Roma Early Childhood Inclusion
Roma Early Childhood Inclusion
Roma Early Childhood Inclusion
EDUCATION
FUND
Roma
Early
Childhood
Inclusion
Overview Report
Roma Early Childhood Inclusion
The RECI Overview Report
For further information, please contact:
Sarah Klaus, Open Society Foundations: [email protected]
Mihai Surdu, REF: [email protected]
Deepa Grover, UNICEF: [email protected]
UNICEF photos/SWZ/2011/John McConnico
Design and layout/Judit Kovacs/Createch Ltd.
Printed in Hungary/2012
This publication has been produced with the assistance of the European Union. The contents of this publication are the sole
responsibility of the authors and can in no way be taken to reflect the views of the European Union.
Author
John Bennett
The country designations employed and the presentation of material throughout this publication do not imply the expression
of any opinion whatsoever on the part of the sponsoring agencies concerning the legal status of any country, territory, city or
area or of its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries.
As per the United Nations Security Council Resolution 817, the UN adopted the provisional reference name the former
Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia. Most international organizations, including the EU have adopted the same convention.
In line with the UN resolution, UNICEF refers to the country as the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia. The Open
Society Foundations refer to it by its constitutional name, Republic of Macedonia. Given that this publication is supported
by EU, it was resolved by the three sponsoring agencies REF, Open Society Foundations and UNICEF to use the name
the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia.
Contents
List of Boxes, Figures and Tables ....................................................................................................... 5
The Sponsoring Agencies .................................................................................................................. 7
Acknowledgements ........................................................................................................................... 8
A Note on Terminology ....................................................................................................................... 8
Preface ............................................................................................................................................... 9
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY .................................................................................................................... 11
Chapter 1. Introduction, Methodology and Sources .......................................................................... 11
Chapter 2. Issues Identified in the RECI National Reports ............................................................... 11
Chapter 3. Conclusions and Principles of Action ...............................................................................13
CHAPTER 1. Introduction, Methodology and Sources ...................................................................... 17
Key Messages of Chapter 1 .............................................................................................................. 17
1. Overview of the RECI Project and Methodology ........................................................................... 17
2. The Roma People ..........................................................................................................................19
CHAPTER 2. Issues Identified in the RECI National Reports .......................................................... 23
Key Messages of Chapter 2 ............................................................................................................. 23
1. Progress In Policy Formulation Is Being Made But a Large Gap Exists
Between Aspirations and Implementation ................................................................................ 23
2. Extreme Poverty, Intolerable Living Conditions, Low Educational Levels and Lack of
Employment Undermine Roma Family Life and the Health of Young Children ......................... 26
3. The Social Exclusion of Roma is Greatly Reinforced by Majority Discrimination
and Prejudice ............................................................................................................................. 28
4. The Early Development of Roma Children, During Infancy and the Pre-Kindergarten
Period, Is Not Sufficiently Supported ........................................................................................ 34
5. National Kindergarten and Primary Education Systems Are Failing to Recruit,
Include and Educate Roma Children ......................................................................................... 38
6. The Lack of Disaggregated Data on Roma Children and Their Progress Prevents
Evidence-Based Planning .......................................................................................................... 43
CHAPTER 3. Conclusions and Principles of Action .......................................................................... 47
Key Messages of Chapter 3 ............................................................................................................. 47
1. Roma Children Are Valuable: Europe Cannot Afford to Neglect Their Future ............................ 47
2. In Addition to Legislation, Governments Need to Invest in Communication
and Education to Renew Majority Notions of Citizenship and Democracy ............................... 53
3. The Major Responsibility for Early Childhood Policies Remains with National
and Local Governments. Their Efforts Will Be More Effective if Linked Closely with EU
Roma Initiatives ......................................................................................................................... 57
4. In Contexts of Extreme Poverty and Exclusion, Developmental Readiness for
School Requires a Multi-Dimensional Concept of Early Childhood Programming
That Places a Strong Emphasis on Early Intervention and Womens Education........................ 61
5. In the Early Childhood Sector, Effective Governance and Consolidated Policies
Are Critical ................................................................................................................................. 65
6. Effective Kindergartens and Schools for Excluded Children Need Clear Goals,
High Quality, Expanded Services, and Outreach to Parents and Communities ........................ 69
7. Evidence-Based Policy in Favour of Roma Children Is Urgently Needed ...................................73
4
r o m a e a r l y c h i l d h o o d i n c l u s i o n t h e R E C I o v e r v i e w r e p o r t
References ...................................................................................................................................... 77
Annex 1. Summary of the RECI National Reports ............................................................................ 83
The Czech Republic ................................................................................................................... 83
1. Country Information .......................................................................................................... 83
2. The Status of Roma in the Czech Republic ....................................................................... 83
3. The Status of Young Children in General ........................................................................... 84
4. The Status of Roma Children and Their Families ............................................................... 85
5. Issues and Challenges ...................................................................................................... 86
6. Recommendations for Consideration by Czech Policymakers .......................................... 86
The former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia ............................................................................ 87
1. Country Information .......................................................................................................... 87
2. The Status of Roma in the Former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia ................................ 87
3. The Status of Young Children in General ........................................................................... 89
4. The Status of Roma Children and Their Families ............................................................... 89
5. Issues and Challenges ...................................................................................................... 90
6. Recommendations for Consideration by Macedonian Policymakers ................................ 90
Romania .................................................................................................................................... 91
1. Country Information .......................................................................................................... 91
2. The Status of Roma in Romania ........................................................................................ 91
3. The Status of Young Children in General ........................................................................... 93
4. The Status of Roma Children and Their Families ............................................................... 93
5. Issues and Challenges ...................................................................................................... 95
6. Recommendations ........................................................................................................... 95
Serbia ........................................................................................................................................ 98
1. Country Information .......................................................................................................... 98
2. The Status of Roma in Serbia ............................................................................................ 98
3. The Status of Young Children in General ........................................................................... 99
4. The Status of Young Romany Children and Their Families ................................................. 99
5. Issues and Challenges .....................................................................................................100
6. Recommendations for the Consideration of Serbian Policymakers ................................. 101
Annex 2. Notes on the National Report Authors ............................................................................. 103
5
List of Boxes, Figures and Tables
Box 1: World Bank Policy Note on the Economic Costs of Roma Exclusion (2010) ......................... 20
Box 2: European Union Minorities and Discrimination Survey (EU-MIDIS, 2009) ............................ 28
Box 3: A disturbing backdrop to Roma talks (European Voice, 7 April, 2011) .................................... 30
Box 4: Special testing of Roma children at Dumbraveni, Sibiu, Romania ......................................... 33
Box 5: What do we know about early childhood development? ...................................................... 35
Box 6: Initiatives in Serbia to improve education for young children ................................................ 39
Box 7: Attitudes to education are linked to education levels ............................................................ 43
Box 8: Czech draft policy proposal for more effective inclusion of Roma children ........................... 45
Box 9: The costs of not taking action on behalf of Roma children ................................................... 49
Box 10: Why Roma parents in Romania do not enrol children in early education services .............. 50
Box 11: Toward equitable enrolments .............................................................................................. 52
Box 12: A Good Start (AGS) Pilot Initiative ....................................................................................... 60
Box 13: How will the European Commission check on progress? ................................................... 61
Box 14: Gender equality in the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia ........................................ 64
Box 15: Elements of a well-governed early childhood system ......................................................... 66
Box 16: The provision of education expenses and food coupons improves attendance .................. 71
Box 17: A Romanian initiative to enhance bilingual education ......................................................... 73
Figure 1: Percentage of children remaining in poverty before and after government transfers ....... 48
Figure 2: A holistic model of early intervention................................................................................ 63
Table 1: An early childhood development agenda for Roma children ............................................... 15
Table 2: Comparative life expectancy rates among national populations and Roma ........................ 24
Table 3: An overview of Roma poverty and unemployment in the four countries ........................... 27
Table 4: Percentage of total children in special class-rooms, centres or segregated
schools who are Roma ......................................................................................................... 32
Table 5: Early childhood indicators from Serbia, 2005 ...................................................................... 35
Table 6: Female age of marriage in the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia and Serbia .......... 36
Table 7: Public spending on social systems ..................................................................................... 37
Table 8: Comparative data on ECEC and primary school enrolments for Roma and
majority children ........................................................................................................................ 40
Table 9: Size of the Roma population in selected countries: official figures and
alternative estimates ................................................................................................................. 44
Table 10: An early childhood development agenda for Roma children
(adapted from UNICEF, 2008) .................................................................................................... 69
Table 11. Roma in comparison to Macedonians and Albanians in the former Yugoslav
Republic of Macedonia .............................................................................................................. 89
Table 12. Enrolment of Roma children in segregated preschools and schools as
a percentage of all Romanian children enrolled (estimation) ..................................................... 95
7
The Sponsoring Agencies
The Open Society Foundations work to build vibrant and tolerant democracies whose
governments are accountable to their citizens. To achieve this mission, the Foundations
seek to shape public policies that assure greater fairness in political, legal, and economic
systems and safeguard fundamental rights. On a local level, the Open Society Foundations
implement a range of initiatives to advance justice, education, public health, and independent
media. The Foundations place a high priority on protecting and improving the lives of
people in marginalized communities. The Open Society Foundations are key drivers of the
Roma Decade. The Open Society Foundations have considerable experiences in working in
partnership with and strengthening Roma civil society organisations, but also in collecting
and analysing data and the evaluation of projects and programmes. The Early Childhood
Program (ECP) promotes healthy development and wellbeing of young children, through
initiatives that emphasize parent and community engagement, professional development and
government accountability. The ECPs rights-based approach and social justice framework
give particular attention to minorities; children with developmental delays, malnutrition
and disabilities; and children living in poverty. In Central Eastern Europe/Eurasia, large ECP
initiatives focus on addressing the situation of Roma children, children with disabilities and
children who do not have access to services. The ECP continues to support and collaborate
with the national and regional early childhood NGOs, established through its flagship Step by
Step program, including the International Step by Step Association (ISSA).
The Roma Education Fund (REF) was created in the framework of the Decade of
Roma Inclusion in 2005. Its mission and ultimate goal is to close the gap in educational
outcomes between Roma and non-Roma. In order to achieve this goal, the organization
supports policies and programmes which ensure quality education for Roma, including
the desegregation of education systems. Through its activities, the REF promotes Roma
inclusion in all aspects of the national education systems of countries participating in the
Decade of Roma Inclusion, as well as other countries that wish to join in this effort. The
objectives of REF include ensuring access to compulsory education, improving the quality
of education, implementing integration and desegregation of Roma students, expanding
access to pre-school education, and increasing access to secondary, post-secondary and
adult education, for example through scholarships, adult literacy courses and career advice
for secondary school students. REF is currently engaged in an early childhood initiative
funded by the European Union. The project supports more than 4,000 children from ages
zero to six to access early childhood education and care services in 16 locations across four
countries (Hungary, the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Romania and Slovakia).
UNICEF has been working in the CEECIS region since the 1990s with the objective of
protecting and promoting the rights of children, especially those from the most vulnerable and
marginalized groups. UNICEF is a member of the Steering Committee of the Roma Decade.
UNICEF is engaged in developing a systematic and coherent engagement with Roma issues
through the key entry points of early childhood development and basic education. UNICEF
is mandated by the United Nations General Assembly to advocate for the protection of
childrens rights, to help meet their basic needs and to expand their opportunities to reach
their full potential. UNICEF is guided by the Convention on the Rights of the Child and strives
to establish childrens rights as enduring ethical principles and international standards of
behaviour towards children. UNICEF insists that the survival, protection and development of
children are universal development imperatives that are integral to human progress. UNICEF
mobilizes political will and material resources to help countries, particularly developing
countries, ensure a first call for children and to build their capacity to form appropriate
policies and deliver services for children and their families. UNICEF is committed to ensuring
special protection for the most disadvantaged children victims of war, disasters, extreme
poverty, all forms of violence and exploitation and those with disabilities.
8
r o m a e a r l y c h i l d h o o d i n c l u s i o n t h e R E C I o v e r v i e w r e p o r t
Acknowledgements
The Open Society Foundations, REF and UNICEF would like to acknowledge with
appreciation and gratitude the leadership provided by Dr. John Bennett in conducting the
Roma Early Childhood Inclusion research. He was responsible for developing the research
methodology, training national researchers, supporting the drafting of the national RECI
reports in the Czech Republic, Romania, Serbia, and the former Yugoslav Republic of
Macedonia, supporting and participating in national consultations, and contributing
significantly to the final versions of the reports. Dr. Bennett also prepared the RECI
Overview Report, which is as an interpretative summary of the four national reports.
The sponsoring agencies acknowledge with thanks the hard work of the national
researchers and writers of the reports who are Martin Kaleja and Milada Rabuicov for
the Czech Report; Nadica Janeva, Enisa Eminovska and Violeta Petroska-Beshka for the
Macedonian Report; Margareta Matache and Mihaela Ionescu for the Romanian Report;
and Zorica Trikic, Sunc ica Macura-Milovanovic , and Marija Aleksandrovic for the Serbian
Report. Eben Friedman did a meticulous job of editing and finalising the Macedonian
Report.
A Note on Terminology
The text seeks to comply with the European Union and the Council of Europes adopted
usage of the term Roma. The term includes as in recent official EU, Council of Europe
and Organisation for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE) documents Roma,
Traveller, Sinti and other groups commonly (though inaccurately) described as Gypsies.
1
Readers should note that the usage of the term is not intended to deny the diversity that
exists across both Roma and Traveller groups. A significant and growing Roma middle
class exists, which participates fully as citizens in the countries and societies in which
they live, without sacrificing their ethnic and cultural identity.
For readability purposes, the adjective Roma will generally be used, in particular when
referring to the Roma people as a whole or to groups or individuals, e.g. Roma children,
Roma families. The adjective Romani will generally refer to languages and culture.
1 Gypsies is a term that is highly contested and can only be used with the greatest caution, as many groups
described as such in the press and media would refute the term. Among the groups that accept the term, albeit
capitalised, are English Gypsies or Romany people in the UK; see Hancock (2002), We Are The Romani People/
Ames sam e Rromane Dzene, Interface Collection, Hateld: University of Hertfordshire Press, xvixxii.
9
Preface
Every European nation has ratified the UN Convention on the Rights of the Child
and therefore has an obligation to protect and promote, with equity and without
discrimination, the rights of all children. Yet, across Europe, the majority of poor Roma
children face a challenging present and a difficult future. Their possibilities to succeed in
life are severely constrained by prevailing negative attitudes towards their families and
communities. From the very start of life, Roma children have reduced opportunities to
develop to their full potential.
The Open Society Foundations Early Childhood Program, the Roma Education Fund and
UNICEF are committed to tackling the pervasive violation of rights experienced by Roma
children in the region. We believe that early childhood development is one of the most
important keys to breaking the cycle of poverty and exclusion, a cycle that has proven so
difficult to counter with sporadic and short-term measures.
Some of the most persuasive arguments about the critical importance of early childhood are
those proposed by Nobel laureate economist James Heckman, who notes that investing
in disadvantaged young children is a rare public policy that not only promotes productivity
but also fairness and social justice. Investments in high quality services for young children
and their families, particularly those who are poor and disadvantaged, lead not only to the
protection of childrens rights, but also to later savings in public expenditure. These savings
are achieved because early interventions help families to improve their childrens health
and well-being and to make the most of subsequent educational opportunities. Children
are therefore more likely to succeed in later life, and are less likely to require social welfare
and other benefits. And yet, in spite of a growing body of evidence that establishes early
childhood as the most significant period for human capital formation, most governments
invest inversely, prioritising programmes that target older children and adults.
The Open Society Foundations, REF and UNICEF have collaborated to develop the series
of Roma Early Childhood Inclusion (RECI) Reports. The research partnership was initiated
in response to the commitment of each organisation to the rights of Roma children.
All three organisations are committed to enabling young Roma children to access and
benefit from appropriate, inclusive and effective early childhood development services.
The RECI Reports build a detailed picture of early childhood policy and provision
frameworks, highlighting the barriers and opportunities for improving the access of Roma
children to appropriate and high-quality early childhood services. The principal objective
of the Reports was to make information and data on young Roma childrens exclusion
available to decision makers and key stakeholders with a view to advocate for equitable
early childhood policies and programmes. This exercise was a first attempt in the Central
and Eastern European region to capture and present systematically the situation of young
Roma children. Four such Reports have been prepared, one for each country: the Czech
Republic, the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Serbia and Romania. Through
examining available data, each RECI Report identifies priority early childhood policy issues
and concerns in respect of Roma families and children. The views of Roma communities
and families, and Roma women and men, gathered through focus group discussions
and interviews, have been incorporated in the country reports. Technical experts,
representatives of ministries of health, education, and social welfare, academics as well
as members of civil society organisations, had the opportunity to read draft versions
of the reports and to contribute from their respective points of view to the articulation
of policy reforms and practical steps required to improve the situation of young and
disadvantaged Roma children.
10
r o m a e a r l y c h i l d h o o d i n c l u s i o n t h e R E C I o v e r v i e w r e p o r t
This RECI Overview Report is based on the country reports and compares and
contrasts respective policy contexts and service delivery models. It proposes a series of
recommendations for more comprehensive and inclusive early childhood services and
provides a clear agenda for action by governments. The findings and recommendations
of the Overview Report are particularly relevant at this point in time as the recent Europe
2020 strategy requires member states and those seeking accession to the European
Union, to develop national strategies for Roma inclusion. Moreover, two years of pre-
school education for all Roma children has been one of the targets of the Roma Decade,
since its inception. It is the belief of the collaborating agencies that the time is right for
governments to act. Comprehensive early childhood services for all children, starting with
the prenatal period and extending through the early years of primary education, must be
expanded, with an explicit focus on the most disadvantaged and marginalised groups
such as the Roma, so that the reality of Roma inclusion is realised for this generation of
young Roma children and beyond.
The country reports were prepared by local researchers. Dr. John Bennett, an eminent
international expert on early childhood development, designed the research framework,
guided the local researchers and authored the RECI Overview Report. For more
information on the RECI Reports, copies of the reports and for additional resources on
early childhood and Roma inclusion please visit the Roma Children website:
www.romachildren.com.
Open Society Foundations
Early Childhood Program
London
Roma Education Fund
Budapest
UNICEF
Regional Office CEECIS
Geneva
2011
11
EXECUTIVE SUMMARY
Chapter 1 Introduction, Methodology and Sources
The Roma Early Childhood Inclusion (RECI) Project is sponsored by three leading European
organizations the Open Society Foundations, the Roma Education Fund and UNICEF. Its
purpose is to gather data and information about the inclusion of young Roma children in the
early childhood services of four Central and Eastern European (CEE) countries: the Czech
Republic, the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Romania and Serbia. For each country,
national researchers and specialists have researched and written a RECI National Report,
based on a common format. The findings of each report were discussed and cross-checked
in each country during a national consultation organised by the sponsoring organisations.
However, although these Reports provide valuable new information and insights into the
condition of Roma people, the national authors in each country faced a serious difficulty.
Data on young Roma children were often scant and unreliable as many governments fail to
collect disaggregated data on young children and their participation in services.
The final section of Chapter 1 presents a brief introduction to the Roma people and
their present situation in Europe. The Roma population (along with those assimilated
to the group) is recognised as the biggest ethnic minority in the European Union, with
between 10 and 15 million people (12 million is the most cited figure). They are, for the
great majority, EU citizens and live in all 27 member states. It is estimated that as many
as 50 per cent of this population is composed of children below the age of 15 years.
2
The
chapter provides a brief overview of the origins and languages of the Romani peoples;
their demographic patterns and a brief note on their discrimination.
Chapter 2 Issues Identied in the RECI National Reports
The following are some of the key issues identified in the National Reports:
Progress in policies is being made but a large gap exists between aspirations and
implementation. Among the reasons advanced for the slow progress are the following:
3
Though national legislation in each of the four countries has developed remarkably,
it rarely requires public authorities to take specific actions or to achieve measurable
results.
2 Breaking the Cycle of Exclusion: Roma children in South East Europe, UNICEF Serbia; February 2007.
e x e c u t i v e s u m m a r y
12
r o m a e a r l y c h i l d h o o d i n c l u s i o n t h e R E C I o v e r v i e w r e p o r t
3
In policies targeting Roma, a lack of indicators, institutional audits and evaluations
severely hamper knowledge of which policies work.
Extreme poverty, intolerable living conditions, low educational levels and lack of
employment undermine Roma family life and the health of infants and young children.
The great majority of Roma families suffer from severe poverty, which research
identifies as one of the greatest barriers to the holistic development of young children
(Marmot Review, 2010). The impact of poverty is reinforced by family stress (due to
lack of employment and income), malnutrition (sometimes severe), and intolerable
living conditions, for example, severe overcrowding, lack of running water and other
community infrastructure.
The social exclusion of the Roma is greatly reinforced by the discrimination and
prejudice of the majority population. The National Reports and various European surveys
(notably the Gallup Poll organised by EU Fundamental Rights Agency in 2009 and the
EU Minorities and Discrimination Survey (EU-MIDIS, 2009) testify to the widespread
prejudice against Roma groups in the four countries. Prejudice ranges from negative
stereotyping to political extremism, with threatening marches on neighbourhoods, used
to injure, intimidate or evict Roma residents.
The early development of Roma children, during infancy and the pre-kindergarten
period, is not sufficiently supported. The early development of Roma children is often
neglected, partly for two reasons: firstly, because of a general under-estimation of
the importance of the period 03 years, with Central and South East Europe (CSEE)
governments spending little on specific developmental programmes for children in
the age group. Secondly, national spending on the public services that critically affect
young children, that is: public health, social protection, and family policies, is in most
instances, well below the EU average.
National kindergarten and primary education systems are failing to recruit, include,
retain and educate Roma children. The basic findings of the National Reports can be
summarised as follows:
3
A high percentage of Roma children never enrol in the education system.
3
The participation rate of Roma children in preschool education is extremely low.
3
The drop-out rates of Roma children, especially in lower secondary education are
extremely high. Drop-out rates are even higher in segregated educational settings.
3
Roma adolescents, in particular girls, have a very low transition rate into upper
secondary education.
3
The total years spent by Roma children in the education system is, in general, about
half the national average.
