

A recent report shared by 7NEWS Australia warns of a troubling trend: fewer Australian parents are reading to their children. While the headline sparks concern about declining literacy and emotional development, it risks overlooking a deeper reality—one that goes far beyond the bedtime book ritual.
In a world where classroom outcomes are often skewed by postcode, language background, or parental education, one early predictor quietly cuts through the noise: phoneme awareness. As Brady (2020) starkly highlights, this foundational skill outranks intelligence and socioeconomic status when forecasting reading success.
In early childhood education, minimum ratios is one of the most insidious drivers of burnout across the sector. When minimum standards become maximum limits, educators are expected to absorb overwhelming cognitive and emotional loads while maintaining composure, care, and compliance. The result? Chronic stress, professional dissonance, and rising attrition. Ratios don’t just affect supervision—they shape every moment of decision-making, relational engagement, and safeguarding. The following article provides research on the effect of ratios on educators.
In early childhood education and care, ratios are more than a technicality—they are a frontline safeguard. Every child deserves responsive supervision, emotional connection, and developmental support. Yet in Australia, the current staff-to-child ratio standards may meet regulatory requirements, but they fall short of protecting what matters most: children's safety and well-being.
When unraveling whether a candidate has shortcut their Early Childhood Education (ECE) training, structured interviews and targeted questions can expose gaps in real-world competence. Fast-track or “vacation” pathways have raised alarm after thousands of candidates completed diplomas and graduate qualifications in months—sometimes with no genuine workplace experience and questionable oversight.
Across Australia, regulated staffing ratios aim to safeguard children in early learning settings. However, a growing number of incidents reveal that meeting these minimum requirements on paper doesn’t always translate into active, vigilant supervision. Below are several case studies that illustrate how gaps can emerge—even when legal ratios are nominally met.
When a family requests that male educators not change their child’s nappy, it touches on safeguarding, inclusion, and professional boundaries all at once. Here’s a way to navigate it thoughtfully.
If you need to report an early childhood service, there are clear steps you can take depending on the nature of the issue and your location. Here's a breakdown to guide you:
Stories shape how children make sense of their world. When we tell stories through a trauma-informed lens, we offer safety, build resilience, and honour each child’s experience. The following article provides information on Core Principles, Why It Matters, In Practice, Trauma-Informed Storytelling, 5 Examples of Trauma-Informed Stories and more.
Setting children up for a confident and joyful start to school begins long before the first bell. This guide brings together evidence-informed strategies, play-based activities, and partnership ideas to help preschoolers develop the skills, independence, and emotional resilience they need for their big leap into school.
The Children’s Services Award introduces a streamlined classification system and updated pay rates designed to better recognise the skills, qualifications, and responsibilities of early childhood… Read More
The Children’s Services Award has 8 clear levels. These levels make it easier to understand where you fit, based on your experience, qualifications, and responsibilities.… Read More
When working as a qualified early childhood teacher (with a university degree) within a service, your rate of pay will come from the Educational Services… Read More
Diploma-qualified educators play a vital role in early childhood services, taking on responsibilities that range from supporting children’s learning and development to leading rooms and… Read More
Certificate III qualified educators form the backbone of early childhood services, providing essential care and learning support for children across all settings. Their wages under… Read More
Early Childhood Teachers (ECTs) play a vital role in leading curriculum and pedagogy in early learning settings. Regulation 272 of the Education and Care Services… Read More
Children need safe and positive environments to learn and grow. To ensure this, services and educators need to ensure effective supervision at all times. The… Read More
Floorbook is a documentation approach that uses a large book with blank pages for children to record different aspects of their learning in small groups… Read More
In Norway and most other Scandinavian countries, children nap in the outdoors. According, to research outdoor sleeping not only promotes better daytime sleeping, but it… Read More
From 2026, every educator covered by the Children’s Services Award will move into a new, simplified classification structure. Instead of navigating 30 different levels, educators… Read More

One of the biggest hazards we face as early childhood Educators is back injuries. The...
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Embed Aboriginal Practices throughout the year with this yearly calendar created by Aboriginal Education Association...
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Mark-making refers to the earliest forms of visual expression—scribbles, lines, dots, and patterns—that children create...
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