They’re the people many parents rely on the most, particularly in the early years of their child’s life. The people who devote their time to looking after children so their mums and dads can return to work or have some time out for themselves in their busy lives.
They’re the people that children rely on to teach them, raise them, play with them, comfort them, feed them, help them to get to sleep during nap time and show them how to make friends, how to respect others and how to develop skills that will see them through their lifetime.
But that’s certainly not all. We know the list could go on and on because that’s the true value of early learning educators. Yet despite playing such a vital role in our families and communities respectively, early learning educators – 97 percent of whom are women – are among the lowest paid professionals in Australia, earning as little as $21 an hour.
Top Comments
Our day care educators are highly intelligent, most patient and gentle people I ever met. What they have contributed to my daughter's development is priceless. She goes 5 days a week. Parents did bring this up with the management (ignored). One of the educators in particular is outstanding. She treats my daughter like her own. The amount of developmental activities kids do; the amount of hard (genuine!) work put in. I am so disgusted people that shape my daughter's future are so undervalued. Considering early development is most crucial in my child's life and ridiculously high day care costs in Australia - where the f* are $20K per week centre income are going? If there is a pay increase by $150 per week (net) per worker (x10), they don't lose much money at all. Greed, greed and greed.
$21 per hour is disgusting pay rate for these people. Shameful!