments:

  1. Cindy,

    These are three wonderful organizations and I believe you are more than competent to accomplish any goal or objective you sit your mind to. I think that NAEYC Assessor would be demanding physically but a rewarding job as accreditation is an essential element to promoting high-quality early childhood programs.

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  2. The NAEYC site has many purposes for early education, This one of the many site we visit for all types of information. I especially like your choice "NAEYC Assessor," all people working in the field of education may not be fit to work with children or around children. It's good to know that this is available.

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  3. Cindy,
    The NAEYC Assessor sounds like a great job. Very interesting! The NAEYC does so much to set high standards for educating children and working with families. NAEYC was one that I chose as well.

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  4. Hi Cindy

    The NAEYC Assessor sounds interesting to me too. It almost same as Accreditation Assessor in the region where I work now. However, in order to be qualified as an assessor in my region here, you have to be a very senior early childhood professional or school administrator who has been running some programs for many years. The assessor usually attaches to the Ministry of Education and has the influence to close down any programs that deliver bad services.

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  5. Cindy,

    The NAEYC Assessor is a position that I have been long interested in. If I resided in the correct location this is definitely a professional path that I would want to pursue. Thanks for sharing.

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