
YOU HAVE DESCRIBED THE FRAMEWORK AS ‘PIONEERING’. WHY WAS IT SO GROUND-BREAKING?
Birth to Three Matters (B-3M) was the first national framework that supported children in their earliest years.
It was commissioned by the UK Government, and developed by a research team at Manchester Metropolitan University, led by Professor Lesley Abbott. My role was researching and writing the strand called A Strong Child. It was published in 2003, and then incorporated into the statutory Early Years Foundation Stage in 2008. It offered a rounded, positive and detailed picture of very young children as active learners who develop through interaction with the world, and with adults and other children.
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