Sep 07, 2024  
Catalog 2024-2025 
    
Catalog 2024-2025

Early Childhood Education | Early Childhood Education, Certificate

Location(s): Salem Campus


ece.chemeketa.edu

Early Childhood Education is a comprehensive program of both theory and practical experiences designed to prepare individuals to work with young children. Graduates may qualify to be childcare teachers, assistants, and aids in preschools, day care centers, kindergartens, Head Start programs, and therapeutic relief nurseries. Many of the courses may be helpful to parents of young children and to persons working with families. Students may select individual courses to meet their needs, or work toward a certificate of completion.

Students in the program must earn grades of “C” or better in all Early Childhood Education (ECE) and Human Development and Family Studies (HDF) courses. In order to enroll in certain courses, students will be required to enroll in the Oregon Child Care Registry, which includes a background check. A valid first aid card is required for graduation in both the one-year and two-year programs. The on-site laboratory school provides students with hands-on experiences working with children. This is where students apply theory from their course work into a classroom setting. Students work side by side with teaching staff and instructors in the lab and receive ongoing coaching about their work. While in the lab, students learn how to develop curriculum, design classroom environments, and assess the development of children. Throughout the program students set goals and reflect on their practice as they work towards developing into professional teachers.

Program Outcomes

Students completing this certificate should be able to satisfy the following outcomes:

  1. Use a strong understanding of young children’s (birth to age 6) developmental characteristics, influences on development, and individual needs to create healthy, respectful, responsive, supportive, and challenging learning environments to promote development in all domains 
  2. Understand appropriate uses of assessment, know about and use observation, documentation, and other assessment tools and approaches to promote positive outcomes for each child
  3. Understand positive relationships and supportive interactions as the foundation of their work with children, know and understand effective strategies and tools for early education, and use a broad repertoire of developmentally appropriate teaching/learning practices 
  4. Understand content knowledge and resources in academic disciplines, their own knowledge, appropriate early learning standards, and other resources  and use them to design, implement, and evaluate meaningful, challenging curricula for each child
  5. Practice appropriate communication skills-both written and verbal-with supervisors, colleagues, and parents

You may earn a certificate of completion by successfully completing the required 45 credit hours with a grade of “C” or better in all ECE and HDF courses.

Are you looking to print a Degree Planner for this program? Click on located at the upper right corner of this page.