The lack of disaggregated data on Roma children and their progress prevents evidence-
based planning or are used as an excuse for planning and budgeting overall inclusive
policies. The lack of accurate figures about Roma families and children prevents realistic
planning, monitoring and evaluation and can be sometimes used as an excuse for not
providing sufficient funds for inclusive policies. Ministries and organisations working for
social inclusion do not know the exact number of Roma children, what measures are
successful, or whether they were implemented effectively. Without data and research,
policy units remain in the realm of opinion: no data, no problem, no progress.
3
3 See the Open Society study by McDonald. C. & Negrin, K. (2010), No Data: No Progress, Budapest, OSI.
13
Chapter 3 Conclusions and Principles of Action
1. Roma children are valuable: Europe and its member states cannot afford to neglect their future
Because of the demographic profile of the Roma population and given the ageing of
Europe and its chronic lack of labour, Roma children are an extremely valuable asset to
be educated and brought into the skilled workforce. Action needs to be taken urgently:
to invest more in the developmental readiness of Roma children for both kindergarten
and school and to eliminate the many barriers experienced by Roma families to access
public services.
2. In addition to legislation, governments need to invest in communication and education
to renew majority notions of citizenship and democracy
An urgent task is to change negative majority attitudes toward the Roma and
particularly within the scope of the RECI project negative attitudes toward Roma
children among majority children and their parents. Already, much is being done at EU
levels for example, through the PROGRESS programme, including the For Diversity:
Against Discrimination information campaign.
4
These activities need to be supported
at national level by similar information programmes and through establishing anti-
discrimination bodies and/or procedures that can be invoked whenever rights and
obligations are disregarded.
Discrimination against young Roma children takes the form of: the non-provision of
services; enrolment procedures that favour dual-income parents; a hostile or neglectful
kindergarten climate; lack of outreach to parents; the practice of streaming or ability-
grouping, or even the segregation of Roma children into special schools and classes.
The text reviews these practices and proposes some solutions, including a focus by
governments on the purposes of education.
5
3. The major responsibility for early childhood policies remains with national government. Their
efforts will be more effective if linked closely with the Roma initiatives of the European Union
Member States are primarily responsible for Roma integration, including access to the
key areas of employment, health care, housing and education which hold back Roma
inclusion. The successful inclusion of Roma children in kindergartens and schools will
not happen unless countries take on their responsibilities, begin to set measurable goals
in health care, housing and employment and coordinate the policies and activities of
different ministries.
Roma early childhood programming should be part of national social inclusion and
education policies. The mainstreaming of Roma inclusion issues into national policy
areas rather than treating them as a separate issue (which may isolate Roma children
even more) is in line with Principles No. 2 and No. 4 of the Common Basic Principles on
4 See http://ec.europa.eu/justice/fdad/cms/stopdiscrimination/about.html?langid=en for details of
the campaign.
5 In addition to seeing education as fitting the needs of the economy, the UNESCO Delors Report (1996)
proposes broader goals that are particularly relevant to young children: Learning to be; learning to do;
learning to learn; and learning to live together. Learning is fundamentally a social activity and its goals
should include in addition to its utility for individuals the protection and practice of democracy. Inclusive
education helps to foster a cohesive social culture among both parents and young children. Connollys (2009)
research in Northern Ireland finds that in polarised situations, children even by the age of 3 years have
already begun to absorb from their parents ugly discriminatory attitudes, which must be countered in the
early childhood centre.
e x e c u t i v e s u m m a r y
14
r o m a e a r l y c h i l d h o o d i n c l u s i o n t h e R E C I o v e r v i e w r e p o r t
Roma inclusion.
6
These principles promote explicit but not exclusive targeting as well as
aiming for the mainstream.
In certain circumstances, for example in the case of very young children, services
need to be brought to where people are, with the support of the local community.
7
In
a situation characterised by lack of services, community-based programming for very
young children becomes necessary. In addition, community programming supports the
role of the family in the upbringing of children and assists minority groups to preserve
their language and culture.
The EU framework offers Member States and pre-accession countries powerful policy
and financial tools to develop and implement effectively Roma inclusion policies. Among
the key initiatives in which the EU is actively involved is the 20052015 Decade of Roma
Inclusion
8
and the Integrated Platform for Roma inclusion.
9
In addition, through its Social
Protection and Social Inclusion Process, the EU coordinates and supports Member
States actions to combat poverty and social exclusion.
4. In contexts of extreme poverty and exclusion, developmental readiness for school requires a
multi-dimensional concept of early childhood programming that places a strong emphasis on
early intervention and womens education
In contexts of extreme poverty and exclusion, a multi-dimensional concept of early
childhood services is needed. Before getting Roma children into centre-based
kindergartens and school, community intervention programmes are urgently needed
to ensure the developmental readiness of young Roma children within the family and
community.
10
These interventions should include pre- and postnatal health, parenting and
adult education, play and stimulation programmes for toddlers, conducted in the relevant
Roma dialect.
11
Such interventions can be implemented in an economical and sensitive
way by the local health and paediatric services, in consultation with Roma communities
and NGOs, and with the help of Roma health and education assistants. Only Roma
participation can ensure the legitimacy, accountability and success of such services.
Interventions will also pay special attention to the education of girls. In all countries, the
educational level of mothers is a significant indicator of a childs success (or lack of it) in
school. The improved education of Roma girls will make possible the early stimulation,
language inputs and educational support that future Roma children will receive.
6 See http://register.consilium.europa.eu/pdf/en/09/st10/st10394.en09.pdf; Explicit but not exclusive targeting
of the Roma is essential for inclusion policy initiatives. It implies focusing on Roma people as a target group but
not to the exclusion of other people who share similar socio-economic circumstances; All inclusion policies
aim to insert the Roma in the mainstream of society (mainstream educational institutions, mainstream jobs, and
mainstream housing).
7 Local community may mean a grouping smaller than the local municipality. In many instances, the latter may not
be sensitive to the concerns of Roma parents.
8 See http://www.romadecade.org.
9 http://ec.europa.eu/justice/discrimination/roma/roma-platform/index_en.htm.
10 Developmental readiness for school includes not only verbal and intellectual skills and knowledge, but also
social abilities and health and nutritional status that predict preparedness for life and not just for school.
(Bowman, Donovan & Burns, 2001). This concept is distinguished from school readiness which normally refers
to preparation for school i.e. is limited to the knowledge and 3R skills deemed necessary to participate in
primary education. (UNICEF, 2008).
11 At present there are some 80 different varieties of Romani-chib, or Romans, spoken by differing Romani groups
see http://romani.humanities.manchester.ac.uk/whatis/language/origins.shtml.
15
5. For successful policy implementation, effective governance of the sector is critical
All the RECI National Reports refer to weaknesses in the current governance of
early childhood programming for majority and Roma children. A common critique is
the failure to develop and coordinate national policy. Ministries continue to pursue
their traditional aims without reference to each other or to Romani (and other) NGOs
working in the field.
The Overview recommends for consideration the establishing of an Early Childhood
Council in every local government to coordinate policy for social inclusion, child health
and education, from infancy to school age. This Council could involve a wide range
of stakeholders, including Roma representation in those municipalities where Roma
communities exist.
6. Effective kindergartens and schools for excluded children need clear goals, high quality,
expanded services, outreach to parents and appropriate pedagogies. A free place in
kindergarten should be provided for at least two years to every child coming from an
absolute poverty background
In summary form, government policymakers might wish to consider the following goals
for young Roma children at different ages:
Table 1. An early childhood development agenda for Roma children
Developmental stage Issues to address
A. Conception birth Ensuring quality pre- and postnatal health care for mothers and
infants within the communities, through visiting health services
and the use of Romani bridging personnel. Reasonable family
living standards.
Counselling for self-care, preparing for delivery, parenting and
family planning. Parent education.
B. Birth age 3 years Birth registration. Communication and counselling for health
care, nutrition and feeding, with an emphasis on infant-caregiver
interaction; attention to the play, social development and language
development of toddlers through providing a responsive, rich and
stimulating learning environment.
C. 36 years Access to quality early learning opportunities in public kindergartens:
a safe, hygienic and stimulating environment; qualified providers;
a quality curriculum; developmentally appropriate and inter-active;
culturally and linguistically sensitive; gender sensitive; active
parental participation; continuous assessment of programme quality
and child development outcomes.
D. 68 years Focus on developmental school readiness; getting schools ready for
children, eliminating all forms to segregation, special schools and
classrooms; getting families ready for childrens schooling.
Source: adapted from UNICEF, 2008.
Research suggests that steps A and B above are critical, that is, to secure reasonable
living standards for Roma families from which to ensure health, social care and
stimulation for young children in the first three years. The need and the pseudo need
as well for special schools and classrooms would quickly disappear if Roma families
had better living conditions in which to rear their children and if the early services and
kindergartens were empowered to do comprehensive work.
In all countries, every disadvantaged child (including Roma children) should be given
an entitlement to a free place in kindergarten for at least two years before compulsory
e x e c u t i v e s u m m a r y
16
r o m a e a r l y c h i l d h o o d i n c l u s i o n t h e R E C I o v e r v i e w r e p o r t
schooling and disadvantaged Roma parents provided with the necessary supports to
enable their children to take up such an entitlement. Recent analyses of the funding of
pre-school provision suggest that the CSEE countries could achieve such an aim within
their present budgets, if afternoon kindergarten services (which cater for dual-working
parents) were financed more equitably by users and abolished where they are not
needed. In communities where, at present, no kindergartens exist, community services
for families and young children under 3 years of age should be extended upwards to
include children of kindergarten age and should employ trained Roma teachers and
assistants to initiate and supervise these services.
7. Evidence-based policy in favour of Roma children will not be achieved without research,
consultation and data collection
The Open Society Foundations have contributed to the debate on the lack of data on
Roma children through its publication: No Data, No Progress (OSI, 2010),
12
which makes
the case for the collection of disaggregated data, noting that the lack of reliable data
about Roma communities remains a major obstacle to reducing inequality and eliminating
discrimination. The Open Society Foundations have also made detailed recommendations
on the why, what and how of data collection and monitoring within the context of the
Roma Decade.
Concerns are expressed by Roma people concerning data collection and its uses. These
concern need to be taken at face value and robust systems of data protection established.
Reasons for greater optimism about data collection now exist: there is new focus at
European level on rigorous data collection, benchmarking, monitoring and evaluation. The
European Commission in its recent communication: An EU Framework for National Roma
Integration Strategies up to 2020
13
calls attention to the need for better data in individual
national plans for Roma inclusion.
12 http://www.romadecade.org/les/downloads/General%20Resources/No%20Data%20No%20Progress%20
Country%20Findings.pdf.
13 http://ec.europa.eu/justice/policies/discrimination/docs/com_2011_173_en.pdf.
17
CHAPTER 1
Introduction, Methodology and Sources
Key Messages of Chapter 1
3
A major purpose of the RECI National Reports is to provide information to
policymakers in the four participating countries. Reliable data can help to open
discussions concerning the lack of access of Roma children to early development
services and to propose certain key principles of action.
3
The Roma constitute Europes largest minority (about 12 million people).
14
It is a
young population: 35.7 per cent are under 15 compared to 15.7 per cent of the
EU population overall. Only a small proportion of these children complete primary
education. From 10 to 36 per cent enrol in secondary education. Across the region,
less than two per cent of Roma have access to higher education.
15
3
Roma children present a real opportunity for an ageing Europe. Through continuing
education, starting in their homes and kindergartens, these children can have a
better life, contribute to their own culture and join their fellow citizens in building the
economies and societies of their respective countries.
1. Overview of the RECI Project and Methodology
The need for the Roma Early Childhood Inclusion (RECI) Project stems from the
convergence of different rationales:
1. The unacceptable poverty and discrimination against Roma families and their children
in European countries.
16
14 According to the Council of Europe; see http://www.coe.int/t/dg3/romatravellers/default_en.asp.
15 Education for Some More than Others? A regional study on education in Central and Eastern Europe and the
Commonwealth of Independent States (CEECIS); UNICEF Regional Ofce for CEECIS, 2007.
16 We are aware also that there are many successful Roma people, that Roma groups differ from each other and
that Roma society is socially stratied. Our concern is for the many Roma children who live in dire poverty and
are denied the educational opportunities that could break the inter-generational transmission of poverty and
enable countries to avail of the positive contribution to society that Roma children can make.
c h a p t e r 1
18
r o m a e a r l y c h i l d h o o d i n c l u s i o n t h e R E C I o v e r v i e w r e p o r t
2. The commitment of the Roma and their organisations, backed by the European Union
and international organizations, to change the situation.
3. The realisation by governments that the Roma population is growing more rapidly
than majority populations and, in several countries, will soon constitute a significant
part of the workforce.
4. The understanding that the early childhood period is the foundation stage not only of
individual development but also of lifelong health and education. Investments must
be made from the beginning if Roma children are to acquire the knowledge, attitudes
and skills to continue education and become part of a skilled European workforce.
5. The lack of reliable data on young Roma children in the Central and South-Eastern
European (CSEE) countries in particular, concerning their health, developmental and
education status hinders the development of evidence-based policies.
Methodology
A major purpose of the RECI Project is to gather reliable data and information about
the inclusion of young Roma children in the early childhood services of four Central and
South-Eastern European (CSEE) countries: the Czech Republic, the former Yugoslav
Republic of Macedonia, Romania and Serbia. For each country, a RECI National Report
has been researched and written by national early childhood specialists, one of whom,
in each country, was of Romani origin. The reports follow a common format, agreed in
advance by the sponsors and the lead researcher. The main conclusions of the reports
and the data on which they were based were validated in each case by a national
meeting of all the stakeholders, including Roma and government representatives. Further
conclusions and recommendations were drawn from the national consultations and are
included in the national profiles in Annex 1.
The present Overview Report is an interpretative summary of the four National Reports.
It falls into three parts: Chapter 1, which serves as an introduction to the project and
describes the methodology used; Chapter 2, which outlines the issues and challenges
that emerge from the National Reports; and Chapter 3, which proposes conclusions and
policy orientations.
The validity of the Overview Report depends greatly on the data provided in the
National Reports and on the validity of the processes and selection criteria used by the
national authors. As will be seen in Chapter 2, data on Roma children and their families
are both scant and unreliable.
17
Not only do many Roma individuals not choose to
declare themselves as Roma, but governments also fail to collect reliable data on the
ethnic background of impoverished populations and service users. Even for as simple
an indicator as population size, census data significantly undercount the actual number
of Roma people because of the common practice of relying on self-identification.
Data on Roma education are also frequently lacking because of legislation and
regulations that are interpreted to prohibit the collection of data based on ethnicity
or misinterpretations of the existing legislation. For example, Czechoslovakia stopped
collecting disaggregated data on Roma in 1990, and Hungary followed suit in 1993. As
a result, policy toward Roma families is often based on traditional ministerial reflexes
rather than on data-based evidence. The National Report authors have been careful to
cross-check the figures that they propose, but given the weakness of data collection in
this field, errors of interpretation are possible.
18
17 See No Data, No Progress, http://www.romadecade.org/les/downloads/General%20Resources/No%20
Data%20No%20Progress%20Country%20Findings.pdf.
18 The most widely accepted gures for Romani populations can be found on the Council of Europes web site;
see www.coe.int/t/dg3/romatravellers/Source/documents/stats.xls.
19
Qualitative data on the situation of the Roma in each country were collected through
literature reviews and semi-structured interviews with key informants, such as central
and local government policy makers, Roma experts and NGOs, early childhood centres
and educators, and various focus groups. While the authors were unable to use a
strictly representative sampling approach in the organization of focus groups and
interviews, a broad range of actors were consulted and a broad variety of perspectives
obtained. Thus, while the reports often offer insights rather than a rigorous analysis of
interviews, it is reassuring from a methodological perspective to know that a strong
concordance of views emerges across the different countries concerning the general
situation of Roma populations.
2. The Roma People
Origin and languages: According to the Council of Europe, the term Roma refers to
a variety of groups of people who describe themselves as Roma, Gypsies, Travellers,
Manouches, Ashkali, Sinti, as well as other self-ascriptions.
19
Strong linguistic and genetic
evidence exists to suggest that ancestors of the original group or groups emigrated
from the north-western Indian lands (possibly from Rajasthan and what is now modern-
day Pakistan), in the late tenth and early eleventh centuries, via Persia, Anatolia and the
Balkans to Central and Eastern Europe by the fourteenth century and on into western
and northern Europe by the early fifteenth and sixteenth centuries. They speak a number
of related dialects of the Romani language,
20
which are Indic in origins and contain
admixtures of Persian, Greek and the Balkan languages, frequently mixed with words
from the majority national language of the country in which modern Roma populations
live. In some cases, these dialects are heavily influenced by the dominant language to
form contact languages such as Anglo-Romani or Scandinavian Romani. Some groups
have maintained their language competence whilst others have lost theirs, due to
assimilative processes or attempts at forced eradication of Romani language and culture,
in a national context.
21
Today, with an estimated population of around 12 million people, they constitute the
largest ethnic minority in Europe, present in all 27 EU Member States. Because of their
heterogeneous background and the range of countries and environments in which they
live, there cannot be a single inclusion strategy suitable for all Roma groups. A Hungarian
survey has shown, for example, that the share of Roma with less than basic education
was 23 per cent for the Romungro Roma (whose native language is Hungarian),
42 per cent for the Bayash (native Romanian speakers), and 48 per cent for the Wallach
or Vlach Roma (Kalderash and Lovari whose mother tongue is Vlach Romani)
22
(Puporka
and Zdori, 1999). There is a need, therefore, for differentiated approaches that take
19 The term Roma used at the Council of Europe and elsewhere refers to Roma, Sinti, Kale and related groups in
Europe, including Travellers and the Eastern groups (Dom and Lom), and covers the wide diversity of the groups
concerned, including persons who identify themselves as Gypsies; see Glossary on Roma and Travellers,
http://www.coe.int/lportal/web/coe-portal/roma.
20 Called Romans or Rromani-chib in Romani dialects; see Lee, Ronald (2005), Learn Romani/Das-duma Rromanes,
Hateld: University of Hertfordshire Press; Hancock, Ian (2002), We Are the Romani People Interface
Collection, Hateld: University of Hertfordshire Press, chap. 14 Amari Chib: Our Language, pp. 139149.
21 Policies aimed at this process have been in existence since the early seventeenth century in Spain and
particularly under the reign of the Habsburg Empress, Marie-Therese (174080) and her son, Joseph II
(178090). Late nineteenth century and early twentieth century attempts to eradicate Romani language and
culture, in Norway for example, were frequently sponsored by the national churches, hand-in-hand with forced
sedentarisation and removing children from parents to raise as non-Romani, involuntary sterilisation programmes
and ultimately, under the racial hygiene laws in many states, such as Sweden, during the19351945 period, the
reduction of the Romani populations.
22 See Matras, Yaron (2005), Romani: A Linguistic Introduction, Cambs: Cambridge University Press, pp. 513.
c h a p t e r 1
20
r o m a e a r l y c h i l d h o o d i n c l u s i o n t h e R E C I o v e r v i e w r e p o r t
account of the different backgrounds of Roma groups and individuals and of the different
geographical, economic, social, cultural and legal contexts of the countries in which they
live. However, a unifying feature of the situation of Roma across Europe is the widespread
rejection and social exclusion practised toward them by majority populations. As a result,
too many Roma children live in dire poverty and are denied the educational opportunities
that could break the inter-generational transmission of deprivation and exclusion.
Discrimination: Historically, Roma populations have been a target for discrimination
and xenophobia. During the Second World War and the Nazi occupation of central
Europe, between 200,000 and 800,000 Roma people
23
lost their lives because of their
ethnicity.
24
Under the communist regimes, Roma communities, though restricted in the
expression of their cultural traditions and language, fared better; children were more
integrated into education systems and most of Roma adults were employed in the state-
controlled economies. However, the period of transition from 1989 led to a heavy loss of
employment amongst Roma, forcing many families into long-term unemployment and
the need to seek social assistance.
25
Box 1. World Bank Policy Note on the Economic Costs of Roma Exclusion (2010)
On the occasion of the 2
nd
EU Roma Summit in Cordoba, April 89, 2010, the World
Bank presented a Policy Note focusing on the economic benefits of eliminating the
productivity gap between Roma and majority populations in Bulgaria, Czech Republic,
Romania, and Serbia. These four countries represent more than two-thirds of Roma
in Central and Eastern Europe. The analysis is based on quantitative data from seven
household surveys in the four countries and information from interviews with 222
stakeholders government and non-government officials and Roma and non-Roma.
The Policy Note finds that Roma want to work but cannot find jobs in the countries
studied. The public perception often holds that Roma do not want to work and are
overwhelmingly dependent on social assistance programmes, such as guaranteed
minimum social assistance. Yet, according to the Policy Note, work rates often in the
grey economy are higher among Roma males than those of non-Roma in 3 out of
the 4 countries, although very high numbers are officially unemployed. In other words,
Roma men are willing to work, but cannot find official jobs. 20 per cent of Roma men
looking for jobs remain unemployed, while among Roma women, 39 per cent seeking
jobs cannot obtain work.
In sum, although they have been an integral part of European society for about
seven hundred years, Romani cultures are rarely spoken about or included in school
programmes, beyond stereotyped references. In their daily lives, Romani people face
discrimination and social exclusion, based on racial prejudice, stereotyping and as a
consequence, are confronted by profoundly negative attitudes, frequently articulated by
populist politicians, ultra-nationalist political parties and the mass media.
Demographic patterns: Roma populations have been traditionally concentrated in south-
eastern, Central and Eastern European (CEE) countries, with the largest populations in
23 Romani scholars such as Ian Hancock would suggest gures of between 600,000 and one million, based upon
the evidence; see We Are the Romani People (Ame Sam E Rromane Dzene), Interface Collection, University of
Hertfordshire Press: Hateld.
24 See Matras, Yaron (2005), Romani: A Linguistic Introduction, Cambs: Cambridge University Press, pp. 513.
25 European Commission (2004), The Situation of Roma in an Enlarged European Union: Employment and Social
Affairs. Fundamental Rights and Anti-discrimination.
21
Turkey and the Balkans although today, they are migrating northwards and westwards
throughout Europe in search of work.
