학술논문

Unpacking and unpicking the challenge of 600 hours of preschool attendance.
Document Type
Article
Source
Australasian Journal of Early Childhood. Mar2024, Vol. 49 Issue 1, p32-48. 17p.
Subject
*PRESCHOOL children
*EARLY childhood education
*PRESCHOOLS
*ATTENDANCE
*GOVERNMENT report writing
*SCHOOL year
Language
ISSN
1836-9391
Abstract
The Australian Government's (2022) Preschool Reform Funding Agreement and initiatives by state governments aim to lift enrolment and maximise the benefits of early childhood education (ECE) in the year before school. The Agreement is particularly relevant for children and families from vulnerable and disadvantaged backgrounds, many of whom do not utilise the annual attendance target of 600 hours available to every child. Children's enrolment and daily attendance records are key to understanding participation in ECE, but few studies or government reports have examined this information in detail. Drawing on administrative records provided by 19 long day care and preschool centres/schools in areas of socio-economic disadvantage, we analysed weekly attendance for 971 preschool-aged children over four 10-week terms. Results for the 'percentage of enrolled days' attended (M = 88%) and 'total hours' attended (M = 576 h) approached the target but differed for children enrolled in preschool versus long day care. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]