It’s common for students to be asked to help with cleaning, tidying, and supervising children outdoors. These tasks are part of daily routines and give you insight into how services operate. However, if your placement hours are limited to cleaning and basic supervision, you’re missing out on the learning opportunities placements are designed to provide.
Placements should expose you to:
- Observing and supporting children’s learning experiences.
- Understanding curriculum links and documentation practices.
- Engaging in routines like mealtimes, rest times, and group activities.
- Connecting theory from your course to real-world practice.
If you’re not experiencing these, it’s worth addressing.
Signs Your Placement Isn’t Meeting Learning Outcomes
- You’re restricted to cleaning tasks only.
- You’re not invited to observe or participate in planned experiences.
- You haven’t had opportunities to connect placement hours to course requirements.
- You feel you’re not learning or developing professional skills.
Steps You Can Take
-
Review Your Course Requirements
Check your handbook or placement guide. Placements are meant to meet specific learning outcomes, not just provide labour. -
Communicate with Your Supervisor
Politely explain that you’d like opportunities to observe and support learning activities. Frame it around your course needs:
“I’d love to be involved in group activities so I can connect this to my studies.” -
Document Your Experience
Keep a record of what you’ve been asked to do. This helps if you need to raise concerns with your training provider. -
Advocate for Yourself
Position your request as wanting to meet course requirements, not as a complaint. Supervisors are often more receptive when they see it’s about your learning. -
Escalate if Needed
If nothing changes, contact your course coordinator. They can intervene to ensure your placement is meaningful.
Placements are about learning, not free labour. You deserve to gain skills and insights that prepare you for the profession. Cleaning and supervision are part of the job, but they should not be the only part of your placement experience.
Further Reading
Study Plan Techniques For Students
Navigating Placement Boundaries in Early Childhood Education
Q: Do Students Have To Complete Practicals
Opinion: 70000 Students in Training, but 21000 Educators Missing