I have been studying the International Step by Step Association (ISSA) website and reading the current ISSA newsletter for these past few weeks and have learned a lot from this web resource. As a professional, the section that is probably the most relevant to my professional development is the Global Network section. This section provides information on ISSA members and organizations (useful for contacting professionals in other parts of the world), the ISSA Newsletter (current issues in the field and ISSA projects), and ISSA’s partners (links to even more early childhood organizations and resources!).
The article I read this week was “New Publication: Early Childhood Development and Education in Emergencies: Country Profiles from the CEE/CIS Region.” This publication is the result of a project ISSA has been working on with UNICEF. The article describes this project which has focused how young children are included in emergency preparedness and response strategies in 5 countries in the CEE/CIS region (Bosnia-Herzegovina, Georgia, Kyrgyzstan, Moldova, and Tajikistan). The results of the project found that “young children's needs and early childhood development (ECD) are generally absent from the emergency preparedness and response strategies in the region. Each of the five country profiles identifies a general omission of young children from emergency preparedness and response strategies” (Izsak, n.d.). From reading a little bit of the publication "Early Childhood Development and Education in Emergencies," I learned that this region has a lot of what the publication calls “emergencies,” including armed conflict, toxic waste, energy shortages, and natural disasters (earthquakes, floods, avalanches, etc.). In fact, Kyrgyzstan has about 200 natural disasters a year (ISSA, 2010)! Thinking about this gave me new insights into thinking about child development and how much the community and environment influences and impacts it. According to this article,” young children and the elderly are among the first victims and most vulnerable groups. Young children in emergency situations are more likely to experience life-threatening and other physically, emotionally, and socially extreme situations” and the “the negative impacts of emergencies on young children are multiple, affecting all dimensions of their development” (Izsak, n.d.). I just thought that this was really interesting and relevant today, especially in light of what is currently happening in the world!
In addition to this new insight, this article also showed me how other fields are supporting the early childhood field. The ISSA/UNICEF project was a result of poverty alleviation research (from the field of economics) and the article talks about how children’s brain development (from the field of neuroscience) is affected as a result from toxic stress which is the result from the “emergencies” in the region. This project is not only a collaboration of other fields but is working towards changing policies in the region so that young children and child development are better supported during times of emergencies.
This issue of how children are affected by emergencies in their region-whether they are from conflict or natural disaster is one that I think is particularly relevant today. The ISSA website has some really good information on issues such as these and what the early childhood programs in the region are doing to promote positive child development despite the challenges that they may face. Keeping up to date on global issues has helped me further understand just how many issues are affecting young children and their development today. Reading about this particular topic has made me wonder what is in place in my local community and region for young children in case of a natural disaster or emergency; I will now have to look into this!
References:
ISSA. (2010). Early Childhood Development and Education in Emergencies. Retrieved from: http://www.issa.nl/docs_pdfs/Unicef-country-profiles-final.pdf
Izsak, Eva. (n.d.). New Publication: Early Childhood Development and Education in Emergencies: Country Profiles from the CEE/CIS Region. Retrieved from ISSA website: http://www.issa.nl/news_publ2010.html