26
Reliable data are hard to come by, but they form
a significant (estimated) proportion of the population in Bulgaria (around 10 per cent),
Slovakia (9 per cent), Romania (8 per cent), and Hungary (7 per cent). They are also
present significantly in the western Balkans, including Serbia and the former Yugoslav
Republic of Macedonia. Many Roma do not possess identity documents; or are included
in the general category of minority groups, or for a variety of reasons, prefer not to
identify as Roma.
27
Today, Roma groups have significantly higher fertility (and mortality) rates than
mainstream populations in the CEE countries. According to the recent EU Framework for
National Roma Integration Strategies up to 2020:
The Roma population is young: 35.7 per cent are under 15 compared to 15.7 per cent
of the EU population overall. The average age is 25 among Roma, compared with 40
across the EU. The vast majority of working-age Roma lack the education needed to
find good jobs. It is therefore of crucial importance to invest in the education of Roma
children to allow them later on to successfully enter the labour market. In Member
States with significant Roma populations, this already has an economic impact.
According to estimates, in Bulgaria, about 23 per cent of new labour entrants are
Roma, in Romania, about 21 per cent.
The RECI Report draws a more child-centred conclusion. If given the opportunity, Roma
children through education can have a better life and contribute to their own culture
and to the economies and societies of their respective countries. No country with a
sizeable Roma minority can afford not to address issues of social justice and education in
regard to these children.
Chapter 2: will outline, inter alia, the extent of the discrimination and social exclusion of
Romani populations in the four countries studies, in particular, across core indicators such
as housing, employment, nutrition, health, development and education. In different Roma
communities, both young children and women (especially in the child-bearing years) are
exposed to particularly high risks in these areas.
26 Statistics drawn from the Council of Europes Roma and Traveller Division (updated 14/09/2010), available at
http://www.coe.int/t/dg3/romatravellers/Source/documents/stats.xls.
27 Roma children in South East Europe The Challenge: overcoming centuries of distrust and discrimination.
Regional Ofce for CEECIS Region, Social and economic policy for children; Discussion paper, March, 2007.
c h a p t e r 1
23
CHAPTER 2
Issues Identied in the RECI National Reports
Key Messages of Chapter 2
3
Progress in policy formulation is being made but a large gap exists between
aspirations and implementation. There are far too few tangible gains for Roma
families and children on the ground.
3
Extreme poverty, intolerable living conditions, low educational levels and lack of
employment gravely undermine Roma family life and the health of infants and
young children.
3
The social exclusion of the Roma is greatly reinforced by majority prejudice and
discrimination.
3
The early development of Roma children, during infancy and the pre-kindergarten
period, is not sufficiently supported.
3
National kindergarten and primary education systems are failing to recruit, include,
retain and educate Roma children.
3
The lack of disaggregated data on Roma children and their progress prevents
evidence-based planning and monitoring.
1. Progress in Policy Formulation Is Being Made But a Large Gap Exists Between
Aspirations and Implementation
Substantial human and financial resources are now being invested in Romani issues
far greater than in any years since the CSEE countries made the transition to market
economies. The European Union has become involved and its leadership has been
critically important in moving forward the agenda for Roma inclusion.
28
At the level of
the RECI project, progress and good will is also recorded. During the preparation of the
National Reports, many policymakers and administrators voluntarily gave of their time to
provide data and research and to attend various meetings at country level.
The four National Reports point, however, to the gap that exists between policy
aspirations and their implementation. Roma families still endure grinding poverty and an
28 Romani NGOs have been highly critical of the recent EU framework for national Roma integration strategies
up to 2020, in particular, for its lack of ambition on education; for its failure to include gender and Romani
youth dimensions; and for not mentioning the rising levels of anti-Gypsyism, hate speech and institutionalized
discrimination. See: http://www.romadecade.org/eu_shuts_out_roma.
c h a p t e r 2
24
r o m a e a r l y c h i l d h o o d i n c l u s i o n t h e R E C I o v e r v i e w r e p o r t
intolerable health and housing situation. In some domains, such as employment and the
segregation of Roma children in special education, their situation has actually worsened
in the past ten years. For example, in a survey organised by the European Fundamental
Rights Agency, 17 per cent of Roma interviewed indicated that they had experienced
discrimination by public health-care personnel in the previous twelve months. According
to the EC EU Framework Communication, the use of prevention services among the
Roma population is low and over 25 per cent of Roma children are not fully vaccinated.
Table 2. Comparative life expectancy rates among national populations and Roma
Life expectancy (LE)
at birth
EU-27 Czech
Republic
The former
Yugoslav
Republic of
Macedonia
Romania Serbia
Average LE of
national populations
79
years
77
years
73.5
years
74
years
74
years
Average LE of
Roma population
69
years (estimate)
68
years
64
years
58
years*
Source: RECI National Reports, 2010.
* This figure for Roma women is supplied by the Serbian Institute for Economic Research, 2009,
compared with a life expectancy for Serbian women of 76.6 years (UNICEF MICS, 2011).
In sum, there are far too few tangible gains for Roma families and children on the
ground. The reasons advanced by the RECI reports for ineffectual implementation can be
summarised under the following headings.
Weaknesses in national legislation: New laws and statutes, although a huge
improvement on previous legislation, rarely require public authorities to take specific
actions or to achieve measurable results. For example, though the countries under review
have anti-discrimination legislation and sometimes a specific anti-discrimination body
those minorities without an external country to back them are often unable to defend
their rights effectively. Thus, the segregation of Roma children into special and Roma-
only schools continues to exist, despite several condemnations of the practice by the
European Court of Human Rights. Another weakness identified is that legislative and
policy texts often carry the proviso: "according to budgetary possibilities and priorities
determined", resulting in a recipe for inaction. Young children rarely receive budgetary
priority even in countries that take seriously the UN Convention on the Rights of the
Child. A fortiori, young children do not receive a fair share of investment or services in
contexts where funding is scarce and where the equitable and universal provision of
pre-school services is not a statutory obligation for local governments.
Lack of capacity to coordinate policy initiatives in support of Roma inclusion coming from
external sources. Because of insufficiency of expertise and critical mass (that is, sufficient
numbers of competent administrators), government departments often fail to integrate
external initiatives from the European Union and other sources into national policy or to
absorb effectively the different funding sources placed at their disposal. This has been
a constant criticism made by the European monitoring bodies (see, for example, the
general comments of the EC Employment, Social Affairs and Inclusion report, 2008 or of
the EC Committee on Employment and Social Affairs, 2010). A country example is that of
the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, where the EU Commission wrote in its 2009
Accession Progress Report:
Little progress has been made in the area of anti-discrimination... Administrative
capacity in this area remains insufficient. Ethnic minorities, particularly the Roma
25
community, suffer from discrimination in various spheres of economic, social and
cultural life. The situation of people with disabilities has not improved.
Lack of capacity to develop and coordinate a unified national policy for Roma inclusion.
All four countries under review have national plans, strategies or programmes for Roma
but, according to the Romani organisations and external experts, these plans are not
rigorous enough. They may lack, for example, essential planning components such as
firm financing commitments; defined goals and measurable outcomes for children;
delivery dates; or the nomination of responsible agencies. Implementation can be equally
haphazard. All National Reports speak of weak coordination across the ministries with
regard to policy planning, implementation and monitoring. Vertical coordination toward
local government can also be overlooked with local governments unwilling or unable
to implement central policies. At the local level, ministries still continue to pursue their
traditional aims without effective reference to each other or to the local governments and
NGOs working in the field.
In their reports, the four countries have privileged particular themes:
3
Too many new laws and regulations but too few concrete targets and evaluation
mechanisms. According to the Romanian report, the profusion of new regulations
has led to confusion and misinformation on important matters, such as, access to
health services or enrolment in kindergarten. Clear targets for the reduction of child
and family poverty among Roma have rarely been set. In parallel, specific strategies
for Roma inclusion do not provide an agreed framework for addressing children, but
tend to remain locked into sectoral approaches.
3
Wasteful, complicated procedures, such as those required to obtain a child allowance.
In Serbia, for example, it is reported that fifteen different documents may be required
a formidable obstacle for illiterate Roma parents who, in addition, may also be
displaced persons.
29
Serbia also reports the difficulty of implementing radically new
policies, such as inclusion, using the same staff.
3
Weak inter-departmental co-operation and local lack of accountability: the former
Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia reports that there is no one-stop-shop or
place to which Roma mothers who for the most part are illiterate can turn to
for information or support in their efforts to raise their young children. The child is
attached at one moment to this ministry and its bureaucracy and then to another. In
consequence, no real locus of responsibility exists to evaluate outcomes for Roma
families and children.
3
Punitive attitudes: The National Report from the Czech Republic suggest
that services for young Roma children can be characterized by a bureaucratic
insistence, that Roma parents should fulfil their obligations. Such punitive attitudes
destroy Roma trust in the goodwill of state services. They also run counter to
a professional, democratic approach that would seek to build bridges toward
excluded families and communities.
29 Many Kosovan Roma, Ashkali and Egyptians remain in Serbia and Montenegro as displaced refugees from the
conicts and their aftermath in 19992000; in Serbia alone between 40,000 and 50,000 IDPs identied as Roma
live in very poor conditions; see OSCE/ODIHR (2010), Sustainable Solutions for Displaced Roma, Ashkali &
Egyptians and Policies to Improve the Reintegration of Repatriated Roma, Belgrade: OSCE/ODIHR,
http://www.osce.org/odihr/75578.
c h a p t e r 2
26
r o m a e a r l y c h i l d h o o d i n c l u s i o n t h e R E C I o v e r v i e w r e p o r t
2. Extreme Poverty, Intolerable Living Conditions, Low Educational Levels and Lack
of Employment Undermine Roma Family Life and the Health of Young Children
The poverty levels of Roma adults and children differ from country to country, between
urban and rural areas and among different types of Roma communities. In the following
paragraphs, figures are provided on Roma employment, health, housing, child poverty,
etc. with examples from the four countries.
In the Czech Republic, Roma families and children are disproportionally poor
and dependent. While the overall unemployment rate in the Czech Republic is
approximately 10 per cent, the unemployment rate among Roma is estimated at around
60 per cent, with a 7090 per cent unemployment level in some communities. To its
credit, the Czech Republic has traditionally achieved low levels of child poverty and a
high level of infant survival, but the monthly social assistance provided in 2006 for two
family types a lone parent with one child and workless families with three children
is in the lower third of EU countries (Bradshaw, 2006). In addition because of their low
life expectancy, Roma people benefit much less from state pensions and support in old
age a sphere of social security that is far more costly to the public exchequer than
child or welfare benefits.
In the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, the low social and economic status
of the Roma is illustrated by the following indicators: unemployment is highest among
the Roma population, reaching 73 per cent of the population aged 1564, compared
to 31 per cent of Macedonians and 27 per cent of Albanians. The Roma have also the
worst poverty levels: 63 per cent of the Roma population live below the poverty line,
compared to 27 per cent of Macedonians and 29 per cent of Albanians. According to a
UNDP survey, 36 per cent of the Roma families live in substandard dwelling units and the
average living area is 50 per cent smaller than that of non-Roma families.
In the period 20068, the national poverty rate in Romania, was 23 per cent, while the
Roma poverty rate was 67 per cent (World Bank, 2010). Roma employment figures are
estimated to be 26 percentage points less than the average male employment rate and
in terms of wages paid, they are 50 percentage points less. Many of the poorest Roma
families do not touch any social benefits. The life expectancy of Roma is about 64 years
30
compared with the overall Romanian life expectancy of almost 74 years. Mortality rates
among Roma infants are three to four times higher than the national average.
31
According
to UNDP/ILO data, more than 40 per cent of children in Roma households experience
severe undernourishment, bordering on starvation.
In Serbia, World Bank estimates suggest that 60.5 per cent of the Roma population falls
within the category of very poor (based on an absolute poverty rate of 8,883 dinars per
month), compared with 6.1 per cent of the average population (World Bank, 2010). Within
the poor Roma population, women and children are especially at risk and mothers under
a great deal of stress:
32
They (the majority of population) say that the Gypsies do not look after their children,
and that is not true! We do take care of them, but we simply cannot manage
everything. Imagine having five or six children, would you be able to do everything
you planned. Every mother cares for her child. (A mother from a Focus group).
30 UNDP Report (2004). Avoiding the Dependency Trap: The Roma in Central and Eastern Europe.
31 Fleck Gabor, C. Rughinis (2008).
32 Kovac Cerovic, (2007).
27
Table 3 provides a rapid overview of the situation of the poverty and unemployment
situation of Roma across the four countries.
33
Table 3. An overview of Roma poverty and unemployment in the four countries
34
Country Poverty Unemployment
rate of Roma
adults
(per cent)
Per cent Roma living in
households below $4.30
per day (PPP)
Per cent Roma living in
households below $2.15
per day (PPP)
Income
based
Expenditure
based
Income
based
Expenditure
based
Czech
Republic
$11 daily
25 per cent
$11 daily
45 per cent
not
available
not
available
11.7
(60 per cent+)
34
The former
Yugoslav
Republic of
Macedonia
52 per cent 33 per cent 22 per cent 9 per cent 71 per cent
Romania 67 per cent 66 per cent 22 per cent 20 per cent 44 per cent
Serbia 58 per cent 57 per cent 30 per cent 26 per cent 51 per cent
Source: Adapted from http://web.worldbank.org; accessed April, 2011.
Housing: The Roma housing situation in the four countries is very inadequate, a
situation that is replicated in much of Europe, including in the rich countries to which
workless Roma people move in desperation. Thousands of Roma families live in favela-
like settlements, in shelters patched together out of mud, cardboard, metal sheets
and plastic, sometimes located in environmentally hazardous areas. Frequently, these
settlements have poor access to public services, employment and schools; and without
adequate access to public utilities such as water, electricity or gas. In Romania, Roma
people live mostly (60 per cent) in rural areas or at the periphery of municipalities. 74 per
cent of their communities have severe budgetary problems, 67 per cent have poor
access (dirt roads only) and 23 per cent lack electricity and potable water.
35
Illiteracy: The UNDP the World Bank and other organisations provide official literacy rates for
the Roma population. In general, these figures are more positive than those found in the
National Reports, which provide functional illiteracy rates for Roma populations in excess of
50 per cent in all countries, reaching as high as 80 per cent for women in rural settlements.
Given that many Roma children do not have the majority language as their mother tongue,
36
that many do not complete primary education and that the children of illiterate parents
are more likely to have limited literacy,
36
the figures in the National Reports may be more
realistic.
33 See UNDP, Vulnerable Groups in Central and Southeast Europe (statistical proles), http://vulnerability.undp.
sk/; UNDP (2006), At Risk: Roma and the Displaced in Southeast Europe [The primary universe under study
consists of all the households in Roma settlements or areas of compact Roma population]; World Bank (2008),
Czech Republic: Improving Employment Chances of the Roma, Roma NGOs give much higher gures in some
instances, in excess of 60 per cent for unemployment among Roma in the Czech Republic.
34 11.7 per cent is the ofcial gure. The World Bank (2008), Czech Republic: Improving Employment Chances of the
Roma and Roma NGOs gives a much higher unemployment gure among Roma in the Czech Republic in some
instances, in excess of 60 per cent. The World Bank (2010) also testies that Roma men are among the most
active seekers of employment in the CEE countries.
35 Badescu, G., V. Grigoras, C. Rughinis, M. Voicu, O. Voicu (2007).
36 Hughes, D. et al. (2010), Developmental outcomes of Canadian kindergarten children from diverse language
backgrounds, Centre for Child Studies, McMaster University.
c h a p t e r 2
28
r o m a e a r l y c h i l d h o o d i n c l u s i o n t h e R E C I o v e r v i e w r e p o r t
3. The Social Exclusion of Roma is Greatly Reinforced by Majority Discrimination
and Prejudice
According to the findings of the European Union Minorities and Discrimination Survey
(EU-MIDIS) 2009,
37
majority discrimination and prejudice greatly reinforces the social
exclusion of Roma.
BOX 2. The EU Minorities and Discrimination Survey (EU-MIDIS) 2009
EU-MIDIS asked a sample of Roma respondents about discrimination they had
experienced, in the past 12 months or in the past 5 years, in nine areas:
1. When looking for work.
2. At work.
3. When looking for a house or an apartment to rent or buy.
4. By health-care personnel.
5. By social service personnel.
6. By school personnel.
7. At a caf, restaurant or bar.
8. When entering or in a shop.
9. When trying to open a bank account or get a loan.
47 per cent of all respondents indicated they were victims of discrimination based on
their ethnicity, in one or more of these areas, during the previous 12 months. In the
Czech Republic, Roma respondents reported the highest levels of overall discrimination
(64 per cent), closely followed by Hungary (62 per cent).
In the context of being victims of crime, and racially motivated crime, the EU-MIDIS
survey was even more explicit:
On average 1 in 4 Roma respondents were victims of personal crime including
assaults, threats and serious harassment at least once in the previous 12 months.
On average 1 in 5 Roma respondents were victims of racially motivated personal
crime including assaults, threats and serious harassment at least once in the previous
12 months. Roma who were victims of assault, threat or serious harassment experienced
on average 4 incidents over a 12 month period.
81 per cent of Roma who indicated they were victims of assault, threat or serious
harassment in the previous 12 months considered that their victimisation was racially
motivated.
In the National Reports several of which cite the Gallup Poll made for the EU
Fundamental Rights Agency in 2009 the following information is provided:
37 European Agency for Fundamental Rights (2009), EU-MIDIS European Union Minorities & Discrimination Survey,
Main Results Report, Conference Edition, http://fra.europa.eu/fraWebsite/attachments/eumidis_mainreport_
conference-edition_en_pdf.
29
In Romania, majority perceptions of the Roma minority continue to focus on stereotypes
of criminality, violence, and lack of interest in schooling. Of non-Roma respondents,
25 per cent think that Roma children should not play with other children and 35 per cent
consider that residential mixing of the populations is not to be recommended (INSOMAR,
2009).
38
More than 60 per cent think that current treatment of the Roma people is
legitimate. Most agree with the following statement: If I were an employer, I would
not hire a Roma because the most of them are lazy and they steal. In sum, majority
perceptions validate the discriminatory treatment that Roma experience, with many
respondents indicating that Roma get what they deserve.
39
Similar attitudes emerge
from the other three countries.
Even in the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, in which attitudes toward the
Roma seem most tolerant (the majority of respondents depict the Roma, on an individual
level, as good, peaceful, hospitable, happy, communicative and talented for music),
40
negative views about the Roma are also current.
In the Czech Republic, according to Eurobarometer 2008, 47 per cent of the majority
would not wish to have a Roma neighbour (the average figure for the European countries
surveyed was 25 per cent). The UN Committee on the Rights of the Child also made
reference to Roma children in its Concluding Remarks on the Czech Second Periodic
Report of 2003 and expressed its concern at the negative attitudes and prejudices
among the general public, media representations, incidents of police brutality, and
discriminatory behaviour on the part of some persons working with and for children,
including teachers and doctors.
Alongside prejudicial stereotyping, more sinister activities exist. Political extremism and
violence against the Roma has been witnessed in the Czech Republic, Romania and
Serbia. Violence can range from threatening marches on Roma settlements to mob and
skinhead attacks in which weaponry and firebombing have been used to intimidate or evict
Roma residents. In Hungary, Roma adults and children have been murdered by organised,
ultranationalist gangs.
41
In a context of economic crisis, extremist politicians even parties
have emerged, openly hostile to Roma citizens. Through racist rhetoric, they have created
a climate in which rights violations are more likely to occur with impunity.
38 Discrimination phenomena in Romania perception and attitudes (August 2009). CNCD, INSOMAR.
39 The interethnic climate in Romania before EU integration (2006). Department of Interethnic Relations.
40 Even in the above cases, stereotypical representations of Roma as happy and talented in music are considered
positive by the respondents.
41 See Human Rights First (2010), Combating Violence Against Roma in Hungary, Blueprint, http://www.
humanrightsrst.org/wp-content/uploads/pdf/HungaryBlueprint.pdf.
c h a p t e r 2
30
r o m a e a r l y c h i l d h o o d i n c l u s i o n t h e R E C I o v e r v i e w r e p o r t
BOX 3. A disturbing backdrop to Roma talks (European Voice, 7 April, 2011)
Dressed in black uniforms resembling those of the banned paramilitary Hungarian Guard,
members of the Jobbik party last weekend marched through the Hungarian village of
Hejoszalonta, intimidating the local Roma community. The demonstration was part of the
extreme-right partys campaign of uniformed interventions. On 10 March, Jobbik brought
more than 1,000 black-clad neo-Nazis to besiege the Roma quarter of Gyngyspata,
another Hungarian village. Such incidents are neither uncommon nor exclusive to
Hungary. They are a blunt reminder of the anti-Roma sentiment that is common to most
European countries.
The incidents in Hejoszalonta and Gyngyspata form a sinister backdrop to this weeks
meeting of the EU Roma Platform, hosted in Budapest by the Hungarian presidency of
the Council of Ministers, which will offer an initial opportunity for policymakers and civil
society to discuss the EU framework for national Roma integration strategies that the
European Commission launched this week (5 April, 2011). The Commissions proposal
represents a step forward in that, as European Voice noted last week (Strategy sets
targets for education and jobs, 31 March6 April), it asks all member states to target
the socio-economic exclusion of Roma people and devote enough money to achieve
real results.
Investment, targeted intervention and monitoring are steps that are needed to help
promote integration of the Roma. But poverty, sub-standard education, and lack of access
to justice and decent housing experienced by Roma people are inextricably linked to the
discrimination that they face and can be solved only as part of a greater effort to tackle
anti-Gypsyism.
42
Other examples of prejudice and discrimination referenced in the National Reports
As the RECI focus is on young children and their families, the examples of prejudice
and discrimination broached in the National Reports mention predominantly denial of
health care, of social protection and of access to kindergarten and education, and finally,
disproportionate placing of Roma children into special or practical schools.
Structural and institutional discrimination
Racism and discrimination do not refer only to individual beliefs and attitudes but include
also the built-in features of institutions, e.g. the way in which health, education, social
services and justice systems are structured and work. For example, in under-funded
health systems, prevention work may not be possible and financing may exist only for
urgent medical responses. In such instances, the tendency will be not to neglect the
extension of the public health and education network to the remote areas in which Roma
families live. The health authorities may not make available sufficient numbers of health
personnel to ensure pre- and post-natal health, and the various checks and immunisations
that rural and low-income infants need.
