Weather Morning: 13°c Light showers Afternoon: 14°c Light showers

News

HEADLINES:

Early-learning tests 'are a recipe for toddler tantrums'

Tim Ross, Education Correspondent
08.04.09

THE Government's new "nappy curriculum" for nurseries is fuelling tantrums among toddlers who are forced into formal education too early, teachers warned today.

Three- and four-year-olds are being labelled as "failures" before they have even started primary school under the Early Years Foundation Stage curriculum, a union conference was told.

Children are measured against 69 early learning targets for literacy, numeracy, problem solving and social skills under the rules, which came into force in all private, state and voluntary nurseries last year.

Members of the Association of Teachers and Lecturers said toddlers should spend more time playing and learning nursery rhymes instead of being forced to read and write at such a young age.

Ministers introduced the curriculum in an attempt to guarantee consistent standards across nurseries in England.

They say parents need to be reassured that wherever children attend a nursery or playgroup they are receiving a suitable early education.

Angela Forkin, a childcare specialist and delegate at the ATL conference in Liverpool, said she was "very concerned" the new rules were putting children under too much pressure. "It's becoming a prescriptive nursery education," she said. "Three- and four-year-olds are being assessed against targets which are developmentally inappropriate."

In many nurseries toddlers spend hours trying to write their names on a blackboard, or learning to sound out letters of the alphabet in a formal reading technique known as phonics.

"I can't help feeling the deterioration of behaviour we have seen in children is because of this," she said. "They should be learning nursery rhymes and the rhythm of language, not sounding out with phonics. We will get an increase in what you might term 'challenging behaviour' because young children don't always know how to express themselves.

"We all know about the 'terrible twos' and the tantrums. That will just get worse as children are forced to do things they are not able to do. Their confidence and self-esteem will suffer and this often results in disruptive behaviour."

Ms Forkin said children were expected to write simple sentences by the age of five. "They are not ready for that {so]. they are being labelled as failures before they enter statutory education."

The union was debating a motion calling for reforms to the curriculum to make more time for play-based activities.

Reader views (2)

 Add your view

This is a bizarre age that professes to be in tune with children and yet hates them so much: We have banned them from playing on the streets with our cars and stuff computer games and TV shows down their throats to keep them still. Then we train them like monkeys to recite adult ideas of "intelligence" whilst ignoring their most basic need - the freedom to develop in their own time and space. It's disgusting. They send kids to school at six and seven on the continent - and their IQ is none the bit lower than our children's. Boy, and just look at the infrastructure in Scandinavia or Germany! Children: revolt. Have tantrums! Lots of them!!

- Chris, London

Anything that has a Labour government tag is a sure fire disaster.
Lets think of the long list of Labour government achievements:


Thats it. Zero.

- Dave Davies, Basingstoke


Add your comment

 

Your email address will not be published

Terms and conditions make text area bigger You have  characters left.


 

Don't Miss
  • Lenny Henry

    Lenny Henry: 'Maybe one day we can have a black Doctor Who'

    Shortlisted at today's Evening Standard theatre awards for his role as Othello, Lenny Henry has come a long way from black and white minstrels
  • John and Edward

    Spread of the Jedhead

    Jedward, voted off the X-Factor this weekend, are the most obvious proponents of the sticky-uppy look - but the style crosses boundaries of age, gender, sexuality and taste, says Nick Curtis

Steamy scenes for Purnell in Turkish bath

Scheming over the future of the Labour Party continues even in the most unlikely places

All stories


Promotions

Environmental initiatives

Find out how you can help to meet the challenges of climate change in London.


The Open University

Every year The Open University helps thousands of professionals progress in their careers.


Win the Best Seats

In London theatre when you vote for your favourite celebrity spec wearer.


Breast Cancer Care

Donate £1 and leave a message of support for a loved one in the Swarovski Garden of Wishes.


Win an iPodTouch

With Courvoisier when you share your thoughts on this week's cocktail.