A UN-backed initiative’s work group on early childhood, education, and the transition to work, co-chaired by Hirokazu Yoshikawa, a professor at the Steinhardt School, calls for member nations of the UN to establish goals to address early childhood development.

Steinhardt’s Yoshikawa Part of UN-Backed Group to Call for New Early Childhood Focus in Sustainable Development Goals
A UN-backed initiative’s work group on early childhood, education, and the transition to work, co-chaired by Hirokazu Yoshikawa, a professor at the Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, calls for member nations of the UN to establish goals, which include quality pre-primary education, to address early childhood development. ©iStockPhoto.com/Jo Unruh

More than 200 million of the world’s children under five begin life at severe risk, which threatens global aims of poverty eradication, sustainable development, and social stability, according to a new report by the Sustainable Development Solutions Network, a research initiative set up at the request of the United Nations Secretary-General.

In response, the initiative’s work group on early childhood, education, and the transition to work, co-chaired by Hirokazu Yoshikawa, a professor at New York University’s Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development, and Madhav Chavan, CE-President of the education non-profit Pratham in India, calls for member nations of the UN to establish goals to address early childhood development (ECD) in its 2015-2030 Sustainable Development Goals.

“Early childhood development, other than reducing infant mortality, was not part of the Millennium Development Goals,” says Yoshikawa. “Yet beyond the critical issues of infant mortality and survival, children have a right to thrive and have a chance at contributing to sustainable development.”

The report, “The Future of Our Children: Lifelong, Multi-Generational Learning for Sustainable Development,” synthesizes the current global research on the benefits of early childhood development programs and policies. It notes that “benefit-cost evidence suggests that early childhood development interventions of sufficient quality could ensure that hundreds of millions of children reach their developmental potential and thereby contribute substantially to the world’s future workforce.”

It points to three types of early childhood interventions with demonstrated cost effectiveness: integrating a parent responsiveness and stimulation emphasis in health and nutrition programs for 0-3 year olds; quality pre-primary education; and direct poverty reduction through cash transfer, paid parental leave, and other policies for families with young children.

“Children’s health, learning, and behavior during the early years are the foundation for later school success and completion, close nurturing relationships with peers and adults, and the capacity to contribute to community, workplace, and society,” observes Yoshikawa, a professor in NYU Steinhardt’s Department of Applied Psychology. “Early childhood is thus a critical life stage for a country’s sustainable development -- it is a culmination of learning for one generation embodied in the beginning of a lifetime of learning for the next.”

For a copy of the report, click here.

About the Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development (@NYUSteinhardt)

Located in the heart of Greenwich Village, NYU’s Steinhardt School of Culture, Education, and Human Development prepares students for careers in the arts, education, health, media, and psychology. Since its founding in 1890, the Steinhardt School's mission has been to expand human capacity through public service, global collaboration, research, scholarship, and practice. To learn more about NYU Steinhardt, visit: http://steinhardt.nyu.edu.

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