For this reason, in each of the countries reviewed, there are far more accidents at birth
among Roma mothers and infant mortality rates are significantly higher than the national
42 Source: European Voice (2011) Ruus Dijksterhuis, European Roma Policy Coalition, Brussels.
31
average, for example, more than twice as high as the national average in Serbia. In
Romania, the infant mortality rate (IMR) is more than six times higher than that of
Sweden.
43
Relatively few doctors, pharmacists or nurses are available to serve remote
populations, particularly in rural areas, where, according to UNICEF reports, the risk of
infant mortality is four times greater than in urban areas. It is heartening to note that,
according to the EUROSTAT Child Well-being Index, the former Yugoslav Republic of
Macedonia does excellent work for child well-being.
44
Strong primary and preventative
health programmes are in place including for Roma populations focussed on mother
and infant health, backed up by home visits performed by community nursing services.
More than 99 per cent of births, rural as well as urban, are professionally assisted, with
over 95 per cent of births in hospital. Premature and low-weight births among Roma
women are 7.2 per cent, slightly above the EU-27 average and immunisation covers over
95 per cent of all children. The Czech Republic does not provide disaggregated figures on
the health status of Roma children and families.
Insufficient attention to ensuring that Roma families are provided with identification documents
In addition to the distance that many Roma have to travel to attend the nearest health
clinic, the access of Roma communities to health care is hampered by their lack of birth
certificates, identity and other documents required by the health and education services
in any countries. In Serbia for example, at the end of the conflicts in the regions,
more than half of all Roma people did not possess a health certificate or identification
document and approximately one-third did not have a health card.
45
It is reported in the
Czech Republic and Romania
46
that in addition to documentation barriers, the Roma
face discrimination from public health care personnel. The consequences can be serious
for children. Lack of registration and parents not possessing identity documents can
mean that birth certificates will not be issued for their children. In many instances, Roma
may have been resident and held citizenship for generations, but they and their children
now lack the documents to prove it. The notion of citizenship (in the sense of being a
resident, holding a passport and having certain rights and duties) is sometimes confused
with belonging to the majority ethnic group or language. After nearly seven hundred
years of residing in the nation-states of Europe, Roma groups are still not considered by
many Europeans as citizens of the EU.
The segregation of Roma children in school education
Although a promising start has been made in Serbia to end the practice, the segregation
of Roma children within education systems remains a significant challenge, in many
countries in the region, including in the four countries reviewed. To justify the practice
of segregation, children are tested at the age of 5, 6 or 7 for entry into primary school.
True to the defectology tradition still influential in CEE countries, these tests look for
weaknesses and not strengths. In addition, they are generally culturally biased in the
sense that they are designed with the majority child in mind and are administered
through the majority language (few psychologists speak Romani languages). According
to the National Reports, the time spent with each child may be as short, as 15 minutes.
47
43 Report of the Presidential Commission for analysis and elaboration of policies in the eld of public health care in
Romania, 2008.
44 For a summary of the EUROSTAT ndings see http://www.eurofound.europa.eu/emcc/content/source/eu06015a.
htm?p1=ef_publication&p2=null.
45 UNICEF Serbia; February 2007.
46 Cases of segregation of Romani women in maternities were signalled by Romani Criss.
47 Not only is the methodology suspect but the fact that disability and cognitive delays in Roma children are
routinely attributed to cultural and racial factors, rather than to the serious malnutrition and poverty of expectant
and nursing mothers, is a matter of real concern.
c h a p t e r 2
32
r o m a e a r l y c h i l d h o o d i n c l u s i o n t h e R E C I o v e r v i e w r e p o r t
As a result of these tests, a disproportionate number of Roma children are allocated
to special classes or placed in special schools where simplified curricula are used.
Graduation from these schools has little value in the eyes of potential employers or of
society at large.
The following table provides a brief summary of the information about segregated
education found in the National Reports:
Table 4. Percentage of total children in special class-rooms,
centres or segregated schools who are Roma
Per cent Czech
Republic
The former
Yugoslav Republic
of Macedonia
Romania Serbia
Per cent Roma children
in special schools,
classes or segregated
schools
26.7 per cent
MoE figure*
(c.70 per cent
Romani NGOs)
36 per cent
(primary)
60 per cent
and
2** per cent
32 per cent
and
38 per cent***
Source: RECI National Reports, 2011.
* Romani organisations in the Czech Republic place the figure at around 70 per cent (see text
below). Source: Persistent Segregation of Roma in the Czech Education System, REF, 2011.
** The Romania National Report provides a figure of 70 per cent, based on research from 2001.
48
Research conducted in 2008 for the Romani CRISS Organization in 2008 found that of the 90
schools studied, 67 per cent had some segregation of Roma pupils.
*** Source: Roma children in Special Education in Serbia: overrepresentation, underachievement,
and impact on life, OSI. 2010. 30 per cent in special schools (almost wholly for intellectual
difficulties) and 38 per cent in special classes.
The Czech Republic. Until recently, the Czech Republic did not collect data on children
disaggregated by ethnic minority. For this reason, reliable information on Roma children
is extremely scarce. Apart from Roma children in full secondary education and above
(estimated at about 3.3 per cent), estimates by the Romani organisations suggest that
over 70 per cent of Roma children attend practical schools (former special schools). The
Czech Ministry of Education has researched the issue and provides a figure of 26.7 per
cent. However, research undertaken in 2008 on a sample of 20 practical primary schools
by the European Roma Rights Centre (ERRC, 2009), in co-operation with the Roma
Education Fund, confirms that Roma children continue to be placed disproportionately in
practical primary schools:
3
In 8 out of 19 practical schools, Roma children accounted for more than 80 per cent
of the student population;
3
In 6 out of 19 practical schools, Roma children accounted for between 50 and 79 per
cent of the student population; and
3
In only 5 out of 19 practical schools did Roma children account for less than 50 per
cent of the student population; 14 per cent being the lowest.
According to the Czech National Report:
Roma children are transferred from basic to practical schools 28 times as often as other
children. Roma children who stay in basic schools are 14 times as likely to repeat a year
as other children, which implies that a considerable percentage of Roma children finish
48 European Roma Rights Center (2001), State of Impunity: Human Rights Abuse of Roma in Romania.
33
basic school having completed only the sixth, seventh or eighth form, and are thus
unable to apply for vocational training. One of the causes is the language barrier. Most
Roma children entering the first grade of basic schools speak a Roma ethnolect of Czech.
(Czech National Report, 2009)
The former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia. Different sources confirm that Roma
children are disproportionately represented in special schools, being placed there
generally for socioeconomic reasons rather than for educational purposes. The data
from one study show that in over 50 per cent of the special schools and special classes
in Skopje that were visited, Roma children made up a disproportionate number of the
student body.
49
Similarly, the director of a primary school in Bitola visited for the study
in May 2009 reported that 19 of the 47 pupils (39.6 per cent) enrolled in special classes
are Roma. Combining the data on overall enrolment in special education from the
20082009 school year with figures on the number of Roma enrolled in special education
from the previous year, yields a rough estimate that Roma account for approximately 36
per cent of all children in special primary education and 28 per cent of the total in special
secondary education. (Macedonian National Report, 2010)
Romania. In Romania, research from 2001 indicated that up to 70 per cent of the
students in special schools are Roma.
50
In 2004, Surdu (2004) analysed school facilities,
teacher qualifications and pupil outcomes in segregated schools and explored the causes
of this problem in Romania. The author also presents possible policy options to improve
the quality of education for Romani children. According to EUMAP, in 2007, the practice
of guiding intellectually challenged Roma children into special schools for children with
mental disabilities continues.
51
Box 4. Special testing of Roma children at Dumbraveni, Sibiu, Romania
In Dumbraveni, Sibiu County, Roma children who failed to graduate from the same
class for 23 years in a row were transferred to the local special school. Following the
results of special testing, the Education Commission decided that many Roma boys
and girls had mild mental health problems and issued certificates showing they are
children with special educational needs. At least 90 per cent of the children attending the
special school were Roma children. Upon a complaint sent by Roma CRISS, the National
Council for Combating Discrimination sanctioned only the special school and issued a
recommendation to desegregate the school. To date, the situation in Dumbraveni has not
yet been resolved.
Source: Romania National RECI, Report, 2011.
Serbia. Serbia is an exception to the rule, at least, from a legislative perspective. Its new
Law on the Fundamentals of Education (2009) recognises that children with disabilities
or learning challenges should have opportunities for education equal to those of other
children.
52
What is perhaps most impressive about this law is that inclusion is viewed as
intrinsic to the mission, values, and practices of public education. A new Law on
49
M. Dulca, Draft Report, 2007 (p. 27).
50 European Roma Rights Center (2001), State of Impunity: Human Rights Abuse of Roma in Romania.
51 Equal access to quality education for Roma (2007), Romania, EUMAP.
52 Law on the Fundamentals of the Education System, Article 2, paragraph 1/5.
c h a p t e r 2
34
r o m a e a r l y c h i l d h o o d i n c l u s i o n t h e R E C I o v e r v i e w r e p o r t
Pre-school Education goes in the same direction and innovates in the matter of assessing
children with disabilities and learning difficulties. No longer will these children be placed
in categories or assessed in terms of special placements, but solely in terms of the
supports they will need in mainstream schools.
However, the traditional unwillingness of local governments and majority parents to
accept Roma children in majority kindergartens and schools will inevitably slow the
inclusion of Roma children. The National Report estimates that from 3050 per cent of
Roma children in Serbia are placed in sub-standard kindergarten premises and displaced
units, inappropriate for young children. In sum, Roma children do not have equal
resources placed at their disposal (good teachers, infrastructure and equipment adjusted
to their age, appropriate didactic methods and additional educational programmes).
Members of focus groups are of the opinion that discrimination is more easily noticed
in primary schools than in kindergartens, as the number of Roma children in the latter is
extremely low in Serbia.
4. The Early Development of Roma Children, During Infancy and the Pre-Kindergarten
Period, Is Not Sufciently Supported
The early development of Roma children, during infancy and the pre-kindergarten
period, is not sufficiently supported in the four countries, partly for two reasons.
Firstly, because there seems to be a general under-estimation of the importance of the
period prenatal to 3 years and thus, there is little spending on specific developmental
programmes for children in the age group. Secondly, spending on general public
policies that critically affect young children, namely public health (in particular,
preventive health services), social protection, and child and family policies, remains well
below EU averages. To take these points in order:
A general under-estimation of the importance of the period prenatal to 3 years with little
investment in developmental programmes for children in the age group
Health and well-being in the early childhood period is a critical determinant of health
and educational status in later life (Lancet, 2005, 2007; Marmot Review, 2010). While
risk factors affecting health can and will occur throughout the course of life, early
childhood is a critical (and potentially vulnerable) stage where extreme poverty and
malnutrition have lasting negative effects on subsequent health and development. Table
5 provides a series of indicators relevant to early child development and education in
Serbia.
In the Table, both the high mortality rates of Roma infants and the condition of the
surviving infants merit attention. Unnecessarily high mortality rates should not leave
indifferent any society that is based on human rights and social justice. Neither should
the effects of ill-health and early malnutrition in children who survive be a matter of
indifference. Low-birth-weight contributes significantly not only to infant mortality, but
among the infants who survive, it is strongly correlated to other risks. This is apparent
from the table in the greater incidence among Roma children with a disability, being
stunted or having a special education need. Infant malnutrition and stunting strongly
impact on cognitive development and education attainment. (Mother and Child Nutrition
Organisation, 2009).
35
Table 5. Early childhood indicators from Serbia
Serbia National
population
Roma
settlements
Infant mortality rate (IMR) 7 per thousand 14 per thousand
Child mortality rate before 5th birthday 8 per thousand
(2010)*
15 per thousand
Low birth weight infants 2,500 grams 4.8 per cent 10.2 per cent
Underweight prevalence-weight for age (-2SD) in
children 059 months
1.6 per cent 6.6 per cent
Stunting prevalence-height for age (-2SD) in
children 059 months
6.6 per cent 23.6 per cent
Suspected pneumonia 5 per cent 18 per cent
Received all vaccinations (1829 months) 58.5 per cent 26.6 per cent
Immunization rate 87.0 per cent 63.0 per cent
Children with at least one disability** 11.0 per cent 23.0 per cent
Child appears mentally slow 1.3 per cent 4.6 per cent
Early childhood education 35 years 44.0 per cent 8.0 per cent
Percentage of families providing support for
learning of children 05 years***
95 per cent 67 per cent
Percentage literate women, 1524 years 99 per cent 76 per cent
Source: UNICEF MICS for Serbia, 2005, 2010.
* The figure is for 2005. Recent World Bank data provide a much improved figure of 7.1 per cent.
** As reported by mothers.
*** For whom household members engaged in four or more activities that promote learning and
school readiness.
Box 5. What do we know about early child development?
Recent brain and neurological research shows that human babies are born prematurely,
that is, with their brains only one quarter the size of an adult brain (Greenspan and
Shanker, 2004). Their experiences in the first two years of life, while brain growth is
in process, deeply affect future development. The childs experience in the early years
impacts on the architecture of the brain, its neurochemistry and the gene expression that
mediate cognitive, emotional and social behaviours. It sets in place a lifelong trajectory
that influences all of a childs subsequent development from infancy to adulthood,
including capacity for socialization and education. In sum, early experience shapes:
3
Gene expression and neural pathways.
3
Emotional response, temperament and social development.
3
Perceptual and cognitive ability.
3
Physical and mental health and behaviour in adult life.
3
Language and cognitive capability.
Childrens capacity to learn when they enter school is strongly influenced by the
neural wiring that has (or has not) taken place in the first two years of life. Positive
nurturing experiences in the home are essential for this wiring and optimal early brain
development. The window of opportunity is relatively narrow, lasting from conception to
about 24 months. For this reason, a stressful, poverty-stricken infancy is a danger that all
governments should strive to prevent. The tragedy is that thousands of Roma children are
lost to education each year because governments fail to invest sufficiently in the family
and community environments of children during the infancy and early childhood period.
Source: Shanker, S. (2011).
c h a p t e r 2
36
r o m a e a r l y c h i l d h o o d i n c l u s i o n t h e R E C I o v e r v i e w r e p o r t
A strong implication from these research findings is that Roma mothers need support
during pregnancy and during the infancy of their children. Developmental monitoring
to address maternal and infant nutrition and health should begin before childbirth and
continue throughout early childhood. However, the various National Reports indicate that
the situation of Roma women is often very difficult.
Firstly, a sizeable proportion of Roma women do not receive sufficient health care and
support in the pre- and postnatal period (see Table 4 above). In particular, UNICEF reports
refer to the effects of malnutrition, un-spaced births, and depression that undermine the
care that Roma women would wish to give each new-born child.
Secondly, the domestic situation of Roma mothers is often highly stressful: little or
no income, large families, unsanitary dwellings in which to rear children, and greater
tolerance of domestic violence.
53
Thirdly, there is a tendency for Roma girls, particularly in the more traditional settlements,
to leave education early and to marry young. According to the National Report from
Romania, childhood ends rapidly in many traditional Roma communities, as the age for
marriage is significantly lower than among the majority population and in many instances,
lower than the law allows.
54
Table 6. Female age of marriage in the former Yugoslav Republic of
Macedonia and in Serbia
The former Yugoslav
Republic of
Macedonia
Serbia
Average female age of marriage 24.3 (2003) 29 (2010)*
Average percentage of total women married
before 18 years
10.4% 8.0%
Percentage of Roma women married
before age 18 years
48.6% 53.7%**
Percentage of Roma girls married before 15 years 11.4% 16.2%**
Sources: Macedonian and Serbian National Reports; Vital statistics; SORS and UNICEF MICS (2010)
for Serbia.
* Vital statistics, 2010.
** MICS, 2010.
53 According to the UNICEF MICS 2005 survey of Serbia, over 35 per cent of Romani women believe that it is
justied for a husband to beat his wife when she neglects the children or goes out without telling him or argues
with him, or if she refuses to have sex with him. The corresponding gure for women at national level in Serbia
is 5.8 per cent. A parallel nding was reached by a study for ESE (Association for Emancipation, Solidarity and
Equality of Women in Macedonia), which indicated that almost half of Romani women surveyed had experienced
domestic violence. (Bernard van Leer Foundation, 2010). Whether the samples used in these surveys were large
enough to be probative is open to question, but their nding concurs with American research using much larger
research samples, viz. that domestic violence occurs signicantly more often in low income families (see Economic
Determinants and Consequences of Child Maltreatment, Lawrence M. Berger, Jane Waldfogel, OECD, 2011).
54 Voicu, M. & Popescu, R. (2007). It is important to note, as Voicu and Popescu (2007) underline, that there are
signicant differences across Roma communities where early marriage and patriarchal community control over
individual lives are concerned. These authors distinguish between three different types of community: traditional
communities, where community control is very powerful, the education stock is very low and the involvement of
women in work outside the home is almost non-existent, non-traditional rural communities, where community
control is less powerful, but where opportunities for women to work outside the home remain limited and do not
threaten gender roles; and non-traditional urban communities, where community control is relaxed, the education
stock is similar to that of the non-traditional rural communities, and opportunities exist for women to engage in
paid work outside the home.
37
The outcome is increased risk of developmental disabilities in children born to teenage
mothers. In addition, the early marriage age compromises the education of Roma
girls and obliges them to cut short their schooling. Early marriages can result in early
pregnancy and social isolation, and reinforces the gendered nature of Roma poverty
(UNICEF, 2006). In sum, many factors can interfere with the Roma childs developmental
readiness for school.
55
Under-spending on social and educational services
We have suggested in the previous section that in addition to discrimination caused
by hostility and racism, part of the discrimination against Roma citizens is institutional,
that is, exclusion is often a consequence of poorly functioning systems of health, social
welfare, and education. The weak financing of these services affect disproportionately the
health and well-being of children from low-income backgrounds. The relative weakness of
social support systems in the four countries can be seen by comparing their investments
in social and education programmes with the average investment in these systems
across the EU-27 countries, as shown in Table 7.
56
Table 7. Public spending on social systems
Percentage of GDP EU-27 Czech
Republic
The former
Yugoslav
Republic of
Macedonia
Romania Serbia
Public health spending 7.5
per cent
6.2
per cent
7.1
per cent
4.8
per cent
6.5
per cent
Social protection
expenditure
26.2
per cent
18.6
per cent
17.0
per cent
12.8
per cent
18.1
per cent
Family and child benefits 2.1
per cent
1.4
per cent
1.0
per cent
1.2
per cent
0.45
per cent
Public education
expenditure
5.0
per cent
4.2
per cent
3.8
per cent
4.25
per cent
4.5
per cent
Annual per pupil
expenditure in EUR
EUR
6,251
EUR
4,452
EUR
1,438
EUR
1,000 est.
Early childhood education
and care
0.5
per cent
0.51
per cent
0.33
per cent
0.77
per cent
0.43
per cent
Sources: EUROSTAT, 2011: the year of reference for public health is 2006, (updated 2008);
for social protection 2007; for education, 2007; National Report researchers, 2011.
As a footnote, it is interesting to note that social protection expenditure includes
spending on old-age and survivor pensions; sickness/health care; disability; family/
children; unemployment housing and social exclusion. In an ageing Europe-27, most social
expenditure flows toward pensions and health care for senior citizens accounting for 46.2
per cent of total benefits or 11.9 per cent of GDP. This sum constitutes a far greater share
of national budget than allowances spent on children and families. Because Roma people
55 Developmental readiness for school includes health and nutritional status, socio-emotional development
and the communication and social skills that prepare the child for life in society and not just for school.
(Bowman, Donovan & Burns, 2001). This concept is distinguished from school readiness which normally refers
to preparation for school i.e. is limited to the knowledge and 3R skills deemed necessary to participate in
primary education.
56 The disparity between countries is not just a question of political will but is also related to different levels of
wealth, different levels of information, traditional differences in social protection systems, demographic trends,
unemployment rates and other institutional and economic factors.
c h a p t e r 2
38
r o m a e a r l y c h i l d h o o d i n c l u s i o n t h e R E C I o v e r v i e w r e p o r t
rarely enjoy pensions (life expectancy is short and/or they do not have sufficient years in
salaried work), social expenditure on the Roma is considerably less per person than for
the majority population.
5. National Kindergarten and Primary Education Systems Are Failing to Recruit,
Include and Educate Roma Children
The 2009 EU Roma Platform meeting in Brussels provided an overview of the current
state of Romani education:
3
A high percentage of Roma children never access the education system.
3
The participation rate of Roma children in preschool education is extremely low.
Existing data sources suggest that a maximum of 20 per cent of Roma children
across Europe are enrolled in preschool, though this improves to more than
50 per cent in the year before compulsory schooling (UNICEF CEE/CIS Regional
Office, 2010).
3
Rates of attendance and completion for Roma children in primary school remain
staggeringly low with a recent estimate by UNICEF suggesting only one Roma child
completes primary school to every four non-Roma children in Central and South
Eastern Europe (ibid.).
3
Roma children, in particular girls, have a very low transition rate into secondary
education.
3
The drop-out rates of Roma children, especially in lower secondary education are
extremely high, reaching well over 50 per cent in most countries. Drop-out rates are
even higher in segregated educational settings.
3
Roma children are inordinately channelled toward special schools, remedial classes or
Roma only schools.
3
In most educational settings attended by Roma, the quality of education received
is invariably lower because of weak curricular standards, insufficient human and
material resources allocated, and low expectations of teachers.
3
There are perverse incentives for Roma parents to enrol children in special schools:
free meals, textbooks, a safer environment for children.
3
For Roma children who access and continue in education, the total years spent in the
education system is, on average, about half the national average.
A survey conducted by UNDP in 2006 found that two out of three Roma do not complete
primary school, as compared with one in seven in majority communities. In South East
Europe, only 18 per cent of Roma youth attend secondary compared with 75 per cent of
the majority community, and less than 1 per cent attends university (Ivanov, 2010). Biro et
al (2009) paint the following picture of Roma education in Serbia:
Data on the education level of Serbian Roma are disheartening (C
uk, 2009).
