Early Years Professional Status
Early Years Professional Status (EYPS) is a professional status for practitioners in England at the Early Years Foundation Stage (ages 0 – 5), which is intended to be broadly equivalent to Qualified Teacher Status (ages 5 – 18). Introduced by the British government in 2007, via the Children's Workforce Development Council, EYPS courses require a degree, and include an assessment in an early years setting - either a placement or within the trainee's own early years workplace. In Scotland the Childhood Practice Award (either a professional development award, a practice based ordinary degree or a post-graduate diploma) similarly requires those who lead and manage Early Years (In Scotland Childhood Practice incorporates all those working in non-compulsory children's services 0-16).[1]
By 2010, all early years children's centres in England (of which there are nearly 3000) will be required to have at least one Early Years Professional (EYP), and by 2015, all full daycare settings will be required to have at least one,[2] which will require 20,000 EYPs.[3] In early 2009 there were more than 2,500 graduate-level EYPs and a further 2,400 in training in 35 higher education institutions.[2] In Scotland, since 2011, it is a registration requirement with SSSC (Scottish Social Service Council) that all leaders and managers who are in charge of EY centres, nurseries or family centres must have a Level 9 qualification ( SCQF) which is equivalent to an ordinary degree.
Government funding is available (via the Graduate Leader Fund[4]) to support private, voluntary or independent sector daycare in gaining EYPS status,[5] but is not currently available for the 20% of England's early years childcare workforce which is run by the government.[2]
Pay for EYPs however is often only half that of a Newly Qualified Teacher, at £8-9/hr.[2]
See also
- Qualified Teacher Status
- Childhood Practice
References
- ↑ http://learningzone.workforcesolutions.sssc.uk.com/course/view.php?id=15
- ↑ 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 The Guardian, 28 April 2009, The poor professionals
- ↑ The Guardian, 7 August 2008, Under-fives have almost no male teachers
- ↑ CWDC - Funding
- ↑ The Guardian, 27 February 2007, Early tears