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Where are the best places to look for childcare roles?
  • Seek is your best bet.

    For Government jobs
    https://www.careers.vic.gov.au/jobs/early-childhood?keyword=Early+Childhood

    Or

    https://jobs.earlychildhood.education.vic.gov.au/

    If it's a small place you can try applying directly, or if it's a group you can visit their site they often advertise vacancies directly as well. If they know a centre they want to work at, it can't hurt to ring in and ask, often lots of places are look unofficially before they start seriously looking.

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    Over 50 people detained as police raid two Moscow gay clubs overnight
  • My instance is blocked from them (and .ml), so I don't think they can see this post.

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    Rule for emailing me
  • I live in a city of millions and there's a handful of 24/7 supermarkets around. The few times I've ever needed them in emergencies, it was creepy quiet not angry karens.

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    The Productivity Commission wants all Australian kids to get 3 days a week of childcare – but it won’t be until 2036.
  • Scrap the subsidies entirely. They’re harmful and fucking over the industry.

    Stop subsiding private businesses who rate hike each year yet pass none of it into the resources, building, children, or educators.

    And finally pay educators better, you want high quality education? You’re not getting it when your educators rarely stay more than a year into the industry and lack all deep long term institutional knowledge.

    Not to mention we’re deeply understaffed as is, and you want to put more children in when we cannot meet the demand already existing, and no a free fucking tafe course is not getting educators into the industry.

    This is policy made by people who don’t step foot in the class and have zero idea of the industry.

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    The Ferals
  • Rattus, Modigliana, Derryn and Mixy?

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    Access to the playtest
  • Permanently Deleted

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    The Failed Migration of Academic Twitter
  • I tried that. No one ever really joined. I tried posting content, and no one ever engaged with it.

    Guess theres not many childcare educators on Lemmy as the reddit community is always super active.

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    Anyone willing to get me into beta?
  • It’s not pinned on mobile for me.

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    Advice on consequences for 4 yearold
  • Behaviourism (reward/punish to influence behaviour) was revolutionary 100 years ago, it’s pretty outdated by today’s educational paedagogy.

    You might get a few short term “wins”, but all you’re doing long term is teaching them to focus on the reward. They're not learning an intrinsic value to the actions, and as such will be less likely to follow through once you’re not in the picture to punish/reward (e.g. at school, as teenagers doing teenager things, etc)

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  • www.abc.net.au Pay rise will help address staffing crisis in early childhood sector, providers say

    The federal government has announced it will fund a 15 per cent wage increase for early childhood education workers, tied to a commitment from childcare centres to limit fee increases.

    We’d been fighting for 25%, so only 10% left to go. Glad to see UWU putting some pressure on.

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    The anglers tavern finally reopens on the 18th (this Thursday)!
  • I live 2 streets away and have never been. What’s so good about it?

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    Daily discussion. 24 July 2024 Wednesday
  • Bloody AusPost left my parcel up a fucking tree.

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    Literacy Teaching Toolkit Map - Birth to 5 Years
  • A mistake you only make once a day.

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    Trump Tower is coming to Saudi Arabia | CNN Business
  • The urinals are pumped directly to Trumps private suite.

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    BBC.com: Unable to back down, Israel and Hezbollah move closer to all-out war
  • Fuck Israel, they just want more targets to murder.

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    China says Dalai Lama must 'thoroughly correct' his political views
  • Tibetans told VICE World News that the meaning of this common expression used to tease and teach children is completely lost in cultural interpretation and its English translation. The correct phrase in Tibetan for this joke is “Che le sa”, which roughly translates to “Eat my tongue.” English is the Dalai Lama’s second language and Indian news outlets have previously reported that the leader speaks in broken English at public events.

    […]

    In a Youtube videoJigme Ugen, a second-generation Tibetan refugee living in the U.S., explains how this display of affection was born out of a game played between the Tibetan elderly and children. Kids who go up to their grandfather, for instance, are asked to kiss their grandfather’s forehead, touch their noses and kiss them.

    “Then [the grandfather] says that I’ve given you everything so the only thing left is for you to eat my tongue,” Ugen said. “The child probably never gets the candy or money but gets a beautiful lesson about life, love and family.”

    https://www.vice.com/en/article/jg5854/tibetans-explain-what-suck-my-tongue-means-dalai-lama-viral-video

    tl;dr: A harmless translation issue.

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  • What the absolute fuck? Has anyone else seen this ad play on SBS, how can they advertise for such a piece of shit to spread his brand of hate here.

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    I've started a community to help learn and practice Irish/Gaeilge. I'm learning myself and would love to meet others who are also trying, or even people who can already speak who'd love to teach or just talk.