Approximately 80 per cent of Roma living in Serbia are illiterate or functionally
illiterate. Only 28 per cent of Roma in Serbia have completed elementary education,
only 8 per cent have finished high school, and only 0.3 per cent has graduated from
college or university. Currently, fewer than 20 per cent of Roma children aged 715
are enrolled in Serbian elementary schools and fewer than 10 per cent of Roma
children attend kindergarten. In addition, recent data clearly indicate that Roma
children are over-represented in Serbian schools for special education (Stojanovic &
Baucal, 2007; Koc ic -Rakoc evic & Miljevic , 2003).
In response, the Serbian Ministry of Education has recently taken important steps to
remedy the situation. (see Box 6)
39
Box 6. Initiatives in Serbia to improve education for young children
Two innovative laws have been passed in the Serbian parliament to improve education
opportunities for young children and to ensure fairness of access to disadvantaged
children. The Law on the Fundamentals of the Education System (LOFES) (2009)
57
addresses, among other matters, the inclusion of children and pupils with
developmental problems and disabilities and children and pupils from socially
sensitive groups. The Law underlines that all children have equal rights to education, and
condemns discrimination or segregation of children from the above groups. Outcomes
and standards of education have been introduced (save for preschool instruction and
education).
58
Attention is also given to the participation of children and procedures for
monitoring and protecting the rights of the child and pupil have been made stricter. The
role of Parent Councils in schools has also been defined more clearly. The schools social
role has likewise been strengthened through clear regulations on non-discrimination, the
prohibition of violence, abuse and negligence.
LOFES also contains new regulations by which a fairer enrolment policy will be
practised, with specific implications for Roma children. All children shall be enrolled
and testing will be carried out only after enrolment. The aim of testing is not to decide
on where a child will be placed (all children are recognised to have a right to primary
education) but to ascertain what additional supports a child may need to progress
through primary school. Testing will take place in the mother tongue of the child, in
the presence of a translator. The school is also obliged to develop individual education
plans for all children who need it and an individual programme of Serbian is introduced
for children from national minorities who do not speak the language in which classes
are held. A particularly important innovation is that schools may employ a pedagogical
assistant temporarily, whose task is to provide help and additional support to children in
accordance with their needs.
59
The Law on Pre-school Education (LPE), 2010 outlines the principles of preschool
education and in Article 4 clearly states the main goals of preschool education and
upbringing in Serbia. It proposes: to expand the number of preschool institutions, to
rationalize the network and improve the quality of education for all children of preschool
age. The Law governs: the use of language (for minority children, it is now possible to
organize classes in their first language if more than 50 per cent of parents agree (Article
3); prohibits discrimination, violence and neglect of children (Article 5);
60
regulates
enrolment policy, in the sense that children who come from marginalized groups should
have priority (Articles 13 and 14); and provides the right to supplementary aid and support
to children from marginalized families, children with special needs, hospitalized children
etc. (Article 16).
61
In distant regions where the number and capacities of preschool
institutions are limited or non-existent, the law proposes programmes of travelling
kindergartens and hiring a travelling preschool teacher (Article 21).
57 LFEIS, 2009.
58 Quality standards and self-evaluation system are currently being prepared.
59 Information on Law on the Fundaments, 2009.
60 Determined in detail by Rulebook; Protocol of Institutional Treatment as a Reaction to Violence, Abuse and
Neglect (Ofcial Gazette of the Republic of Serbia, No. 30/2010).
61 Determined by Rulebook: Supplementary Education, Health and Social Support to Children and Pupils, (Ofcial
Gazette of the Republic of Serbia, No. 63/10) mutual document of the Ministry of Education, Ministry of Health
and Ministry of Labour and Social Policy.
c h a p t e r 2
continued on p. 40
40
r o m a e a r l y c h i l d h o o d i n c l u s i o n t h e R E C I o v e r v i e w r e p o r t
The Ministry has backed up these laws with a Common Action Plan for Roma Education
directors and principals should make projections and plans to allow for the presence of
Roma children. In primary, secondary and tertiary education, there is also an affirmative
action programme for Roma children. In addition, two new projects financed to the tune
of 1.8 million Euros by EU-IPA (Instrument for Pre-Accession Assistance) funds are highly
significant for the inclusion of Roma children in the Serbian public education system. The
first Education for All Promoting Accessibility and Quality of Education for the Children
of Marginalized Groups was initiated in 2010 and lasts until 2012; the other Promotion
of Preschool Education in Serbia, IMPRES will begin in February 2011. It is planned to
further expand the number of Roma pedagogical assistants in preschool and primary
schools, a project established in co-operation with OSCE.
62
A second part of the project
is dedicated to the professional improvement of teachers and educators through the
organization of professional training and seminars on inclusive approaches.
Source: National Report for Serbia.
Table 8, based on a number of sources provides a comparative overview of ECEC and
primary school enrolments for Roma and majority children.
Table 8. Comparative data on ECEC and primary school enrolments
for Roma and majority children
Percentage
of enrol-
ments
1
EU-25
(2008)
Czech Republic The former
Yugoslav
Republic of
Macedonia
Romania Serbia
National Roma National Roma National Roma National Roma
Enrolments
childcare
2
26 6 1 7 0.7 20
3
4.5 15 2
Enrolments
kindergar-
ten
84 93/67
4
8
(final
year)
25
5
3.5 70 23
6
38.1 47
Enrolments
primary
school
98 98 70 97 67 93.5 c.70 98 c. 70
7
Completion
primary
school
8
97.5 98 m* 88.5 40
9
m c.55 92.4 28
Enrolling
in sec.
education
95 m 45
10
12.8 85.2 55 76.4 10.2
Sources: EUROSTAT (2008), OSI (2008), Roma Education Fund (2010) and the RECI National Reports.
* Missing data.
1. Enrolment figures are net enrolments; enrolment does not necessarily mean attendance.
All figures for Romani enrolment are estimates due to the lack of disaggregated data.
2. Enrolment in a government licensed or formal service, that is, care and education provided
by a regulated centre-based or family day-care service organised and monitored by a public or
recognised private structure.
62 In 2006, the Ministry of Education introduced Roma pedagogical assistants into primary schools, in cooperation
with the OSCE and with the professional aid of the Centre for Interactive Pedagogy (CIP). More on the subject
can be found in the publication by MoE, EU, OSCE and CIP named Roma Pedagogical Assistants as Agents of
Change, 2010.
41
3. Compulsory education begins from age 5 in Romania. Prior to this, fewer than 20 per cent of all
children are enrolled in kindergarten.
4. EUROSTAT (2008) provides an enrolment average in the Czech Republic of 67 per cent for 36
years in 2006. The 93 per cent average is provided by the National Report and may refer to the
final 56 year, which includes also a zero year in the basic school.
5. 34 years. Obligatory attendance begins at 5 years in the former Yugoslav Republic of
Macedonia.
6. 23 per cent is the Romani enrolment in the final year. 13.2 per cent is the average enrolment
from age 36.
7. According to REF (2008), the percentage may be significantly lower. See also Biro et al (2009)
above.
8. The completion rate is a percentage of those initially enrolled.
9. Only 7 per cent of Roma children complete secondary; 0.1 per cent complete tertiary.
10. This percentage refers to enrolments in upper secondary.
These findings are a matter of serious concern, both for the Roma children and for
the countries concerned. There are few roads into employment in modern service
economies for young adults without literacy and certification either in vocational or
academic subjects. School drop-out or attendance at low-performance special schools
simply reproduces the cycle of poverty and unemployment, deprives economies of the
work and taxation of young Roma adults, and places a heavy burden on welfare and
health systems.
The National Reports and the valuable OSI REI monitoring reports (OSI, 2007) shed light
on the barriers that hinder the improvement of educational outcomes for Roma children
and youth.
Poverty: The economic situation of Roma families is such that the incidental costs of
education materials, textbooks, food and outings are too much for many Roma
parents to assume. Children may also have to contribute to the familys income, which
may interfere with their education; for example, childrens seasonal labour in the former
Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, Romania and in Serbia (picking fruit and vegetables)
occurs in early autumn at the beginning of the school year. For girls, the expectation that
they will help care for younger siblings is a serious barrier to their education.
Teachers low expectations in dealing with Roma children and families from excluded and
minority backgrounds. National kindergarten systems tend to be highly mono-cultural.
Few Roma staff are employed and frequently, according to the focus groups that were
organised by the authors of the National Reports, open prejudice is shown toward Roma
children by teachers and majority parents.
3
I never saw the teacher showing him something in the books, not a letter in his
books by his teacher, not in notebooks, nor did he help him in anything. Focus group
mother, Barajevo, Serbia.
3
If she had good grades, the teacher uses to say: You see, she gets good grades
even if she is a gypsy. Focus group parent, Craiova, Romania.
3
We love them (the Roma children), we help them but at school their colour starts to
matter; the children start to separate, to marginalise Roma, to be unwilling to sit in
the same bench with them. Focus group, teacher, Bucharest, Romania.
3
Children start going to (regular) school, attend it for a while, then become less and
less successful and they start to feel neglected, unwanted. They dont have things
that other kids have. Everyone avoids them. So the child doesnt want to go anymore,
simply refuses to go, so his parents transfer him to a special school, where they also
get benefits Health mediator, Novi Sad.
Limited opportunities for diversity teacher training: In general, very limited in-service
and pre-service training opportunities exist for kindergarten teachers in CSEE countries.
c h a p t e r 2
42
r o m a e a r l y c h i l d h o o d i n c l u s i o n t h e R E C I o v e r v i e w r e p o r t
What does exist focuses for the most part on pedagogy, with far less attention paid to
areas such as minority cultures, diversity and anti-bias training, second language teaching
methodology, parental involvement, whole school improvement, and education for social
justice. As a result, many teachers are still in the mind-set of behaviour management
or as instructors and experts in a particular subject matter, whereas in teaching Roma
children, it is equally necessary to function as facilitators and mediators for children
and parents. According to the National Reports, parenting outreach and education are
organised only to a very limited extent from the kindergartens, and generally by externally
supported initiatives and projects.
The tendency of teachers and education systems to treat all children as if they were
the same and to assume that what works for children from stable majority backgrounds
will also work for children from excluded families.
63
Equality of opportunity is often
considered as treating all children in the same way, e.g. the remark is often heard: The
kindergarten is open to everyone, including Roma children. They just need to come!
This mind-set overlooks the fact that equal is not enough! Frequently, children from
deprived, second-language backgrounds arrive at kindergarten with significant delays in
language and general knowledge. They need patient reception, outreach to their parents,
smaller groups, and experienced empathetic educators. Treating everyone the same also
overlooks the fact that Roma children, like all children, have particular talents and needs,
and may differ very much from each other.
The attitudes of majority parents: Despite national policies that support integrated schools,
resistance exists among majority parents to having their children attend classes with Roma
children. Schools and kindergartens face not only the challenges of educational change, but
also the challenges found in the social fabric of their communities.
The attitudes of Roma parents: There is a widely held belief that many Roma parents do
not wish to send their children to school. This may be true for some parents as their own
experience of education may have been negative. Certainly, the link between education
and employment cannot be clear to a population so deprived of jobs and inclusion.
Vandenbroeck (2007) has commented extensively in recent years on a similar belief
about immigrant parents in Belgium. He points to the tendency in the majority population
to culturalise the deviant behaviour of minority groups, e.g. Immigrant parents dont
like to send their children to services before the age of four or Such or such ethnic
group does not really value education. Vandenbroeck recommends less culturalisation
of motive but more culturalisation of the programmes in which immigrant and ethnic
children are enrolled.
Part of the difficulty for Roma families is that kindergarten services are organised in such
a way as to virtually exclude parents and their manner of rearing children. As a result,
mono-cultural services and organisation predominate, that is, only the values and norms
of mainstream society are reflected in the available services. A further difficulty is added
for Roma parents in that they fear (often rightly) that their children will be bullied and
suffer discrimination in majority institutions. Research also suggests that attitudes to
education are much influenced by the level of education reached by mothers. See Box 7.
63 In one sense, bureaucracies have the duty to treat all children and families in the same way, but to educate
children from deprived backgrounds, teachers must be aware also of both the permanent and unforeseeable
obstacles that these children face, even to attend a services regularly.
43
Box 7. Attitudes to education are linked to education levels
UNICEF MICS data 2005/2006 for the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia showed
that the higher the educational level of mothers, the more likely they were to enrol their
children in preschool. For example, for mothers with no education only 0.7 per cent
enrolled their children in preschool, whereas for mothers with secondary education the
percentage was 28 per cent. This indicates that women who have attained some level of
education are more likely to see the benefits of their childrens early learning.
64
Other research suggests that when Roma parents receive regular and friendly support
to send their children to kindergarten and school, they generally respond positively.
For example, the REI (the OSI Roma Education Initiative 20025) national evaluation of
Bulgaria (2004), which documented parent attitudes among Roma and non-Roma parents,
showed that, regardless of their ethnic affiliation, they (parents) think that school is an
extremely important educational institution in the life of their children. Interviews with
Roma children confirmed that children liked to be at school with their friends, playing
with their classmates, talking with their teachers, and participating in language and
mathematics lessons. In fact, the evaluator reports: Results show that they want to do
more at school reading, writing, and mathematics.
Ineffective governance of early childhood systems: Because of the traditional low
prestige of early care and education in male-dominated ministries, early childhood
administration is often assigned to junior administrators, who are few in number and
have little budget. Yet, this is an area of responsibility which is far more complex and
multi-dimensional than centre-based schooling. The early childhood administrator needs
to be expert not only in early education, but in liaising with health and the social sector,
local government, and in outreach to families and parental education. Sufficient mass
and expertise in ministries is all the more necessary today as increasingly early childhood
services are recognized as a critical policy measure for social inclusion, and thus the
recipient of significant funds and programmes from large donors.
The split nature of country responsibility for young children. With the exception of
Romania, a number of ministries are involved in the early childhood field in the countries
under review. These ministries have different goals, different personnel, different ways
of intervention, different offices and services all working for the same children. This
manner of working has more to do with a traditional division of ministerial competences
than with an adequate response to the needs of young children and families. It creates
at the same time both duplication and large service gaps. Romania is the only country of
the four that has attempted to integrate programming for children under and over 3 years
of age within one ministry.
6. The Lack of Disaggregated Data on Roma Children and Their Progress Prevents
Evidence-Based Planning
This is a major concern of the international and national organisations working for Roma
children. If there is little data, it is difficult to understand how countries can reasonably
hope to make relevant policy and monitor progress for these children. Of course as
64 Rational choice theory is never simple. The use of kindergarten by mothers with secondary education might also
indicate that they are more likely to be employed and thus use preschools because it provides day care.
c h a p t e r 2
44
r o m a e a r l y c h i l d h o o d i n c l u s i o n t h e R E C I o v e r v i e w r e p o r t
several governments hasten to point out there are constraints linked to human rights
issues, the fragmentation of the early childhood field (public and private; central and local,
different definitions, different competences) and conflicting definitions of exclusion
and disability. Yet, as indicated in the Open Society Foundations report by McDonald and
Negrin (2010) No data No Progress, the listing of constraints and difficulties is often
an excuse; other European countries with strong human rights records, e.g. the Nordic
countries and United Kingdom, gather such data on a regular basis, without contravening
the rights of individuals or minorities.
Data approaches to Roma populations seem to be ostrich-like, that is, burying ones
head so as not to see the extent of the challenge, as Table 9 illustrates. The table was
published by the Open Society Foundations office in Hungary in 2008. The alternative
data provided are informed estimates, based on calculations by Roma NGOs and the
international organisations working in these countries.
Table 9. Size of the Roma population in selected countries:
official figures and alternative estimates
Official Roma
population in 000s
Official
percent-
age of
popula-
tion
Official
number
of Roma
children
aged 018,
in 000s
Alternative
Roma
population
in 000s
Alternative
percentage
Alternative
number
of Roma
children
aged 018,
in 000s
Bulgaria 371 4.8 152.8 700800 9.7 309
Czech
Republic
11.7 0.1 5.6 160300 2.3 110
Hungary 190 1.9 81.1 550600 5.7 246
Macedonia 53.9 2.7 22.4 80130 5.2 44
Moldova 12.9 0.4 ... 100200 4.2 ...
Montenegro 2.6 0.4 1.3 20 3.3 10
Romania 535.1 2.5 230.9 1,8002,500 9.9 926
Serbia 108.2 1.4 44.4 350 4.7 144
Slovakia 89.9 1.7 39.1 350370 6.7 157
Source: Open Society Foundations, 2008.
The lack of accurate figures about the Roma population prevents realistic planning,
monitoring and evaluation. Ministries and organisations working for social inclusion or
indeed in more focussed fields such as health and education cannot really know how
many children need to be targeted, what measures are successful, whether they were
implemented in the right way, or used in a way that actually improves the situation. The
various National Reports raised the following issues:
3
Since 1990, the Czech Republic no longer collects disaggregated data on minorities,
which has made it very difficult to develop policy for Roma children. However, strong
progress was achieved by the Ministry of Education from 20082010. Several serious
studies were commissioned in an attempt to have better data on socially excluded
and Roma children. From October to December 2008, the early education unit in the
Ministry collected data on the educational pathways of 8,462 pupils, both males and
females, selected from a representative group of 100 schools (out of 396 schools)
situated in socially excluded neighbourhoods (GAC, 2009). One fifth of all children
were of Roma origin. The aim of the project was to provide an image of educational
45
trajectories of Roma and other socially disadvantaged children and to compare it with
the trajectories and outcome of their non-Roma peers attending the same schools.
Based on a number of such studies, the Ministry drew up in 2010 a national plan for
severely socially disadvantaged children. The policy proposals (as listed below) were
both comprehensive and feasible, but with the most recent change in government,
they have not been attempted to date.
Box 8. Czech draft policy proposal for more effective inclusion of Roma children
3
Carry out proper research and collect evidence on the representation of Roma
children in special schools and determine the level of support needed by these
children in mainstream schools.
3
Develop a National Action Plan for Inclusive Education to attend to the upbringing
and education of Roma children from socially excluded localities and the creation of
inclusive mechanisms for children with special needs.
3
Create suitable conditions for educating students with slight mental handicaps at
regular schools.
3
Create a system of early care for children at risk of social disadvantage and their
families, in co-operation with the Ministries of Health, Labour and Social Affairs, and
for Regional Development.
3
Continue the system of early care into kindergarten and primary and expand services
provided in this area by non-profit organisations.
3
Create Centres for Support of Inclusive Education in each of the Czech regions,
which would provide methodological care for educational workers, students and their
families at all levels of the education system.
3
Develop teacher skills for working in an inclusive environment through pre-graduate
and further education.
3
Expand the spectrum and availability of compensatory measures that schools can take
advantage of in order to improve the success rate of socially disadvantaged children.
3
Emphasise the principle of respect for diversity in all educational programmes.
3
Provide subsidies to expand individual education.
3
Create a platform for society-wide discussions and sharing examples of good practice.
Apart from this initiative, our knowledge of numbers, enrolments, completion rates,
etc. is derived basically from external studies, carried out by Roma or international
organisations, such as UNICEF, Open Society Foundations and the World Bank. Many
sources including the Committee on the Rights of the Child contend that successive
Czech governments have not made sufficient efforts to collect disaggregated data on
Roma children and their families.
In the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia, governmental weaknesses in data
collection and monitoring are frequently identified in the European accession Progress
Report. For example, data on employment and unemployment; on enrolments in special
schools and classes; on children with special needs and disabilities; on children deprived
of parental care, on children in orphanages, on inclusion in health insurance, on various
direct and indirect forms of discrimination are not disaggregated and, as a result, fail
to show the real situation of the Roma and other excluded groups. Without data on
children, disaggregated by age, ethnic background and other social features (housing,
employment, health and education), it is not possible to design informed policies.
Disaggregated data collection is also weak in Romania: the last analytic study of the
whole pre-school education system was carried out in 2003, funded by the UNICEF
c h a p t e r 2
46
r o m a e a r l y c h i l d h o o d i n c l u s i o n t h e R E C I o v e r v i e w r e p o r t
Office, but no specific data related to Roma children were available. As the McDonald
and Negrin (2010) OSI study, No Data, No Progress underlines the fact that a start must
be made in the CSEE countries to collecting disaggregated data on Roma children, if the
progress of these children through the education system is to be monitored effectively.
In Serbia, harmonized and standardized procedures for data collection are still lacking.
Ministries and other official bodies each collect data in their own way, which means that
existing data are generally not comparable. Although some agencies have developed lists
of indicators to measure, for example, health conditions among vulnerable groups, lack of
harmonization and sample size undermine reliability and comparability. In addition, where
young children are concerned, aggregated data are usually given (again from different
sources), which cannot be used to monitor the inclusion of Roma children or compare
their status to the general population. Data exchange between local and national levels is
also rare. For example, centres for social care, which collect data on children who are not
included in the education system, rarely share these data with schools.
65
Neither do local
institutions promptly submit data on the inclusion of the Roma population to the services
and ministries in charge.
66
In order to address the challenge, the Ministry of Education
has adopted a Rulebook on Education Records (2010), and has issued regulations on the
obligation to collect data and ensure their input into a new information system.
67
These
regulations will cover research and data on the Pre-Primary Preparation (PPP) year and
on school age children. Data collection on the younger children from 06 years is still
not a priority, although their inclusion would allow ministries to establish base line data
(recording the initial condition of Roma children), and thereby, to monitor the outcomes of
kindergartens and schools.
65 Baucal and Stojanovic, 2010, pp. 2025.
66 As early as in 2002 the Ministry of Education started establishing the EIS system which was to cover all
education levels and secure a data base on nances, working conditions, number of children, etc. EIS has never
started operating in full, now there has been a transfer to the Central Education Information System which is to
fully start operating in the year 2011/12.
67 Baucal and Stojanovic, 2010.
47
CHAPTER 3
Conclusions and Principles of Action
Key Messages of Chapter 3
3
Roma children are valuable: Europe and its member states can no longer afford to
neglect their future. The barriers to their access must be torn down.
3
In addition to legislation, governments need to invest in communication and
education to renew majority notions of citizenship and democracy.
3
Early childhood policies for Roma children will be more effective if linked closely with
EU Roma initiatives. These policies also benefit from inclusion within national policies
for all children, but with a strong Romani input.
