Jobs/Roles in the ECE
Community: Internationally
Researching the field of Early Childhood Education on the
International level lead me to several sites and ideas of community services
that caters to children and their families. As a professional of early
childhood education, I am delighted to see so many very helpful organizations
of community services that exist for aiding children of all ages in every area
of concern. The following highlighted organizations are among the few that I
found to be very impressive.
One Laptop Per Child
Their mission is to empower the world’s poorest children
through education.
The computer’s name is The XO. This is a nonprofit organization,
and the kids are the company’s mission, not their market, or profit which means
that the kids keep their laptop, and it focuses on early education ages 6-12
years old. It is solar powered, water proof, dust proof, drop proof. It caters
to schools & classrooms so no one gets left out. It is open and free to
connect to the internet and students can communicate with one another. The XO
grows with the child’s needs in order that they can connect, learn, and
explore. It will be available in the US by November.
The founding members of the organization are companies we
are familiar with such as EBay, and Google, but the others are unknown such as,
Marvell, Red-hat, SES Astra, Nortel, Bright-Star, AMD, and Quanta Computer. XO
organization also has partners that we are familiar with such as Citigroup, and
other that are unknown such as, Foley Hog, Fuse Project, Greenberg Traurig,
Nurun, Pentagram, Underwriters Laboratories, United Nations Development
Progrumme. There are no job opportunities at this time, but the site suggests
to check back soon.
I would love to work for this organization. I would be
overjoyed to help get computers in the hand of a child, and watch them work on
their computers while they learn.
Child Empowerment
International
Child empowerment & education CEI is a registered 501c3
Non-profit organization.
Mission: is to challenge the cycle of poverty in areas of
civil unrest through empowering & educating marginalized children. The
organization provide education & healthcare to children living in refugee
& displaced people camps, children from war experiences, trauma, and
violence of any kind. These opportunities help children to reach
self-actualization, self-reliance, and self-sustain, and self-sustainability,
empowering children to reach maximum potential via higher education or
vocational training and other life skills.
There were no connections to information for job openings
with this organization, but volunteering seems to be connected through donating.
I would not mind working for this organization to encourage the children that
they can do anything, and that they are important.
Khan Academy
Khan Academy is a free online course, learning for children,
and they can work at their own pace. The organization believes in a free
world-class education for anyone anywhere.
Khan Academy offers practice exercises, instructional video,
empowers learning in any subject.
Their Mission is to guide learnings from kindergarten on up.
Their state-of-the-art adaptive technology identifies strengthens, and learning
gaps. The organization is partnered with NASA, The Museum of Modern Art, The
California Academy of Sciences, & MIT to offer specialized coaching in
content, case studies, common core. Parents & teachers can see if a
student, or child is struggling, and provides a summary of their performance.
This organization has several openings in many areas &
subjects offered from instructional to internship & fellows, and more
Nationwide.
I also come across an organization that is also helping
children. The organization is
The School Fund
Provides funding for children to attend school, by way of the
donors, but the way they function disturbs me because the donors are allowed to
browse the student’s profiles until they find a child whose physical appearance
appeals to them. This is an example of unintended consequences, because the donors
are discriminating. It seems to me that if a child is not attractive enough, or
just doesn’t appeal to them by their appearance, then they don’t get funding to
go to school? It should only be donating to send children to school, not just
certain chosen children. Professional educators who work and study the
well-being of children insist that, “never single out one specific child” when
it comes to “physical characteristics” when doing anything for children it
should always “be about all of the children”, and that we should (“teach children
to respect and appreciate differences, to resist stereotypes and bias”; in
addition, “all colors, shapes, and shade of people are beautiful” (Derman-Sparks,
& Olsen Edwards, 2010, p. 34 par 6, p. 84 par 2). I’m not sure if the
children are aware that this is how they get there funding for school, but I
think that it would be strange that they would not be aware of how they get
funding for school.
References
Derman-Sparks, L., & Edwards, J. O. (2010). Anti-bias education for young children and
Ourselves. Washington, DC: National
Association for the Education of Young Children
(NAEYC).



Darlene,
ReplyDeleteIt was so good to hear from you =) I am proud of you. I know you have had issues to overcome and yet you persevered!!!! I will miss you too. Please look me up on FB if you have an account or send me a Walden email I will give you my personal one. We must stay in touch! Good Luck and Congratulations!
Hi Darlene
ReplyDeleteThank you for the complement that you posted on my blog! It is not just you, I recognize a trend in career opportunities overseas in abundance as well. This is why we are furthering our education and learning about these opportunities and as a result we have the ability to teach others by opening their eyes in realizing that early childhood education has many layers that people are not aware of, even our colleagues in the field. I find the Khan Academy opportunity for learners appealing, the word "FREE" is music to my ears, and what child does not deserve a free, quality educational experience. Thanks again and Good Post!
Shelita