    Links to Community: Gaeilge !gaeilge@quokk.au quokk.au/c/gaeilge

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    This is a useful primer to start thinking about how theories exist within the work we do.

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    • Developmental
    • Socio-cultural
    • Socio-behaviourist
    • Post-structural
    • Critical

    These are 5 ways to break down ECE theory. Here’s a brief overview on what they may look like when applied.

    Developmental theory focuses on how the child develops, physically and mentally. We focus largely on stages and broad milestones.

    Socio-Cultural theory looks at how society affects the growth of a child. What does their family and community impart on them as values.

    Socio-behaviourist theory is a focus on stimuli and interactions with environments. We might look at structured routines and positive or negative reinforcement.

    Post-Structuralist theory is about challenging our own understandings. What is really best, is eating with cutlery a goal to achieve when at home a child’s household may use their hands more for meals. How do our own cultural values impact a child’s.

    Critical theory seeks to challenge our power structures. Are we dictators of children’s development or do we value their input? Should social constructs be enforced or should we challenge them?

    What are your views on them? Do you value any over the other, do you incorporate all these things into your practices?

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    Or at least lots of free dinosaur related content going on.

    Did you know you can buy legit fossils of Spinosaurus teeth for like $9 online, could be a special memorable gift if any child really gets into them through these events.

    Edit: and free zoo entry https://www.zoo.org.au/dinos-at-the-zoo

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    Curious to hear people’s ideas on how education would look in such a world.

    For me, I’d like to see it moved away from testing and results based learning.

    A stronger focus on physical engagement with things, e.g. learning biology by going out and cataloging wildlife and learning what’s in a local ecosystem before coming together and researching findings and looking for new questions to ask.

    Less sitting around at desks being fed information and a greater focus on individual agency in exploring topics of interest.

    Not to say there isn’t a time and a place for “high level” stuff where you need to deep dive into books and listen to lectures, but there needs to be a greater balance in methodology.

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    Got any concerns or questions you'd like to discuss? Share them here and I (we? please join me I'm so lonely) will do our best to answer them.

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    As the title says it's a community based around early years learning and development, so from birth up to pre-school.

    Mainly aimed at educators, teachers, and anyone else who works with these age ranges but more than happy to field questions from parents who may be wanting more information to help them.

    It's a bit of a niche community, so I'm going to struggle to grow it but Lemmy needs more industry professional spaces!

    Edit: It's a .au domain, but the community is for everyone no matter where you live.

    Links to Community: Early Childhood Education !earlychildhood@quokk.au quokk.au/c/earlychildhood

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    aussiechildcarenetwork.com.au Child Theorists and Their Theories in Practice - Aussie Childcare Network

    As Educators working with children, it's important to understand each theoretical approach and use parts of different theorists in context. Each theor...

    Do you use theory in any of your documentation or planning?

    I personally find myself using Parten's model a lot, although I find a lot of the stages can occur differently depending more on a child's personality than their age. But it is useful for thinking about what sort of play the children may be engaging in.

    I'm very much against the fully committing to one method, such as you see in Montessori or Steiner schools. Children need a much more holistic approach, using elements from everywhere.

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    I'm born here and a citizen, however I don't have a passport, nor a copy of a birth certificate yet I need to prove I have a right to work here for a job.

    From my look on the gov site, I can use a passport to get my birth certificate or a birth certificate to get a passport. Neither of which is any bloody help.

    Does anyone know what to do?

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    • It's weird
    • It's political
    • It's recent
    • It's Australian, but the title will confuse people
    • It's the vibe

    I think it'll resonate well with the Lemmy audience, see these instant upvote lyrics:

    >When the Orange man Came into power The Minutes Soon Felt like hours Then the Old man Won the election But the world Didn’t change direction

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    www.megaphone.org.au HungryPanda stop punishing your workers!

    HungryPanda is punishing Zhuoying for speaking up about delivery rider conditions. Now she is unable to afford rent and is relying on food from her housemates. The company thought punishing Zhuoying would silence her - they were wrong. Zhuoying is determined to continue the fight for herself and...

    More information can be found here:

    https://www.theguardian.com/business/2024/jan/30/hungry-panda-delivery-rider-launches-legal-action-against-company-claiming-loss-of-work-after-protesting-pay

    https://www.sbs.com.au/language/japanese/en/podcast-episode/food-delivery-riders-take-legal-action/2o6ujzupw

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    Feels like I’m seeing more than I have in the past decade this summer, even saw some crickets when I haven’t seen them since I was a kid.

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    I’m trying to download, archive, and upscale as much older Australian TV content as I can, and would love to see what other people watched or enjoyed so I can try to preserve it as well.

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