Online Degrees Primed to Help Early Ed Teachers Meet New Credential Reqs
        
        
        
			- By Dian Schaffhauser
- 12/18/17
Preschool  isn't just babysitting. The quality of everyday interactions between a young  child and a caring adult helps that child's development in numerous areas:  socioemotional learning, early literacy, early math, fine motor skills,  cognition and approaches to learning. So it makes sense that education  policymakers are pushing the early childhood field to professionalize its  workforce and raise the credential requirements to four-year degrees for the  people interacting with children in those settings.
A report  recently published by New America posed a set of questions related  to how those policies affect the early education teachers who need to attain  bachelor's degrees, especially in areas of quality and access — and whether  online education could provide a leg up. As "When Degree Programs for Pre-K  Teachers Go Online: Challenges and Opportunities" put it, "What do we  know about the availability and quality of existing degree programs? Could they  be offered in a way that would enable a teacher to earn her degree at night  without disrupting her work with children? Could online degree programs provide  new opportunities? Or do they simply represent a new set of challenges related  to quality and access?"
The  findings are based on research from other reports on the state of teacher  preparation, interviews with experts, information pulled from websites of colleges  offering online degree programs, analysis of national data sets on early  childhood teacher preparation programs and surveys of the early childhood  workforce. This project targeted early childhood workers who are closest to  achieving their bachelor's degrees: pre-K "lead teachers."
According  to author Shayna Cook, a New America policy analyst, while online degrees can give  greater program access to teachers, schools need to produce better data and target  this set of students — often non-traditional learners — with financial help.
Online  degree programs have surfaced as a "more flexible and accessible  pathway" to degree attainment, Cook wrote, since students can complete  coursework from anywhere, at any time, and without having to wait for class availability  on campus. Online courses can also provide ways for them to finish remedial  coursework before they tackle full loads of credit-bearing classes.
Financial  considerations can impair the ability of students to achieve their degrees and  even affect the availability of programs altogether. Currently, the average  hourly wage for a pre-K teacher is $15.11 (about $31,400 annually); yet  four-year degrees cost $43,000 on average. While programs such as the Teacher Education and Compensation  Helps (TEACH) Early Childhood Scholarships do exist, many students end up  taking loans to cover the costs of their education. On top of that, the  availability of degree programs — online or face-to-face — is in jeopardy. As  Cook explained, "Institutions of higher education are wary of programs  that place students in serious debt because this debt can negatively affect the  school's ability to offer federal financial aid." As an example, non-profit  institution Western Governors University ended its competency-based online  early childhood program in 2013 "due to a lack of available jobs and low  wages."
Another  barrier is a lack of data. While IPEDS, the national Integrated Postsecondary  Education Data System, accrues and publishes information about whole schools,  it doesn't collect data on individual students or their specific programs. As a  result, the report asserted, it's "impossible to determine the total  number of online bachelor's degree programs in early childhood education"  or to link "outcomes data with online degree programs." Without such  data, the quality of specific programs is difficult to assess.
Cook  offered several recommendations for how institutions and early childhood  education organizations could get over hurdles that are preventing online  degree programs from being seen as "viable pathways for lead  educators."
One suggestion:  to assign advisors who can "help teachers to better understand their  financial aid options, provide information about high-quality programs and  offer emotional support along the way."
Another  suggestion: for accrediting bodies to "aim for full transparency to  avoid conflicts of interest." Cook advised that teachers "should be  able to easily navigate websites to quickly discover whether programs to which  they are applying are accredited."
Cook also  recommended that programs be tailored to leverage the current skills and  expertise the teachers have. "The workforce is already teaching young  children. Successful programs will recognize and build upon these skills in  order to help teachers improve their practice and learn more effective ways to  work with their young students," she wrote.
"Online  bachelor's degree programs have the potential to help build the skills and core  competencies of lead early childhood educators if policymakers and program  developers help teachers to overcome the many barriers to accessing an  affordable, high-quality degree," the report stated. "These barriers,  such as the need for greater teacher compensation and access to broadband, must  be addressed in an equitable way to ensure that every member of the field has  the opportunity to attain a quality degree."
The report  is openly available on the New America website.
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
        
            
        
        
                
                    About the Author
                    
                
                    
                    Dian Schaffhauser is a former senior contributing editor for 1105 Media's education publications THE Journal, Campus Technology and Spaces4Learning.