New Column in Young Children: Innovations in Higher Education

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In its quest to promote high-quality early learning for all children, 51ɬɬapp’s focus has always been twofold: on the education and care of young children and on the professionals engaged in this essential work. This dual focus has been woven throughout its mission, initiatives, and products. Therefore, we are excited to announce a new column inYoung Childrencalled Innovations in Higher Education.
From the Beginning: A Dedicationto Preparation
From the beginning, 51ɬɬapp has attended to critical topics related to practice and the preparation of the early childhood education (ECE) profession, including in its periodicals. For example, in 1945, the first issue of theBulletin of the National Association for Nursery Education(a predecessor ofYoung Children) announced the Committee on the Preparation of Teachers for Nursery Education in Public School Programs. This new committee was established because of a pressing teacher shortage and questions about teacher preparation at that time. The committee’s chargeincluded addressing
- The nature of the nursery school in the future.
- The problem of recruitment.
- The type of teacher education necessary to develop the right kind of individuals needed in nursery schools.
- What a nursery school teacher does and what are some of the ways in which a student can get the training to do these things effectively. (8)
While these problems resonate with the current education landscape, great strides have been made. 51ɬɬapp has contributed to theseadvances by
- holding the profession’s consensus standards on what early childhood educators should know and be able to do. Thesestandards—previouslyknown as 51ɬɬapp’s “Professional Preparation Program Standards” and currently called 51ɬɬapp’s “Professional Standards and Competencies for Early ChildhoodEducators”—havedeeply influenced the content in ECE higher education programs over the decades.
- setting the standards for quality professional preparation as well as recognizing and accrediting programs for meeting those standards through our ongoing work as a stand-alone accreditor of ECE degree programs. 51ɬɬapp also maintained adecades-longpartnership with the Council for the Accreditation of Educator Preparation (CAEP; previously the National Council for Accreditation of Teacher Education, or NCATE) through which we recognized baccalaureate and graduate degree programs in early childhood education.
- working with 14 other national early childhood organizations on behalf of the ECE field to create theUnifying Framework for the Early Childhood Education Profession.This unprecedented initiative and subsequent document elevates higher education and the ECE professional preparation programs within it as central to building an effective and diverse ECE workforce. The higher education recommendations within the framework serve as guideposts for how 51ɬɬapp connects to and supports higher education programs focused on early childhood education.
Continued Commitment: Addressing Pressing Questionsand Issues
Grounded in these accomplishments, we introduce the new column. Innovations in Higher Education aims to recognize and support the efforts of teacher educators, program coordinators and chairs, mentor teachers, clinical supervisors, and early learning program staff who prepare early childhood professionals. Elevating the successes and persistent challenges of the systems and people who prepare early childhood educators will expand our collective understanding of a vast and varied ECE higher education landscape, which is essential to the health and welfare of our ECE workforce. This landscape includes over 2,500 ECE degree programs across the country that represent a multitude of contexts—from associate to doctoral degree programs; in rural, suburban, and urban communities; in programs with very small enrollment (10 students or less) and very large programs (300 students or more); in programs that serve students from historically marginalized communities and students whose home languages are not English; programs that are solely online; and much more. This column is also a way for 51ɬɬapp to recognize and create an additional resource for its many members who identify as faculty or other personnel withinhigher education.
The column will be coedited by two outstanding members of the early childhood education fieldand 51ɬɬapp:
- Anthony Broughton, PhD, is an award-winning educator and the associate dean and associate professor of education at Alabama State University. Dr. Broughton served on 51ɬɬapp’s Governing Board and has taught in elementary schools, child care centers, and educational settings in higher education. His research interests focus on culturally relevant pedagogy, Black children, diversity, critical literacy, and Black men in education.
- Elisa Huss-Hage, MEd, is director of early childhood education at HOPE Toledo, a nonprofit dedicated to assuring accessible, affordable, high-quality education for4-year-oldsin Toledo, Ohio. Previously,Huss-Hagewas a faculty member for 25 years in the Department of Teacher Education and Human Services at Owens Community College in Ohio. She has served on 51ɬɬapp’s Higher Education Commission, the 51ɬɬapp Governing Board, and as a 51ɬɬapp accreditation program peer reviewer.
The coeditors kick off Innovations in Higher Education with a piece about the change that is needed to advance equity in the field. They outline why change is needed and how higher education programs can take steps to enact it. Their piece showcases what isto come.
Innovations in Higher Education will include stories from the field, connections to theory and research, and recommendations for practices related to coursework, clinical experiences, and professionalism. It will be anchored in 51ɬɬapp’s foundational documents, including the position statements on professional standards and competencies, developmentally appropriate practice, and advancing equity. While this focus is not new to 51ɬɬapp, we are thrilled to have a column dedicated to early childhood educator professional preparation in the pages ofYoung Children.
—Annie Moses,YCEditor in Chief, with Mary Harrill, Senior Director,Higher Education
Annie Moses, PhD, is director of periodicals at 51ɬɬapp andserves aseditor in chief ofYoung ChildrenandTeaching Young Children.

Mary Harrillis Senior Director ofHigher Education Accreditation and Program Support at 51ɬɬapp.