3
In contexts of extreme poverty and exclusion, developmental readiness for school
requires a multi-dimensional concept of early childhood programming that places a
strong emphasis on early intervention and womens education.
3
For successful policy implementation, effective governance of the kindergarten sector
is critical.
3
Effective kindergartens and schools for excluded children need expanded services
and appropriate pedagogies. A free place in kindergarten should be provided for at
least two years to every child coming from an absolute poverty background.
3
Evidence-based policy in favour of Roma children will not be achieved without
research, consultation and data collection.
1. Roma Children Are Valuable: Europe Cannot Afford to Neglect Their Future
Roma children need far more attention, protection and investment from the European
Union and its member states. Like all children, they are subjects of basic human rights,
as expressed in the United Nations Convention on the Rights of the Child and in much
European and national legislation. Like all citizens, their parents have rights to education,
health care, housing and employment, and eventually to social welfare if employment
fails. These rights imply a duty on governments and societies to provide protection and,
in a more intelligent way, to prevent poverty and exclusion from taking place. In its child
poverty work, UNICEF shows clearly the huge impact of government action on outcomes
for young children, as Figure 1 illustrates.
Commenting on the figures on which the table is based, UNICEF (2007) underlined that
higher government spending on family and social benefits is generally associated with
c h a p t e r 3
48
r o m a e a r l y c h i l d h o o d i n c l u s i o n t h e R E C I o v e r v i e w r e p o r t
lower child poverty rates.
68
No OECD country devoting 10 per cent or more of GDP to
social transfers has a child poverty rate higher than 10 per cent. No country devoting less
than 5 per cent of GDP to social transfers has a child poverty rate of less than 15 per
cent. In sum, variation in government policy appears to account for most of the variation
in child poverty levels between OECD countries.
Figure 1. Percentage of children remaining in poverty
before and after governmental social transfers
Source: UNICEF, 2007.
Note: The dark grey bars in the chart show the percentage of children born into poor families,
before government has made available grants for parenthood, birth grants, child benefits,
entitlements to services, etc.; the other bars show the reduced percentage of children in poverty
after government grants have become available.
Readers in 2011 may ask if governments can afford to spend more than 10 per cent
of GDP on social transfers in the present economic crisis? Where Roma children are
concerned, the real question is: Can Europe afford not to invest generously in these
children? The commonly accepted number of Roma in Europe is about 12 million people.
The current high fertility rate and low overall life expectancy of Roma people (estimated
at around 63 years) means that the number of Roma children under 6 years of age is
probably around 1.5 million. This number is significantly more than the number of like
children in Spain and roughly equal to the sum total of young children in the five Nordic
countries combined.
In a rapidly ageing Europe (projections for several European countries suggest that by
2050, there will be three retired persons for every four working adults), Roma children
will be an extremely valuable asset if they can be protected, educated and brought into
the skilled work force at increasingly higher levels (Kzdi, G. and Kertesi, G., 2006). As
emphasised in the recent document: An EU Framework for National Roma Integration
Strategies up to 2020 (Europe Commission, 2011), the Roma represent a growing share
of the European working age population, with an average age of 25 compared to the EU
average of 40. Some 35.7 per cent of Roma are under 15, compared to 15.7 per cent of
the EU population. In Bulgaria and Romania, Roma already form one in five of the new
labour market entrants. According to calculations by the World Bank (2010),
68 UNICEF uses the OECD denition of child poverty, that is, children living in households whose total equivalised
incomes is below 50 per cent of the median national equivalised household income. The EU denition is 60 per
cent of the median equivalised household income. The percentage of households at risk of poverty is therefore
signicantly higher when the EU measure is used.
2.4%
2.8%
8.8%
11.8%
18.1%
23.2%
12.7%
19.9%
15.6%
16.4%
21.9%
26.6%
Denmark
Finland
Hungary
Poland
Portugal
USA
5% 10% 15% 20% 25%
49
if the employment rate of Roma could be raised to that of the majority, the overall rate
of employment would be increased by 5 per cent to 10 per cent depending on the
proportion of the Roma population. This would trigger a substantial improvement in all
the indicators contributing to the growth of GDP per capita. Although they may be a
small percentage of all Europeans, Roma children in the future can make a significant
difference to European well-being and prosperity.
Box 9. The costs of not taking action on behalf of Roma children
The costs of not taking action are clearly indicated by the European Parliament in
its Explanatory Note on the EU strategy on Roma inclusion (2010/2276 (INI)). By not
prioritizing Roma inclusion, Member States incur significant losses that include:
3
The indirect cost of lost GDP: As a result of social exclusion, unemployed Roma fail to
produce any domestic product.
3
Social assistance and welfare benefits as well as the social and health care insurance
provided by the state to those in poverty.
3
Higher health costs due to substandard living conditions.
3
Wasted education expenditure: The cost of segregated and/or low standard schools
that fail to provide quality education is wasted money.
3
Extra safety costs, due to higher crime rates caused by socio-economic deprivation;
3
Administrative costs of supervising the flow of welfare expenditure.
In brief, it is important to realise that the inclusion of Roma is not merely an obligation in
terms of human rights, but also an economic necessity for Europe. This being said, we
wish to underline that though demographers, economic ministries, business leaders,
etc. all have a place in the discussion, the rights and needs of young children no matter
what their origin can provide a common focus for competing considerations concerning
the inclusion of the Roma. To integrate these children in an equitable way, democracy
needs to become a fundamental value in all countries and a central aim in European
policies and education (Moss, 2011).
Barriers to the Roma childs appropriate access to education
What can be done to ensure better inclusion of Roma children in national care and
education systems? Inter alia (the recommendations in the following chapters will fill
out the picture), it would help greatly if countries were to remove the major barriers to
the access of Roma children to child health and kindergarten services. These barriers are
well outlined in the various national reports. On the supply side, there exists a narrow
conception of early childhood services that sees early development services as beginning
only at the kindergarten stage. This leads in turn to a lack of effective outreach to Roma
settlements by the health and education services. In sum, the true foundation stage
the childs early years in the family environment is neglected. Many Roma families
and mothers do not receive sufficient support from the public services in their child-
rearing tasks. As mentioned many times in this text, this is the critical stage in human
development when young children need health and proper nutrition, and a stress-reduced
family environment where they can grow and develop. Support to Roma families and
mothers during this critical stage will also lead to less defensive attitudes toward public
services and a better appreciation of child development and early education. Where
access to kindergarten services is concerned, the National Reports list the following
barriers: insufficient numbers of kindergarten services, especially in rural areas;
c h a p t e r 3
50
r o m a e a r l y c h i l d h o o d i n c l u s i o n t h e R E C I o v e r v i e w r e p o r t
the distance of services from the Roma settlements; the extreme poverty of many Roma
families that prevents them from sending their children outside the settlement or to pay
for the incidental costs of education (proper clothes, shoes, transport etc.) even when
places are free; their lack of identity and other necessary papers; enrolment criteria that
give preference to majority working parents rather than to social inclusion; the mono-
cultural nature of national kindergartens and schools which assume that Roma children
must always adapt to majority norms rather than promoting diversity and recognition of
Roma language and culture; the hostility of majority parents and teachers toward the
presence of Roma children.
Box 10. Why Roma parents in Romania do not enrol children in early
education services
According to several focus groups organised in the context of the RECI National Report
for Romania, the most frequent reason given by Roma parents is distance from services,
invoked most often by rural parents. A second reason cited was the lack of financial
resources and thirdly, the preference of Roma mothers to stay at home and look after
their children. Other reasons for non-enrolment are: that it is preferable for children to
stay at home when they are very young; that the services provided by kindergarten are
not stimulating enough; that the staff are not friendly to Roma families and their children.
Among the reasons for which Roma parents withdraw their children from kindergarten or
allow them to drop out are: financial reasons (44.7 per cent), the low quality level of the
education offered (34 per cent), emigration (12.8 per cent); the childs immaturity or state
of health (8.5 per cent). The perception by Roma parents that discriminatory enrolment
practices exist and that teachers lack interest in their children are also reasons for a delay
in enrolling their children.
By contrast, teachers say that Roma children do not attend kindergarten regularly
because they have to look after younger siblings, or because their parents cannot afford
to dress them on a daily basis or provide them with a snack. Teachers also say that
children do not come because parents do not wake up in the morning to bring them to
the kindergarten (Focus group, June 2010). In sum, a wide variety of reasons can be
advanced for the low enrolment and attendance rates of Roma children.
However, the reasons advanced by Roma parents have much in common with comments
by parents from other vulnerable or isolated groups, regardless of ethnicity. Distance
from the local kindergarten, lack of public transport, and various socio-economic reasons
are common to all poor, under-served communities. The situation is made worse for
Roma families, because of discrimination, illiteracy (not being able to read, they lack
information about enrolment times and procedures), and the lack of identity papers.
Many Roma children do not have a birth certificate or a residential address. In turn,
kindergartens will not enrol them because of the specific norms that apply to all children
when entering kindergarten.
Source: National Report for Romania.
Most of these barriers can be addressed only from the national level, e.g. the lack of
identity papers; the extreme poverty of Roma families; or the intolerable housing in
which so many Roma children live. A solution to these upstream problems could do
much to integrate Roma families and provide them with the possibility of sending their
children to early childhood services and schools. Education initiatives need also to be
51
taken, e.g. to introduce weighted capitation financing linked to socio-economic and
second language status. Such funding would make it in the interest of kindergartens and
local governments to pursue inclusion in their enrolment policies and, at the same time,
provide kindergartens or at least, community services in Roma areas.
The question of distance from services is particularly important when dealing with young
children. Because of the inappropriateness and difficulties of transporting very young
children to outside services, it would greatly help if policies to create simple community
services for children in disadvantaged communities were developed and financed (see
Conclusion 4 below). If new kindergartens cannot be built, then simple health and
stimulation programmes for the youngest children can be extended upward to include
children of kindergarten age.
Addressing barriers at local level
Local authorities, in consultation with Roma leaders and families, must also address
barriers to access at local level more precisely and take the necessary steps to address
them. Here, the link with central government is critical and the willingness of central
government to enforce its own regulations. Mechanisms must be developed to enhance
co-operation with local government. Experiences from other countries suggest that
incentives are important: local governments can develop successful early childhood
services if they have central financial and technical support for pre- and in-service
training, supervision, standards, monitoring, evaluation and tracking systems.
The National Reports suggest that local government needs to serve excluded children
better through more equitable service mapping and enrolment practices. In Hungary a
country with a relatively high kindergarten enrolment of Roma children from the age of
three years there is, according to statistical data for 2009/2010, no kindergarten service
available in 29 per cent of local governments. These local governments are situated, for
the most part, in areas where there are Roma majorities. Although such precise figures
are unavailable in the countries under review, the situation seems very similar: health
posts and kindergartens have not yet been created in most Roma rural settlements. The
situation is improving through the employment of Roma health mediators and education
assistants, but there is still a great lack of equity for rural and marginalised urban
populations with regard to their access to public services.
Roma children in kindergartens
According to the National Reports, once Roma children are enrolled, more supervision
of administration and teacher attitudes towards Roma children and parents is needed.
In sum, to avoid discrimination, there is a need to monitor school processes and the
personal attitudes of school staff. The issue of teacher interaction with Roma children
and families is treated in Conclusion 6 below on Effective kindergartens and schools for
excluded children need mainstreaming, expanded services and appropriate pedagogies.
69
As can be seen from the focus groups organised with Roma parents and other
stakeholders in the four countries, neglectful or hostile attitudes by teachers and other
public services personnel have become over time an important barrier to the use of
public services by Roma parent (see Box 10).
In addition, both national inspectorates and local monitoring may wish to consider current
work methodologies. The RECI focus groups often testify that neither Roma parents
nor children feel comfortable in current kindergarten settings: Roma parents may not be
69 Pedagogical issues will be treated in far greater detail in a forthcoming Council of Europe/UNESCO publication.
c h a p t e r 3
52
r o m a e a r l y c h i l d h o o d i n c l u s i o n t h e R E C I o v e r v i e w r e p o r t
welcomed or involved, and Roma children may find the activities have little connection with
what they know or need. It is rare also that they can participate in after-school activities
or in the choice of such activities. There is also the question of the quality of satellite
kindergartens and schools. In these satellite centres offshoots of the larger district school
quality is generally low and missed classes are frequent because of lack of backups for
ill teachers. Young inexperienced teachers, fewer materials, decrepit buildings, abridged
curricula, and low expectations can be the rule rather than the exception.
Attention also needs to be given at local level to the question of absenteeism, to explore
whether this is due to the distance of Roma families from services, an unwelcoming
kindergarten climate, inappropriate pedagogy, or from a failure to respond to the
particular needs of Roma children.
70
Absenteeism needs also to be followed up and an
obligation placed on schools to find out the reasons for repeated absences.
Toward equitable enrolment practice
With good will and better planning, enrolment practices that favour majority, dual earner
families, can be changed. The following is an example of what can be done, taken from
Ghent, a city of the Flemish Community in Belgium.
Box 11. Toward equitable enrolments
Ghent was the first city in Flanders to create a special enrolment procedure known as
the Tinkelbel procedure to ensure the equitable enrolment of children from vulnerable
groups in public child care centres. Today, all parents wishing to enrol their child in child
care now have to contact a central office, which assigns a place to children according
to set social criteria. In so doing, the Tinkelbel procedure has ended the traditional first
in, first served criterion that favoured higher educated two income families. Tinkelbel
takes into account specific priority criteria that favour single mothers, parents who speak
another language, parents with low incomes, parents in crisis situations. As a result,
the population of the municipal child care centres is a reflection of the actual Ghent
population in regard to income, working situation, origins, family composition etc.
The latest internal report of Tinkelbel (2009) shows that in the city:
3
20 per cent of the parent with a child in a public centre are in training.
3
16.6 per cent of the children live in single-parent families.
3
8.6 per cent are enrolled due to crisis situations in the family.
3
19 per cent of the parents have a low education.
3
19 per cent of children come from low-income families.
3
32 per cent of the families speak a home language other than Flemish.
The Ghent Childcare Service closely monitors this project and provides statistical data
on access and on the (un)equal distribution of child care places within the city. These
detailed figures are considered when planning new provision. The Pedagogical Centre has
also set up a policy for the integration of children with disabilities in the day care centres.
Source: Peters, J. and Vandenbroeck, M. (2009).
70 There is some evidence from both Romania and Serbia that the provision of food to Roma children and conditional
cash grants to parents can ensure the regular attendance of Roma children.
53
Partly underlying the exclusion of Roma families is the difficulty for local authorities in
financing the current full-day organisation of the kindergarten service. Such services
can be justified in the richer European countries in which high percentages of women
work. The same need is not present in the CSEE countries where, in the countryside,
employment for women is almost non-existent and in the cities, the percentage of
employed women is relatively low. A more equitable and fit-for-purpose solution at least
until there is some approach to full employment in the CEE countries may be to provide
a daily three or four hour early education service in all communities, focused on the
poorest children (see Conclusion 6 below).
2. In Addition to Legislation, Governments Need to Invest in Communication and
Education to Renew Majority Notions of Citizenship and Democracy
In a sense majority attitudes and exclusionary behaviours are the problem. It is clear
from the European Union Minorities and Discrimination Survey (EU-MIDIS) and the EU
Gallup Poll conducted for the European Fundamental Rights Agency in 2009 that racist
and discriminatory attitudes among the majority reinforce the social exclusion of Roma
populations (see Chapter 2 part 3 above). As expressed by Thomas Hammarberg, the
Council of Europe Commissioner for Human Rights:
The necessary legal and institutional frameworks are in place, but anti-Roma
sentiment in political discourse and in the media is still a major problem. Prejudice
among the majority population remains strong and has negative repercussions on the
lives of many Roma.
The situation is a serious blot on Europes human rights record. The question is raised:
what can be done to change negative majority attitudes toward the Roma and particularly
within the scope of the RECI project negative attitudes toward Roma among young
children and their parents?
Already much is being done at European Union level through, for example:
3
The PROGRESS programme, including the For Diversity: Against Discrimination
information campaign.
3
The European Agenda for Culture which promotes cultural diversity and intercultural
dialogue as a process contributing to European identity, citizenship and social
cohesion, including the development of the intercultural competences of citizens.
3
Awareness and media campaigns that are aimed at changing mainstream mind-
sets through communication and education also exist. For example, the European
Union has supported fairer news coverage about the Roma and financed media
programmes, such as Dosta! Go beyond the prejudice, discover the Roma!
71
These actions need to be supported at national level by establishing anti-discrimination
bodies and/or procedures that can be invoked when rights and obligations are
disregarded, for example:
3
Equality bodies or monitoring committees, working closely with Romani NGOs and
legal practitioners, which have the capacity to draw attention to non-compliance,
when it occurs at central or local government levels.
71 The series aims to inform the majority about how Roma families live, and to build bridges between Roma and the
rest of the society.
c h a p t e r 3
54
r o m a e a r l y c h i l d h o o d i n c l u s i o n t h e R E C I o v e r v i e w r e p o r t
3
Research and other educational bodies dedicated to raising public awareness about
existing rights, not least in the education field.
3
Financial disincentives to combat inaction in implementing equality and inclusion
policies, e.g. withdrawal of European and national funding if agreed policies are not
implemented, such as, involving and supporting Roma civil society in both the design
and implementation of policies and projects that concern them.
Discrimination against young Roma children
In regard to the education of young children, many excellent anti-discrimination projects
and guidelines already exist, for example:
The Council of Europes Recommendation (2000,4) on the education of Roma/
Gypsy children in Europe. The main chapters of this recommendation refer to: the
recognition of Roma as a minority; training for teachers and other Roma education
staff; development and distribution of teaching material; language teaching; studies and
dissemination of information on Romani history and culture; the highlighting of positive
experiences; etc.
National ministries of education and international organisation have also taken initiatives
to develop inter-cultural curricula and retrain teachers in anti-bias attitudes. In this respect,
the social justice training in Step by Step programmes is well known;
72
as is the bilingual-
intercultural work of UNICEF, including its insistence on respect for the UN Convention on
the Rights of the Child in all childrens services.
However, the experience of many Roma children in kindergartens and schools can be
extremely negative, even at kindergarten level. The Focus Groups for Roma mothers and
other stakeholders, organised by the authors of the National Report, unanimously refer to
neglect by teachers and hostility and bullying by other children.
Segregated schools and classes
Surprisingly, Roma parents referred much less often to the segregation of their children
into special schools classes, with devalued curricula and often (especially in the majority
Roma schools) weakly qualified staff and poorly endowed learning environments. But, as
mentioned in Chapter 2 part 5, perverse incentives are offered to Roma parents to enrol
children in special schools, for example, free meals, textbooks, and a safer environment
for children. In order to offer Roma parents a real choice, these incentives should also be
made available in the mainstream schools.
To turn this situation around will require the long-term engagement of education
ministries and local governments, as not only has an unhelpful tradition of segregation
been built up but also majority parents find an interest in the arrangement and defend
it strongly. This is a serious obstacle to overcome in any country and may need to
be tackled both directly through pressure on local governments and by media and
other information campaigns. In the long-term, such prejudice has to be tackled by
the national education system through the teaching and practice of democracy in
kindergartens and schools. The general modernisation and improvement of national
education systems can also be a means of breaking down exclusionary attitudes, e.g.
through promoting inquiry-based learning, and the ability to work cooperatively with
72 The Step by Step Program was launched by the Open Society Foundations in Central Eastern Europe/Eurasia in 1994.
It has grown into a network of national NGOs and the regional International Step by Step Association (ISSA).
55
others; encouraging team-based project work; valuing social and civic competences,
and respect for diversity.
Toward democratic values and practice in kindergartens and schools
From the RECI perspective, a major aim of anti-discrimination policy should be to
emphasise the practice of democracy in all school and educational programmes. Starting
Strong II, the final report of the international review of early childhood policies conducted
by the OECD (2006), concludes with a call to aspire toward ECEC systems that support
broad learning, participation and democracy. This means an early childhood system that
encourages inclusive attitudes among young children, and recognises the democratic
dimension in parental involvement (OECD, 2006: 218219). The approach differs greatly
from simply teaching about human rights and democracy which, in general, may not
affect the structure and operation of the education system itself.
A first priority is to understand the goals and purposes of education. Because of PISA,
PIRLS, TIMSS, etc. it is easy for ministries and the general public to believe that education
is about individual and national performance in easily measurable subject areas. The
UNESCO Delors Report (1996) proposes broader goals for education: Learning to be;
learning to do; learning to learn; and learning to live together. Learning is fundamentally
a social activity and its goals should include in addition to its utility for individuals the
protection and development of society. This basic philosophy is shared by the great
educators of the 20
th
century, such as, John Dewey, Paolo Freire or Loris Malaguzzi.
Writing about the Reggio Emilia experience, the Italian authors, Cagliari, Barozzi and
Giudici, (2004) note:
The educational project of Reggio Emilia is by definition a participation-based project:
its true educational meaning is to be found in the participation of all concerned. This
means that everyone children, teachers and parents is involved in sharing ideas,
in discussion, in a sense of common purpose and with communication as a value
In the Reggio Emilia experience, participation, is a value, an identifying feature of the
entire experience, a way of viewing those involved in the educational process and the
role of the schoolThis idea of participation, therefore, defines the early childhood
centre as a social and political place and thus as an educational place in the fullest
sense. However, this is not a given, so to speak, it is not a natural, intrinsic part of
being a school. It is a philosophical choice, a choice based on values.
Source: Cited in Moss (2010).
Applied to kindergartens, this implies a conscious effort to involve parents and
communities including Roma communities in the education of their children.
A first task would be to ensure that early childhood centres and schools are child- and
family-friendly and that basic principles of living together are guaranteed. According to
UNICEF (2008), the five pillars of the child-friendly kindergarten are: inclusiveness, a
healthy, protective and gender-sensitive environment; the engagement of families and
communities; effective pedagogy (based on play and other child-centred methods); and
the achievement of a smooth transition into the formal primary school environment
(UNICEF, 2008). This position is well supported by researchers such as Irvine (2002) and
Ogbu (1978) in the USA or Vandenbroeck in Europe (2007), who have all underlined the
importance of school climate. According to DECET
73
(2008) a European association
73 The Diversity in Early Childhood Education and Training (DECET) network represents NGOs and institutions
focused on diversity in Europe. See their website: http://www.decet.org.
c h a p t e r 3
56
r o m a e a r l y c h i l d h o o d i n c l u s i o n t h e R E C I o v e r v i e w r e p o r t
working for diversity in early childhood education and training a high quality early
childhood service is one where:
3
Every child, parent and staff member should feel that s/he belongs. This implies an
active policy to take into account family cultures when constructing the curriculum
and daily routines.
