In a landmark move to enhance oversight and accountability across Australia’s early childhood education and care sector, Education Ministers have commissioned ACECQA to develop a New National Educator Register. This foundational digital system will provide regulators with clearer visibility of who is working in the sector and where—supporting safer, more transparent practices for children, families, and providers.
In child-related work, safety begins with trust and trust must be backed by verification. The NSW Office of the Children’s Guardian has issued a clear reminder: a Working With Children Check (WWCC) number alone is not enough. It could be expired, barred, or even fabricated. The only way to ensure a WWCC number is valid is through official online verification.
The following article provides information on why verification matters, how to do it, and what it means for your organisation’s safeguarding responsibilities.
Anxiety in young children often shows up in subtle ways ummy aches, restlessness, clinginess, or emotional outbursts. These feelings, sometimes described by children as having “the worries” or a “bubbly tummy,” can be overwhelming and difficult to articulate. As educators, we play a vital role in helping children recognise and regulate these emotions in safe, supportive ways.
The following article provides a simple, hands-on strategy that engages children’s attention, breathing, and body awareness—bringing calm and connection back into the moment.
Loose parts play is a powerful, open-ended approach that invites children to explore, create, and express themselves using everyday materials. It fosters autonomy, imagination, and problem-solving and can be tailored to your environment and the developmental needs of your children.
In the whirlwind of ratios, regulations, and relentless responsibilities, early childhood educators often forget the most vital resource in any service: themselves. That’s why Wellbeing Wednesday has become more than a calendar quirk—it’s a lifeline. Here’s a restorative reboot for your weekly wellbeing ritual, designed with emotional intelligence, trauma-informed practice, and authentic educator voice at its heart.
Toxic environments in early learning services can manifest as gossip, micromanagement, inconsistent policies, emotional invalidation, or even bullying. These psychosocial hazards are not just unpleasant—they’re legally and ethically significant under Work Health and Safety laws.
The transition from preschool to kindergarten isn’t just academic—it’s deeply social. As children move from parallel play to collaborative learning, they begin to form friendships, navigate conflict, and express their unique identities. These social and personal skills are the bedrock of emotional wellbeing and school readiness.
The following Biting Policy Example tailored for early childhood education and care (ECEC) services in Australia, drawing on best practice from ACECQA, Child Australia, and service-level procedures.
In early childhood education, the quality of a play space isn’t defined by how polished it looks—it’s defined by how deeply it invites children to imagine, explore, and belong. Research consistently shows that the most powerful play environments are those that center children’s agency, emotional safety, and social connection. Here are five foundational features that elevate play from passive activity to transformative experiences.
In a busy early learning room, nestled between a soft rug and a basket of sensory tools, something quietly revolutionary was unfolding. It wasn’t a new curriculum or a flashy resource — it was a space. A space designed not for punishment, but for peace. Not for isolation, but for connection. It was the Calm Corner, and it changed everything.
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