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Child Safety in Early Childhood Teacher Education: Gaps in Australia's Accelerated Graduate Diploma Programs
Journal article   Open access   Peer reviewed

Child Safety in Early Childhood Teacher Education: Gaps in Australia's Accelerated Graduate Diploma Programs

Lauren Brocki
Australasian journal of early childhood, Vol.50(4), pp.364-374
12/2025
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Child Safety in Early Childhood Teacher EducationView
Published (Version of record) Open CC BY V4.0

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Abstract

safeguarding ECEC (early childhood education and care) policy teacher preparation systemic risk child protection child safety
Ensuring child safety is paramount in early childhood education yet concerns persist regarding the preparedness of educators from accelerated Graduate Diploma programs in Australia. This study critically examines eleven such programs through qualitative content analysis to assess how child safety is integrated into the curricula. Findings revealed significant inconsistencies, an often-implicit treatment of safeguarding, over-reliance of professional placements for practicum, and limited leadership, trauma-informed practice, and mandatory reporting. These gaps raise serious questions about whether graduates are adequately equipped to fulfil their legal and ethical responsibilities. This paper advocates for urgent reforms in pre-service teacher education, arguing that child safety must be embedded as a core professional competency. Recommendations include mandating explicit curriculum content, implementing dedicated leadership training, and strengthening regulatory oversight. Addressing these systemic inconsistencies is essential to ensure that all early childhood educators are fully prepared to provide safe, ethical, and high-quality education across diverse early learning settings.

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