Since Labour came to power in 1997, early years
services have undergone a huge transformation - for
example a significant increase in the scale of
provision, the creation of an over-arching policy
approach (Every Child Matters), the establishment of new
departments focused on children and their families at
local and national level, new structures designed to
promote partnership between different bodies concerned
with children's welfare, significant changes in the
early years curriculum, new subsidies for childcare and
education and new arrangements for regulation. This book
would offer an historical account of the development of
early years services in the United Kingdom (with
consideration of developments in Wales, Scotland and
Northern Ireland, as well as England).After an
Introduction arguing the relevance of an historical
perspective, it would offer a fairly brief account of
developments from the 16th century to the Second World
War, a similarly brief account of developments from the
Second World War up until the Conservative victory of
1979, a more detailed account of developments in the
period of Conservative Government (1[zasłonięte]979-19) and three
chapters with an even more detailed account of
developments since 1997. It is easy for those involved
to become so focused on the implementation of the latest
changes that they lose sight of the process of change
itself. This book would be intended to help them to
understand what has happened so far, to evaluate that
process and to prepare for the future. The objective
would be to assist the reader to understand what has
happened, and why, rather than argue that what we have
now is, or is not, better than what went before or than
any other set of arrangements that might be
conceived. |
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