3
Every child, parent and staff member is empowered to develop the diverse aspects
of his/her different identities. This implies that the curriculum fosters multiple
identity building and multilingualism by building bridges between the home and the
institutional environment as well as with the local community.
3
Everyone can learn from each other across cultural and other boundaries.
3
Everyone can participate as active citizens. This implies that staff develop an explicit
anti-bias approach and takes appropriate action to involve all parents.
The mixing of children in services
Another democratic goal will be to ensure the mixing of children in services and to
end the practice of segregated education. This issue needs to be seen not only from
a human rights perspective but also from one of education effectiveness. The present
channelling of low-income and second language children into separate schools holds
back these children and pulls down the general performance of national education
systems. Despite strong pressure from parents with bright children and sometimes
from teachers who lack the creativity needed to teach children with learning difficulties
education research shows that, on the whole, streaming or tracking before upper
secondary level does not greatly enhance the learning of the more advanced children,
but affects very negatively the learning of children assigned to streamed, lower grade
classrooms. Children from disadvantaged backgrounds and children with learning needs
of various sorts who together often make up a third of the school population learn
more effectively in mixed, non-streamed classrooms (for an overview of the research,
see Harlen and Malcolm (1999) from the Scottish Council for Research in Education.
See also, studies by Slavin (1990), PISA (2004), Hanushek and Wossmann (2005), the
National Middle School Association Research Summary, (2007).
Children with additional learning needs
With regard to students with special or additional learning needs, the research is strongly
on the side of mixed grouping. Although differentiated teaching methods are also needed
within the mixed-ability classroom, the clear conclusion from the research is that:
3
Mixed grouping results in positive effects on academic achievement, self-esteem and
interpersonal relationships of lower achieving students.
3
Children with special need require for their development interactions with peers,
opportunities to develop higher-level thinking, recognition of their contributions, and
equal access to quality instruction.
According to UNICEF (2010), the practice of streaming or ability-grouping helps to
reproduce the status quo and can be detrimental to education and social justice goals.
Research on young children shows with considerable certainty that children 3 to 8
years of age display both positive and negative attitudes towards other children with
differentiating features and/or developmental delays. Connollys (2009) research in
Northern Ireland finds that even by the age of 3 years, children have already begun to
absorb discriminatory attitudes from their parents and that by the age of 5 years can
show hostile reactions to other young children outside their group.
57
By contrast, inclusive education helps to foster a cohesive social culture. Children in
mixed classrooms led by inclusive teachers show:
1. Reduced fear of human difference accompanied by an increased comfort and
awareness.
2. Growth in social cognition.
3. Improvements in self-concepts.
4. Development of personal principles, and
5. Warm and caring friendship relationships with children from the out-group
(UNICEF, 2010).
Children exposed to a more diverse peer group from an early age show far more
positive attitudes towards the others than their parents generation. In sum, the
most effective way to influence thinking about difference and/or disability is personal
contact. This further demonstrates the importance of starting inclusive education as
early as possible.
3. The Major Responsibility for Early Childhood Policies Remains with National and
Local Governments. Their Efforts Will Be More Effective if Linked Closely with EU
Roma Initiatives
Member States are primarily responsible for Roma integration, including for Romani
access to key areas such as employment, health care, housing and education. This
competence including competence for early childhood policies is written into all
the major EU treaties. The inclusion of Roma children will not happen unless countries
themselves take the lead in setting priorities and coordinating activities.
For several reasons, Roma inclusion policy must seek to avoid labelling and, in so far as
possible, programmes for Roma children should be part of mainstream national policy for
all children. In parallel, community programmes, specific to the disadvantage, should also
be initiated because:
3
Separate programming risks constructing Roma children as a separate group which,
in the long term, may further inhibit their inclusion in society.
3
Specific programmes for the Roma tend to become poor programmes as, in many
instances, they are at present.
3
When social programmes are presented as focussed on minorities only, they run the
risk of losing majority support. Disadvantage is also present among the majority not
least in the CEE countries and disadvantaged children among the majority generally
far outnumber Roma children.
3
Mainstreaming Roma inclusion issues, rather than treating them as separate issues
falls into line with Principles No. 2 and No. 4 of the Common Basic Principles on
Roma inclusion, explicit but not exclusive targeting and aiming for the mainstream.
From a policy development perspective, all preventive social policies (that is, reducing
the inflow of citizens into poverty) can be national policies. Such policies could include a
minimum income and equitable access to health care, social welfare, early development
and education systems (Frazer et al. 2010). As Conclusion 7 of this report recommends,
what is needed within national systems is disaggregated data and research so that
universal policies can be more responsive to the needs of certain groups and localities.
In parallel, for those children that actually do attend kindergarten, proactive policies are
needed to focus resources on specific neighbourhoods and to provide early diagnosis and
appropriate programmes for children with learning difficulties. Likewise, the inclusion of
c h a p t e r 3
58
r o m a e a r l y c h i l d h o o d i n c l u s i o n t h e R E C I o v e r v i e w r e p o r t
Romani cultural artefacts and language into curricula can be achieved as a right open to all
language groups, once a viable proportion of children speaking that language exists.
The urgent creation of community programmes is needed
At the same time, community-level programmes for mothers and young children are
also critically needed, even if it means leaving aside until the age of 3 or 4 or 5 years
the mixing of Roma and majority children, as advocated in the previous section. When
territorial segregation has already occurred and while children are very young, the mixing
of young children can be achieved only at great cost. Health and education personnel
cannot change existing housing segregation or reasonably expect parents to bring very
young children to municipal services that are far from their homes, especially when
winter climates are rude and no public transport exists.
74
In these cases, services need to
be brought to where people are, with the support and input of the local community.
75
This
manner of programming keeps the child within the family circle and has the advantage of
raising community knowledge and, if properly organised, of providing local employment
(see also the following Section 4).
In this regard, it may be useful to recall that the early childhood field has been a leading
creator of employment in North America in the last two decades (Bartik, 2011) or that
in Romania, most of the approximately 500 health mediators are Roma women. This
is not only significant employment but also makes an indispensable contribution to the
health and education of Roma children.
76
The health mediators role is to identify health
problems and associated social problems, prepare registration with family doctors,
prepare vaccination campaigns and disseminate information regarding the health system,
hygiene, contraception and family planning. They also deal with issues related to the lack
of birth certificates or identity papers and signal social problems to the local authorities.
Trained Roma education assistants play a similar role in education. The small evaluations
of the initiative suggest that Roma assistants have the expertise if not yet the mandate
and financing to show Roma mothers how to support the development and language of
young children and to establish simple community-based play groups and school holiday
activities. In a situation characterised by lack of services, community-based programming
for very young children is a viable alternative and protects as early childhood services
should local democratic choice and the family role in the upbringing of children. The
RECI reports encourage the CSEE countries to expand and finance such positions for
Roma women and to ensure that high performance and years of experience will be
counted toward further training and credits.
Linking national programmes to EU initiatives
Despite the malaise caused by the recent communication: An EU Framework for National
Roma Integration Strategies up to 2020, there are strong advantages to be had from
linking national policy to European Union initiatives. In particular, the EU offers:
74 In any case, the bussing of very young childen is not appropriate.
75 By local community is meant a grouping smaller than the local municipality; in many instances, the latter may not
be at all sensitive to the concerns of Roma parents.
76 Care must be exercised to ensure that this good solution should not become the cause of a new problem, further
distancing the Roma population from the majority. For example, the employment of pedagogical and health-care
assistants and health-care could lead to the belief that only Romani workers can work effectively with the Roma
population, which conveniently absolves administrative services from their responsibility to all citizens.
59
3
A protective human rights and treaty framework: The EU rights and treaty framework
is extremely comprehensive regarding excluded minorities.
3
A collection of legal and policy texts on the situation and inclusion of Roma: Many
important texts treating Romani issues have been voted-in by the Council or by the
European Parliament, which provide common objectives for EU countries regarding
Roma and constitute an accumulated store of knowledge and experience in Roma
policy-making.
3
A dynamic social inclusion policy framework: The EU stimulates and provides
financing for policies in a broad range of governmental fields. One of the key fields
is social inclusion, highlighted in the Lisbon Treaty and reinforced by the new EU
2020 Strategy. Through its Social Protection and Social Inclusion Process, the EU
coordinates and supports Member State actions to combat poverty and focuses
attention increasingly on Roma populations.
3
Active policy initiatives on behalf of Roma: Among the key initiatives in which the
EU has been involved have been the 20052015 Decade of Roma Inclusion and the
Integrated Platform for Roma Inclusion. Within the former, an international conference
on the Right to Education for Every Child: Removing Barriers and Fostering Inclusion
for Roma children was held in Belgrade in June 2009. Within the latter, there has
emerged, for example, the 10 Common Basic Principles on Roma Inclusion (Prague,
2009), a Roadmap for Roma Inclusion (Cordba, 2010) and a strong focus on early
childhood initiatives at the request of the Belgian Presidency (December, 2010).
77
EU stimulation measures to assist the Roma policies of Member States are also
important. For example, Enlargement and Pre-Accession funding is used by the EU to
raise awareness and focus attention on the discrimination and social exclusion faced
by Roma communities in candidate countries. The overview of the Commission is
also critical for the wealthier EU states, as shown, for example, by its intervention in
2010 vis--vis France.
3
Substantial financing for national Roma initiatives: Roma issues are now
mainstreamed within all EU activities. For this reason, Roma inclusion may
be supported through activities financed by various European Union funding
mechanisms
78
and by using national funding in a more effective way.
79
The following
is a citation from the recent EC Communication: An EU Framework for National Roma
Integration Strategies up to 2020:
There are significant amounts of EU technical assistance at Member States
disposal (4 per cent of all Structural Funds), out of which Member States on
average had only used 31 per cent of their planned allocations until late 2009.
These amounts would be lost if not used. When designing their national Roma
integration strategies, Member States should therefore make greater use of EU
technical assistance to improve their management, monitoring and evaluation
capacities also with regard to Roma-targeted projects. This instrument could also
77 The Belgian Presidency discussion paper, in which UNICEF played a strong role, is entitled: Preventing Social
Exclusion through the Europe 2020 Strategy: Early Childhood Development and the Inclusion of Roma families.
78 Among the funds that can be accessed are: the European Social Fund (ESF), which supports the improvement
of living and working conditions of Roma, and invests in education and skills development; the European
Regional Development Funds (ERDF), whose principal objective is to promote economic and social cohesion
within the European Union through the reduction of imbalances between regions or social groups; Enlargement
and Pre-Accession Funds; other funding mechanisms related to EC activities such as: the Lifelong Learning
Programme; the Youth in Action Programme; the Culture Programme (20072013); the European Agricultural
Fund for Rural Development; the Instrument for Pre-Accession Assistance; the Public health programme
(20082013), the PROGRESS programme (including the For Diversity: Against Discrimination information
campaign). Other measures supported by EU Structural Funds focus on preparatory pre-school classes,
after-school support, the appointment of Romani teaching assistants or mediators, targeted scholarship
programmes, and the development of equity indicators.
79 See van Ravens (2011).
c h a p t e r 3
60
r o m a e a r l y c h i l d h o o d i n c l u s i o n t h e R E C I o v e r v i e w r e p o r t
potentially be used by Member States to obtain the expertise of regional, national
and international organisations in preparing, implementing and monitoring
interventionsMember States should also consider using the European Progress
Microfinance Facility, for which a total of 100 million of EU funding is available
for the period 20102013. The Commission estimates that this amount can be
leveraged to more than 500 million in microcredit over the coming eight years.
Roma communities are one of the target groups of the instrument. Giving
Roma communities the opportunity to start autonomous productive activities
could motivate people to actively participate in regular work, reduce benefit
dependency and inspire future generations.
The A Good Start (AGS) pilot initiative is an example of EU funding of national
programming. See Box 12.
Box 12. A Good Start (AGS) pilot initiative
A Good Start (AGS) was developed to address major disparities in Roma access to ECEC
services. The pilot aims to increase access to early childhood education and care services
for more than 4000 children between 06 years of age in 16 locations across Hungary,
Macedonia, Romania and Slovakia. Activities are tailored to the specific contexts and
needs of the target populations in each country.
Led by the Roma Education Fund, the core approach is to support selected partners who
are already working with Roma children. AGS focuses on enhancing childrens physical,
social, emotional and cognitive development, through early education, outreach to
communities, parent education and health services. In particular, AGS aims to empower
families, particularly female care-givers, to create effective home learning environments.
The programme provides material support; prepares children for transition to compulsory
education; trains staff; conducts rigorous monitoring and evaluation; promotes
relationships with government partners and builds professional networks.
Results: An evaluation of the Hungarian Mesd Project, one of the AGS pilot sites,
suggests that AGS has been an effective strategy for engaging and supporting Roma
mothers, most of whom have not gone beyond primary education. The data shows that
the mothers used the learning materials provided by the project and applied effectively
the skills learned in their groups to promote their childrens learning. In addition, they
employed improved parenting practices and developed supportive relationships with
other members of their group.
Source: Kavanagh, M. (2011), Case Study of the Mesd Project, Budapest, Roma Education Fund.
A strong research and evaluation framework: The EU is a leading sponsor of policy
research, especially through the Social Inclusion and Education and Training OMCs (Open
Method of Coordination). It seeks to develop knowledge, data collection and reform
on the basis of policy exchanges and mutual learning between Member States. The
effectiveness of the method can be seen in the enormous growth of European research
in the last decade on social inclusion/exclusion mechanisms. Currently, this research
is turning increasingly toward the study of Roma exclusion. For example, the recent
Evaluation of European Social Fund Support for Enhancing Access to the Labour Market
and the Social Inclusion of Migrants and Ethnic Minorities (DG Employment, 2011)
shows that the most effective means of using the ESF to promote Roma inclusion was
found to be a combination of specific Roma actions with mainstreaming. This implies an
61
integrated approach to Roma inclusion which requires a cross-cutting, holistic approach
that links education with training and employment, while at the same time addressing
Roma housing and health. The Evaluation also notes, less positively, that educational
infrastructure has sometimes been developed through the European Regional
Development Fund (ERDF), which has, in fact, exacerbated Roma segregation. The
example cited refers to building Roma schools, rather than including Roma pupils in
mainstream schools through the provision of additional appropriate support services e.g.
through the use of social workers and classroom assistants.
In sum, despite the criticisms of the European 2020 Framework, the European Union
can support national policies for Roma children with powerful policy and financial tools.
The Framework has developed a more effective response to Roma exclusion by setting
EU-wide goals for integrating Roma, in education, employment, health and housing. It
requires Member States to submit national Roma strategies to the Commission by the
end of 2011, specifying how they will contribute to achieving the overall EU integration
goals, including setting national targets and allowing for sufficient funding to deliver
them. Finally, it proposes solutions for using EU funds more effectively and has laid the
foundations for a robust mechanism to monitor results. See Box 13.
Box 13. How will the European Commission check on progress?
The Commission will report annually to the European Parliament and to the Council
on progress on the integration of the Roma population in Member States and on the
achievement of Roma integration goals.
It will base its monitoring notably on:
3
The results of the Roma household survey regularly carried out by the Fundamental
Rights Agency, the United Nations Development Programme in cooperation with the
World Bank.
3
National reform programmes in the frame of the EU 2020 Strategy, in particular for
those countries with a high share of Roma population.
3
On-going work within the Open Method of Coordination in the field of social policies.
3
Member States contributions based on their own monitoring systems which national
authorities are requested to include in their national Roma integration strategies.
3
It will also take into account the work of the European Platform for Roma Inclusion.
Source: An EU Framework for National Roma Integration Strategies up to 2020.
4. In Contexts of Extreme Poverty and Exclusion, Developmental Readiness for School
Requires a Multi-Dimensional Concept of Early Childhood Programming That Places
a Strong Emphasis on Early Intervention and Womens Education
European Union policies in favour of Roma populations underline that issues of social
inclusion, poverty, employment, health, housing and education need to be tackled
simultaneously. The approach recognises that social exclusion is multi-dimensional in its
causes and requires for its solution a multi-dimensional concept of social planning, which
calls in turn for careful coordination of ministry polices at national level.
In parallel, a multi-dimensional concept of early childhood services is needed. Before
getting Roma children into kindergarten and school, early intervention programmes
c h a p t e r 3
62
r o m a e a r l y c h i l d h o o d i n c l u s i o n t h e R E C I o v e r v i e w r e p o r t
are urgently needed to ensure their developmental readiness. The situation of Roma
families is such that a bums-on-seats policy whether for kindergarten or schools
is entirely inadequate.
3
Because of their poverty, their isolation, their lack of education, and the stressful
nature of their lives, Roma mothers are often unable to care for themselves during
pregnancy or to have the time or knowledge to stimulate their babies sufficiently
during the first critical years of life.
3
The experience of infants in the first two years of life, while brain growth is in
process, deeply affects future development. The childs experiences in these years
impact on the architecture of the brain, its neurochemistry and the gene expression
that mediates cognitive, emotional and social behaviours. Nutritional, care and
interactional experiences set in place a lifelong trajectory that influences all of a
childs subsequent development from infancy to adulthood, including her capacity for
socialization and education (Mustard, 2008).
3
The early childhood period is therefore a potentially vulnerable stage in life where
extreme poverty and malnutrition have lasting negative effects on subsequent health
and development.
3
Research shows that infants with low birth-weight and stunting in the first two years
of life have lower cognitive test scores, delayed development and higher rates of
absenteeism compared with non-stunted children.
These findings suggest that interventions to address the lack of proper nutrition and
other health hazards of expectant Roma mothers and their children, should begin before
childbirth and continue through the early childhood period. In sum, what is needed in
many settlements is a multi-dimensional intervention model, that is acceptable to the
community, economical to run (so staffed to a great extent by Roma mothers, with
some professional assistance) and self-sustaining. Because of the poverty and isolation
of many Roma communities, external means of funding local services must be found,
for example, through the appropriate use of European funds or through direct financial
transfers from government, larger municipalities or regions.
A holistic, multi-dimensional intervention model
A diagram for multi-dimensional intervention is presented on the following page. The
aim in this type of intervention is to bring integrated health, care and education to where
the mothers and children are, that is, into their communities. This can be achieved in a
sensitive way by the local health and paediatric services, for example, in consultation
with Roma communities and NGOs, and with the help of Roma health and education
assistants. Only Roma participation can ensure the legitimacy, accountability and success
of such services.
The model proposed protects the primary role of families in rearing children. As the
Preamble to the Convention on the Rights of the Child states:
The family, as the fundamental group of society and the natural environment for the
growth and well-being of all its members and particularly children, should be afforded
the necessary protection and assistance so that it can fully assume its responsibilities
within the community
Not only are parents the first caregivers and educators of children, they are also the most
important. State and municipal services are there to support parents, not to replace
them. In consequence, early childhood interventions should be designed primarily to
support parental efforts to rear their children decently.
63
An effective intervention model will build on parents unique interest in and knowledge
about their children. It will promote positive attitudes toward childrens learning; provide
parents with parenting information and support. According to the focus groups, many
Roma mothers are prevented from supporting their children by extreme poverty, lack of
time, or by not knowing how they can support their childrens development and learning.
Men too can be involved in this model of community action for young children. They
can play a more active role vis--vis their young children and participate in community
building and entrepreneurship in order to overcome family poverty and the lack of basic
community resources.
Figure 2. A holistic model of early intervention
Source: Adapted by UNICEF from the ECD Systems Working Group, Minnesota, 2007.
All four dimensions should be addressed simultaneously and actively. As mentioned in
the Macedonian National Report, early intervention should be regular, respectful and
address education issues as well as infant health. Interventions should include pre- and
postnatal health, parenting and adult education, play and stimulation programmes for
toddlers, conducted in the relevant Romani dialect.
80
Interventions should also pay
special attention to the education of girls.
In all countries, the educational level of mothers is a significant indicator of informed
child-rearing, early language interactions and childrens success (or lack of it) in
school. More education is needed to open new pathways for Roma girls, to overcome
dependence and reliance on traditional role models. For the moment, however, a wide
gap exists between the expectations of Roma mothers for their daughters and what
schools offer. One mother remarked that the school does not provide the skills Roma
women need for life:they dont learn the things known to be of use to a housewife:
80 At present there are some 80 different varieties of Rromani-chib, or Romans, spoken by differing Romani groups
see http://romani.humanities.manchester.ac.uk/whatis/language/origins.shtml.
c h a p t e r 3
Early
Learning
Maternal
health,
nutrition,
infant health
Special
Needs / Early
Intervention
Comprehensive health
services that meet childrens
vision, hearing, nutrition,
behavioural and oral health as
well as medical health needs.
Parenting education
Early learning
opportunities in
nurturing environments
where children develop
holistically physically,
socially, and cognitively.
Early screening,
assessment and
appropriate services
for children with
special health care
needs, disabilities, or
developmental delays
Economic and parenting supports
to ensure children have nurturing
and stable relationships with caring
adults. Community development
and earning opportunities for
women.
Family and
community
support
64
r o m a e a r l y c h i l d h o o d i n c l u s i o n t h e R E C I o v e r v i e w r e p o r t
cooking, doing the laundry, taking care of the children. Such views must be taken into
account by the education authorities and kindergarten teachers when planning activities.
Children in advanced kindergartens in many countries boys as well as girls play at
house and learn many useful things, such as cooking, tidying up after activities and
looking after the young children. In fact, in many countries looking after a younger child is
a central feature of kindergarten practice.
Box 14. Gender equality in the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia
The equality of women is an important indicator for the early childhood field as it
indicates not only the place of women in society (employment, education levels,
wages, etc.) but also public attitudes toward women, toward child-rearing and toward
the education of girls. The 2010 Global Gender Gap Index
81
ranks the former Yugoslav
Republic of Macedonia as 49
th
in the world, the Czech Republic 65
th
, Romania 67
th
and Serbia (not classified
82
). Gender inequality is generated especially by low political
representation of women, unequal employment opportunities, unequal pay for equal
work, and by highly gendered child-rearing.
