In recent years early childhood education has become a focus for ambitious reforms in China. The
emphasis on early experiences in this study was designed to address issues of unequal life chances,
that is, the opportunities that individuals have to improve their lives across the life span. Children in
rural China are more likely to be educationally disadvantaged and lack of birth registration
compounds this problem. This paper examines data from rural China that was designed to collect
household information including details of birth registration. The survey data indicated that a
significant number of children in the study had no birth registration. Here we contrast the families
with a registered child and the families with an unregistered child in relation to their knowledge of
childrearing and how their knowledge and beliefs were put into practice. Findings indicate that there
were identifiable differences in the two groups and these may be significant for policy makers and
local governments when designing interventions to assist in alleviating poverty.
History
Journal
Asia-Pacific Journal of Research in Early Childhood Education
Volume
10
Issue
3
Start page
71
End page
96
Total pages
26
Publisher
The Pacific Early Childhood education Research Association