Teaching goals are slightly different from the usual ‘drink more water/walk more’ type of goals. Nowadays, there is a lot of advice about goal setting for early childhood professionals. Professional development goals for early childhood educators are deep, mindful, and have the potential to impact others around you as well as yourself.

So, what would you choose as a professional goal? And more to the point, what is the point?
Firstly, I want to clarify that the important goal I’m talking about is not your appraisal goal. You can certainly use the ideas generated by your appraisal to develop your goal. BUT, the goal I’m talking about here is one you set for yourself, by yourself. These are goals set without the influence of someone else who wants you to work on particular teaching skills for your professional development. In other words, you alone decide it. It is your choice, it’s your idea, and it’s about your professional development goals as a teacher.
Appraisal goals, in contrast, are usually joint goals. They are set together with someone else, usually with the input of other educators – your centre team leader or your mentor. This presents a potential power imbalance, where it is a challenge to say no to their idea for your goal. At times the goals set at appraisal can link to a deficit in your teaching that the team leader has identified, and might, in all honesty, be something that is of no interest to you.
And secondly, what’s the point? Well, personal growth is a… well, personal thing. As educators, we belong to a profession that believes in the idea of lifelong learners. Self-reflection and professional goals help us achieve that. Not all learning needs to be a training course or a paper at an education provider. It can be you working on yourself.

A professional goal is about YOUR development, what you want to do, what skills you want to improve. Some examples of goals for early childhood educators are:

So, here are a few tips on how teachers can set professional goals in early childhood education:
To wrap it all up, when thinking about professional goals in early childhood education, remember there will be setbacks. You won’t always be successful. But be kind to yourself, know when to take a break, stop procrastinating and get on with your professional development goals! The challenge is maintaining an interest!

Kath Cooper works for Te Rito Maioha Early Childhood New Zealand. She is passionate about all things early childhood and issues of sustainability. Her recent research was on the visibility of gay early childhood teachers. She lives with her wife in Wellington and has four lovely children and three amazing grandchildren.
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