Alliance warns against move to ‘tick-box’ approach to EYFS in consultation response

The Early Years Alliance has warned that proposed government reforms to the Early Years Foundation Stage (EYFS) could result in a ‘tick-box’ approach to early assessment in its response to the government consultation on the issue, which closes today.

The organisation has expressed concerns that the proposal to replace the existing Early Learning Goals (ELGs) into a “series of bullet point statements” will “inadvertently promote a ‘tick-box’ approach to EYFSP assessment” and risk “moving children’s learning and development, and the early years practice that supports it, from an art to a science”, a shift that the Alliance describes as a “retrograde step”. 

The Alliance’s response outlines a number of other concerns about the proposed reforms, including: 

  • A lack of focus on the learning and development of younger children – despite the fact that the EYFS covers children from 0-5 – due to an emphasis on preparing children for Year 1
  • Lack of reference to how best to support the learning and development of children speaking English as an additional language and children with additional needs and/or disabilities
  • The reduction of the number of Communication and language ELGs from three to two
  • The removal of space, shape and measure from the Mathematics ELG

Commenting, Neil Leitch, chief executive of the Early Years Alliance, said:

"We are deeply concerned by a number of the proposed reforms to the EYFS. 

“Instead of focusing on how best the early development of all young children can be supported, the changes indicate a clear shift towards a narrow, tick-box approach to both learning and assessment.

“Such a move risks encouraging both early years practitioners and reception teachers to ‘teach to the goals’ rather than developing and maintaining a broad, child-centred approach, underpinned by a commitment to learning through play – practice that we as a sector know is best for supporting early development.

“We urge the Department for Education to listen to the concerns of the sector, genuinely engage with the consultation responses and rethink its planned changes ahead of roll-out. If we are going to make changes to such a fundamental aspect of early years education, we need to make sure those changes are positive ones.”