

Australia’s Early Childhood Education and Care (ECEC) sector is facing a crisis that numbers alone cannot explain. On paper, more than 70,000 students are enrolled in early childhood qualifications across the country. Yet services report a shortfall of 21,000 qualified educators. Families are stuck on waitlists, centres are forced to reduce hours, and educators already in the field are stretched to breaking point.
This paradox—so many in training, yet so few in classrooms—reveals a deeper structural failure.
At first glance, the idea of asking a baby for consent before a nappy change might sound absurd. After all, babies can’t speak, reason, or give informed permission. But beneath the surface, this question invites us to reflect on something deeper: How do we model respect, autonomy, and emotional safety from the very beginning of life?
In early childhood education, qualifications are often seen as the benchmark of quality. Diplomas, degrees, and certificates line the walls of centres, signaling compliance and professional achievement. Yet research consistently shows that what truly shapes a child’s well-being and learning is not the paper on the wall, but the warmth, trust, and attunement in the relationships they experience every day.
In early childhood settings, every child deserves to be seen, heard, and held in emotionally safe environments. But when group sizes swell beyond developmental best practice, connection suffers, and so does care.
Large groups can dilute relationships, overwhelm educators, and compromise inclusion. Babies need calm, responsive spaces. Toddlers thrive in predictable, nurturing environments. Preschoolers flourish when their voices are heard—not lost in the crowd.
Across the globe, countries like New Zealand and Denmark cap group sizes to protect developmental well-being. In Australia, while ratios are regulated, group sizes often exceed what’s optimal, especially for infants and children with additional needs.
It’s time to ask: How many is too many?
And more importantly: What does quality care truly require?
Under ACECQA’s National Quality Framework, educators are deemed “qualified” if they hold a Certificate III, Diploma, or approved university degree. But qualification does not equal competence. The current system allows individuals with unrelated undergraduate degrees to complete a one-year postgraduate course and enter classrooms, often with minimal practical experience or emotional readiness. The result? A workforce flooded with technically qualified but emotionally disconnected practitioners some of whom openly admit they “don’t like kids” and entered the profession for visa access or job security.
In our push to capture every moment under the EYLF, many educators find themselves swamped by paperwork rather than immersed in play. Observation records, plans, reflections, assessments—they grow faster than we can connect with each child. When every anecdote demands multiple frameworks and sign-offs, learning narratives can lose their heart. In today’s landscape, dominated by the Early Years Learning Framework (EYLF), that balance has unraveled. The EYLF was meant to unify and elevate practice. Instead, we’ve watched it morph into an overwhelming checklist culture—where paperwork eclipses presence, and compliance overshadows connection. Somewhere along the way, a valuable framework was repurposed into a bureaucratic beast. So, educators, are we documenting learning or drowning in it?
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.
The “under the roof” rule allows childcare centres to meet staffing ratios by counting all educators on-site, regardless of whether they are physically present in rooms with children. This means a centre may appear compliant on paper, even if individual rooms are understaffed.While originally intended to offer flexibility, educators say it’s now being used to cut corners—leaving children without adequate supervision and educators stretched beyond capacity.
An opt-in intimate care waiver is a formal consent form offered by some early childhood education and care (ECEC) services that allows families to choose whether male educators can perform intimate care tasks—such as nappy changes, toileting, or dressing—for their child. On the surface, this seems like a reasonable compromise: empower families, protect children, and avoid blanket bans on male staff. But scratch beneath the surface, and a deeper question emerges: Are we quietly institutionalizing gender discrimination?
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