Starting behind in the early years means staying behind – for individual children and for an education system as a whole. A child’s development in the first few years of life significantly predicts his or her later success in education and ongoing levels of happiness and well-being. The most effective investment governments can make to enhance education and later life outcomes is to provide a strong start in children’s early years. Seeking to ameliorate individual or systemic learning issues at later ages is less successful and more costly than doing so earlier.
Education systems that wish to achieve a step-change in student outcomes are well advised to increase their focus on the quality, responsiveness and effectiveness of their early years policies for children. Like all areas of education policy, decisions affecting children’s early years of learning and well-being are fraught with political and commercial interests, in addition to ideology. Many claim they know what is best for children, yet the international data in this field is surprisingly limited. Moreover, while children’s needs and interests have always been diverse, children’s lives are changing at a greater pace than ever before. Thus, research findings on how best to support children and their families from 20, 10 or even 5 years ago may not be fully applicable to today’s youngsters.
The International Early Learning and Child Well-being study puts a spotlight on how children are faring at five years of age. The study directly measures key indicators of children’s development and learning, as well as collecting a broad range of developmental and contextual information from children’s parents and teachers. The study does not measure everything. Instead, it focuses on those aspects of development and learning that are predictive of children’s later education outcomes and wider well-being. These are: emergent literacy1 and emergent numeracy2, self-regulation3, and social-emotional skills4. Across these early learning domains, a total of 10 dimensions of children’s development and learning were included in the study.
Three OECD countries participated in this study: England (United Kingdom), Estonia and the United States. Each of these countries recognises children’s early years as critical to children’s later learning and well-being. Each country participated in this study to enhance the body of international evidence available to policy makers, education leaders, practitioners and parents to improve children’s early learning outcomes. The information from the study provides each country with insights to inform their approaches to children’s early years and their approaches in the early years of schooling. At five years of age, there is much that education systems can do to further support the learning trajectories for these children.