Like the other countries in the RECI review, the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia
has followed the orthodox transition period compromise: long parental leave assuming
that women will care for young children at home; weak public childcare services; and
long-day public kindergarten (favouring the relatively few dual-income families).
In the country, the employment rate of Roma women is not known but reports suggest
that they are mostly unemployed except for unstable temporary jobs in the grey market.
Roma women are not prioritized in any employment programme, despite evidence
indicating that they have fewer opportunities to access employment than men.
Roma society is highly patriarchal and women are expected to marry, be obedient to their
husbands, have children and rear them. Traditions related to the virginity of young women
limit education during adolescence, which later can affect family size and parenting skills.
Less educated mothers in all societies have fewer opportunities to plan and space births,
to support their childrens education or to create an environment in which children will
fully use their potential.
Child marriage also occurs with some frequency in the Roma community (less frequently
in the ethnic Albanian community). It is difficult to estimate the extent of under-age
marriage as families rarely register such marriages. In general, early parenthood deepens
poverty, limits the education of the young parents, may endanger young mothers and be
detrimental to the development of their children.
Some of these traditional practices are perceived as Romani culture by both Roma and
non-Roma. However, Roma human rights activists demand that these practices, harmful
to young women, should be eliminated, pointing out that they are not Roma practices
but exist in every patriarchal society. They point out also that the Roma community
does not have the sole responsibility in overcoming these practices. The responsible
authorities should apply the laws of the country; culture should not be used as an excuse
81 The Gender Gap Index assesses countries on how well they divide resources and opportunities among their male
and female populations, based on 14 variables across four dimensions: economic participation and opportunity;
educational attainment; political empowerment; health and survival.
82 The higher the number, the greater is the gender gap.
65
to tolerate such practices. The country has no institutional mechanism to discourage child
marriages and no defined policies to address the issue.
The EU Commission writes in its 2009 Progress Report on equal rights for women in the
former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia:
Only limited progress has been made towards implementing the Law on Equal
Opportunities. Also the capacity of the section for equal opportunities remains
insufficient to fulfil its role, as well as administrative capacity to promote the
human rights of women in rural areas. Support for activities and initiatives aimed at
combating discriminatory customs, traditions and stereotypes remain insufficient.
Participation of women in decision-making at both national and local levels is low.
Female participation in the labour force remains very low. Preparations in this area
are on-going.
5. In the Early Childhood Sector, Effective Governance and Consolidated Policies
Are Critical
As outlined in Chapter 2A, the RECI National Reports testify to weaknesses in the
governance of existing early childhood programming for Roma children. Notably, they
refer to:
3
Weak statutory obligations. Constitutions may be strong on inclusion and non-
discrimination but, in fact, there may be few enforceable statutory obligations
requiring public authorities to avoid institutional discrimination, to take specific actions
or to achieve measurable results.
3
Reluctance to use European initiatives to improve the situation of Roma children, e.g.
to engage with the EU Social Inclusion Process, which has put into place a regular
monitoring and reporting process to measure progress towards achieving common
European objectives, not least in regard to Roma.
3
The inability of responsible ministries to coordinate assistance coming from
outside the country, whether from the European Union or the major international
organizations. Because of lack of expertise or of critical mass, early childhood
departments can fail to integrate external initiatives into the national plan for
children (when it exists) or to utilize effectively the different funding sources placed
at their disposition.
3
A lack of capacity to develop and coordinate national policy. This can be seen in
failure to develop and mainstream a national inclusion plan for children across
ministries (horizontal planning) or to implement such a plan at ground level due to
weaknesses in vertical coordination, especially in regard to local government. The
National Reports and Roundtables suggest that ministries continue to pursue their
traditional aims without reference to each other or to the Romani NGOs working in
the field. In sum, initiatives and activities for young children may be numerous but
remain extremely fragmented.
3
Overall poor quality in kindergarten services. Some excellent kindergartens exist in
all the countries reviewed, but alongside, there can be large pockets of poor quality:
unsanitary buildings and poor learning environments for young children; the use of
unqualified staff, particularly in satellite schools, and insufficient in-service training;
over-crowding and high child:staff ratios; lack of appropriate educational materials
for young children. These weaknesses are often due to inadequate financing.
In particular, poor, sparsely populated municipalities (of which there are many) find
c h a p t e r 3
66
r o m a e a r l y c h i l d h o o d i n c l u s i o n t h e R E C I o v e r v i e w r e p o r t
their allocations totally inadequate: children in these municipalities, from deprived,
second-language backgrounds need infrastructure and equipment adjusted to their
age, experienced teachers, small groups, appropriate didactic methods and additional
educational programmes.
3
Insufficient involvement of education ministries in programming for children under
3 years. It seems evident that many children from very deprived backgrounds are
coming into kindergarten either totally unprepared or too late. Action is needed
from education ministries to engage with other ministries (health, social welfare,
regional development, etc.) in strengthening early health care and stimulation
systems for the younger children in the most deprived and isolated settlements.
The developmental readiness of young children for kindergarten should be a
concern of the ministry of education.
Governance of an early childhood system
What then is effective governance of an early childhood system? In summary, the
governance of a national early childhood system could include the following elements, as
outlined in Box 15.
Box 15. Elements of a well-governed early childhood system
A well-governed national early childhood system should include, as a minimum, the
following elements:
3
Legislation and a national curriculum framework as the basis for the system;
3
An on-going and funded National Plan for young children with system-wide targets
and timetables;
3
Policy, planning and programme delivery organised from one lead early childhood
department which has sufficient mass and expertise;
3
Clear definitions of the roles and responsibilities of other departments, which are
supervised annually by an effective inter-ministerial council established to coordinate
policies and implementation;
3
Regulations to define minimum standards and monitoring to ensure that standards
are met;
3
Effective public management of the system at local level and, in so far as possible,
not-for-profit provision of services;
3
Appropriate involvement of community, parents, teachers and children in the
provision and organisation of childrens services;
3
Funded strategies for on-going quality improvement, including strong support for
documentation and teacher in-service training;
3
An evidence-based system founded on thorough data collection and the mandated
involvement of researchers and stakeholders in policy processes at all levels.
Source. Adapted from CRRU, 2007, Quality by design.
The development of national legislation, a curriculum framework and an on-going
National Plan for Early Childhood Development and Education are critical elements in
the governance of an effective system. These elements also provide an opportunity to
go beyond technical solutions and to launch a public consultation on early childhood
policy in answer to the question: what are our national goals for young children?
As mentioned in Recommendation 2 in the present chapter, a major purpose of
kindergarten education is to provide children with developmental readiness for school.
67
Another important aim is to enable children to understand what it means to live in a
democratic society and to educate them in democratic reflexes, such as, participation,
respect for diversity, learning to live together. This aspect is critically important in
societies in which divisive tendencies have appeared. A leading European framework
in this respect is the Swedish Preschool Curriculum (Lpf, 1998) which states in its
first chapter:
Democracy forms the foundation of the pre-school system. For this reason, all pre-
school activity should be carried out in accordance with fundamental democratic
values. Each and everyone working in the preschool should promote respect for the
intrinsic value of each person, as well as respect for our shared environment.... An
important task of the preschool is to establish and help children acquire the values
on which our society is based. The inviolability of human life, individual freedom
and integrity, the equal value of all people, equality between the genders as well
as solidarity with the weak and vulnerable are all values that the preschool should
actively promote in its work with children.
Developing an on-going National Plan for Early Childhood Development and Education,
with measurable targets, indicators and timelines, is also critical for the momentum
and progress of the system. Such a plan would: establish entitlements to services
(with a special focus on excluded children); allow for management decentralization
to local governments with proper financing, support and monitoring; develop a broad
curriculum framework and national learning standards that allow for local inputs and
flexibility; set criteria for a well-educated and well-paid workforce, who would have the
benefit of continuous in-service training; provide for the sub-systems that contribute to
the quality of the system, such as, data collection and research; tertiary-level teacher-
training colleges; a network for regular professional development; a support and
inspection corps; a national ECEC evaluation body to carry out regular and objective
evaluations of national policies and practice, etc. The development of a National Plan
could be the responsibility of the central coordinating ministry in consultation with
other stakeholders, including local governments, civil society, parents and Roma
bodies. If various ministerial plans were consolidated within the framework of a
National Plan, some sense of purposeful organisation could be achieved.
Strategy inputs from the National Reports
The National Reports and recent European Commission documents, in particular, Early
Childhood Education and Care: Providing all our children with the best start for the
world of tomorrow, COM (2011) also outline useful strategies to improve governance.
These include:
3
Overcoming lack of ministerial capacity: The recent EC Communication: An EU
Framework for National Roma Integration Strategies up to 2020, page 10, brings a
partial response to this issue:
To surmount capacity issues, such as lack of know-how and administrative
capacity of managing authorities and the difficulties of combining funds
to support integrated projects, the Commission invites Member States to
consider entrusting the management and implementation of some parts of their
programmes to intermediary bodies such as international organisations, regional
development bodies, churches and religious organisations or communities as well
as non-governmental organisations with proven experience in Roma integration
and knowledge of actors on the ground. In this respect, the network of the
European Economic and Social Committee could be a useful tool.
c h a p t e r 3
68
r o m a e a r l y c h i l d h o o d i n c l u s i o n t h e R E C I o v e r v i e w r e p o r t
3
Integrating the National Plan for Early Childhood Development and Education as
a central component into the National Plan for Social Inclusion. This linking with
European Commission requirements imposes a focus on the holistic development
of excluded children as a cross-cutting goal for all the social ministries, including
education. The association of national early childhood policy with the National Plan for
Social Inclusion could be very beneficial for Roma children.
3
Ensuring integrated services: Perhaps, the surest way of integrating programmes
is bring full responsibility for child health, care and education under one dedicated
ministry or, at least, to ensure that ministries of education engage more actively with
policy and programming for children under 3 years.
3
Improving multi-sectoral coordination: The issue of multi-sectoral coordination was
also raised frequently in the National Reports (see, for example, the profile of Serbia).
Lack of coordination occurs at two levels: horizontally across ministries and vertically
toward local governments.
83
For the former, it was suggested that an Inter-Ministerial
Coordinating Committee should be created, presided over by the lead ministry for
children, which would meet bi-annually to coordinate policies and implementation.
For a variety of reasons, vertical coordination from the centre toward the field is
more difficult to achieve. First it is necessary to find the optimum subsidiary level of
operation at which to coordinate ministerial policies. This will differ from country to
country, but local government if it has sufficient mass and expertise can achieve
the necessary coordination when it is properly resourced and supported. To promote
more expert attention to childrens issues, we recommend for consideration the
creation of an Early Childhood Council in every local government, with responsibility
for social inclusion, child health and education from infancy to school age. This Council
should involve a wide range of stakeholders, including Roma NGOs and Roma
parents and community representatives in municipalities where Roma communities
exist. The local Early Childhood Council would also establish and support at local level,
participative and transparent evaluation processes, taking into account the views of
minority parents concerning the quality of services and their appropriateness to meet
the needs of Roma families and their children.
3
Organise a system for continuous ECD monitoring and evaluation: Most
countries have regulatory systems but they suffer from two weaknesses. Firstly,
the regulations largely concern building issues (fire, sanitation and health) and
more rarely set standards for the rights of children, management and teacher
behaviour, pedagogy or important extra-curricular matters, such as the reception
and involvement of parents. A second weakness is that the regulations are rarely
enforced, especially those regarding parents, children and minority groups who often
remain without a voice or means of redress. Hence, the need for ministries to reform
the regulations, ensure that they are respected and provide a means of redress to
parents whenever regulations are constantly or seriously breached.
83 There is also lack of coordination with the NGO and civil society sector.
69
6. Effective Kindergartens and Schools for Excluded Children Need Clear Goals,
High Quality, Expanded Services, and Outreach to Parents and Communities
Where goals for young children are concerned, the following chart from UNICEF (2008)
suggests that a national government approach to young children could embrace the
following goals at different ages:
Table 10. An early childhood development agenda for Roma children
Developmental stage Issues to address
A. Conception birth Ensuring quality pre- and post-natal health care for mothers and
infants within the communities, through visiting health services
and the use of Roma bridging personnel. Reasonable family living
standards.
Counselling for self-care, preparing for delivery, parenting and family
planning. Parent education.
B. Birth age 3 years Birth registration. Communication and counselling for health
care, nutrition and feeding, with an emphasis on infant-caregiver
interaction; attention to the play, social development and language
development of toddlers through providing a responsive, rich and
stimulating learning environment.
C. 36 years Access to quality early learning opportunities in public kindergartens:
a safe, hygienic and stimulating environment; qualified providers;
a quality curriculum; developmentally appropriate and inter-active;
culturally and linguistically sensitive; gender sensitive; active parental
participation; continuous assessment of programme quality and child
development outcomes.
D. 68 years Focus on developmental school readiness; getting schools ready for
children, eliminating all forms of segregation, special schools and
classrooms, etc.; getting families ready for childrens schooling.
Source: adapted from UNICEF, 2008.
Research suggests that steps A and B above are critical, viz. to secure reasonable living
standards for Roma families with which to ensure health, social care and stimulation
for young children in the first three years. Without progress in this domain, Roma and
other deprived children will continue to be denied a positive start in life, with subsequent
negative effects on their future health status and schooling.
Attention to quality in kindergarten services
84
Following support to the family environment, it is important to improve kindergarten
quality, especially regarding excluded children. Research is clear that without high
quality in early childhood services, more harm than good may be the result for children
and a very significant public investment is wasted (NICHD, 2000; 2004; EPPE, 2004,
2008, 2010). A National Quality Framework can be a useful tool to guide and support
professional staff in their practice, to promote an even level of quality across age groups
and to facilitate communication between staff, parents and children. A quality framework
could include: a statement of the values and goals which should guide early childhood
centres; pedagogical guidelines outlining the processes through which young children
learn; a summary of programme standards, that is, how programmes will be structured
in terms of child/staff ratios, teacher qualifications, etc.; a general description of the
knowledge and skills that children should strive for at different ages (see, for example,
84 A far more detailed account of pedagogical quality in kindergartens catering for disadvantaged Roma children is
provided in a forthcoming pedagogical guideline to be published by the Council of Europe and UNESCO.
c h a p t e r 3
70
r o m a e a r l y c h i l d h o o d i n c l u s i o n t h e R E C I o v e r v i e w r e p o r t
the UNICEF early learning development standards in the former Yugoslav Republic
of Macedonia); and an outline of the knowledge, skills, dispositions and values that
teachers should have, as outlined, for example, in the ISSA Pedagogical Standards:
Competent Teachers of the 21
st
Century (ISSA, 2010).
Challenges to quality raised in the National Reports
According to the National Reports and Roundtables, two major challenges to quality arise
regarding excluded children:
Firstly, to ensure that kindergartens and other early childhood programmes are of
acceptable quality, especially in neighbourhoods and settlements where excluded
children are in a majority. From the National Reports, it seems that structural quality is
often lacking, that is, appropriate buildings and learning environments; properly qualified
staff; staff to child ratios; and group sizes (smaller for children with second-language and
special educational needs).
To raise quality in these areas will require substantial investment, but savings can
perhaps be made through a more equitable sharing of finances. According to analyses
conducted by van Ravens (2010, 2011), the present long-day kindergarten seems to
favour the better-off families as it provides not only education but highly subsidised
afternoon care for working parents a relatively fortunate and affluent group in these
countries. At the same time, for lack of funding, sufficient kindergarten places do not
exist for children from low-income backgrounds and particularly for Roma children in
rural settlements, precisely the children who benefit most from early childhood services.
A fairer and more effective organisation of services would aim to provide a morning early
education service for every child, with afternoon child care being available to parents
who wish to pay the full or partial costs. This would allow local governments to provide a
morning education service for all children, with improved investment in infrastructure and
staffing requirements. The funding saved could also allow local governments to support
simple community services in remote settlements.
A second challenge is to ensure that kindergarten pedagogy is appropriate and effective.
85
During the RECI focus groups, Roma mothers spoke of their children being made to
feel inferior. In kindergarten, they are placed in the back of the class and are ignored and
neglected by teachers.
86
By contrast, the research is clear that the quality of interaction
between teacher and child is critical (see, for example, Pramling, 2011). Young children
learn and develop within warm and positive relationships.
In the kindergarten, particular attention should be given to childrens daily experience
and to helping them make sense of the objects and events presented to them. A
central feature is the teachers ability to understand the childs own perspectives and to
incorporate them into her communication and interplay with the child. It is a question of
85 In terms of pedagogy, some ministries toy with the idea of remedial pedagogies for Roma children, for example,
with the Reuven Feuerstein method or the American Lovaas Model of Applied Behavior Analysis. These
pedagogies are effective with certain kinds of cognitive disability, but they are labour intensive and could become
extremely expensive if extended to scale. However, the real issue is elsewhere. If Roma children were ensured
basic health and stimulation in the early years, remedial pedagogies would be quite unnecessary for the great
majority. The challenge is not the intellectual capacity of Roma children but rather one of social and political
choices: do European countries wish to provide a fair start in life to Roma children? If they do, they need to invest
in the four priorities of the Roma Platform, viz. employment, health, housing and education, thus ensuring positive
family backgrounds for most children.
86 Obviously, this is not the full story: in years of work in the region, the author has seen many dedicated
teachers at work.
71
being part of the childs learning processes and of combining the childs interests with
the goals of the preschool curriculum. To be successful, early education will focus on
the world of the child and respect the natural learning strategies of children: learning
through play, interaction with others, active learning and exploration. In all this, the role
of the teacher is central, in particular, the warmth and quality of her interactions with the
children; her knowledge of the childs background, her respect for the learning strategies
of the young child; and her mastery of specific pedagogical approaches that recognize
diversity and learning difficulties.
Expanded services
Kindergartens are more effective when they practise toward children pedagogy of
care, upbringing and education. They are not just junior schools intent on inculcating
the national language or teaching different knowledge items. Children coming from
deprived backgrounds need continuous care and for them, the kindergarten will
provide comprehensive or expanded services. Expanded services would include some
of the following:
1. Snacks and at least one meal provided on site.
2. An extended day on the same site.
3. Health screening and medical referrals.
4. Regular liaison with social and/or family services for children considered to be at risk.
5. Outreach to parents (Barnett, 2003).
Again, funds need to be found to provide such services free to children from deprived
backgrounds. In fact, there are strong reasons to suggest that: every disadvantaged
Roma child should be given an entitlement to a free place in kindergarten for at least two
years before compulsory schooling and disadvantaged Roma parents provided with the
necessary supports to enable their children to take up such an entitlement.
Box 16. The provision of education expenses and food coupons
improves attendance
The Fiecare Copil in Gradinita (`Every Child in Preschool`) initiative was launched in
Romania in July 2010 and is currently assisting 1,300 children and their families in 19
communities. So far, results are very positive. The percentage of perfect attendance was
almost double compared to attendance in the previous year and grew constantly every
month, rising to 84 per cent in March. In all the communities, attendance over this period
was the highest in the last three years and many local coordinators noted that this is by
far the highest attendance rate EVER in their communities.
The NGO, Ovidiu Rom, is involved in the initiative. It has allocated approximately 150
euro for each child 36 whose family qualifies for social benefits or meets other poverty
criteria. These funds cover educational costs as well as monthly food coupons to the
families whose children have perfect attendance. Ovidiu Rom also provides teacher
training in modern methods and strategies for working with disadvantaged children.
In order to identify all eligible children, the project is based on door-to-door recruitment.
Daily attendance is carefully recorded by teachers and monitored by local coordinators.
A member of the Ovidiu Rom team visits each school at least once a month and spot
checks attendance records. The local coordinator distributes monthly food coupons to
parents of children with perfect attendance at the end of each month.
c h a p t e r 3
72
r o m a e a r l y c h i l d h o o d i n c l u s i o n t h e R E C I o v e r v i e w r e p o r t
Outreach to parents
According to the National Reports and Roundtables, many kindergarten teachers in all
countries need training in providing care to young children and, not least, in professional
outreach to parents. The continuity of childrens experience across environments is
greatly enhanced when parents and staff-members exchange information regularly
and adopt consistent approaches to socialisation, daily routines, child development and
learning (OECD, 2006). Early childhood staff should be trained to interact with and listen
to parents. They will encourage parents to support the learning of young children, and
will share with families the values on which early childhood services are based, including
participation and respect for diversity. Staff will also engage parents in centre activities.
Parent engagement will build on parents unique interest in and knowledge about their
children. It will promote positive attitudes toward childrens learning, provide parents
with information and referrals to other services, and include parents in the centres
committees and management. Particular attention will be given to ensuring equitable
representation and participation of families from diverse backgrounds.
Community involvement
Community involvement in the pre-school is growing in importance, not only for providing
expanded services but also as a space for partnership and the democratic participation of
parents. When opportune, communities and education authorities will also provide adult
education, information, services and social activities for parents, if possible from the early
childhood centre. Research by the OSI REI project (2005) finds that:
3
The work of Romani NGOs with children, and their close cooperation with the local
school generally, has a strong positive influence on childrens learning achievement
and attendance.
3
Likewise, comprehensive, community approaches appear to be a positive factor in
supporting educational success for Roma children. For example, in Slovakia where the
approach has been well implemented, improved educational outcomes are in evidence.
3
An important element of diversity training and for inclusive education, is to employ
teachers and teaching assistants from minority groups. Roma teaching assistants,
for example, can help young children with differences in the language spoken in
homes and schools, be a link between the home culture and the culture of the
education system, and cultivate parents support for their childrens schooling
process. In this way, the teaching assistant can become a role model for the
children on how to be a successful person, both in their own and majority culture.
87
Whenever possible, the creation of bi-lingual kindergartens should be further
explored as a means to overcome the language barriers of Roma children, while
remaining aware that Roma children will need to speak and master the majority
language in school.
87 According to Tankersly (2002), if the purpose of the teaching assistant is to help students succeed academically,
then they must be seen as equal partners in the classroom. If they are pushed into a subservient role, then they
may serve to reinforce in the minds of children their own low standing as a marginalized group. A re-denition of
the assistants role as co-teacher and agent of change in their community leads to an increase in Roma students
self-esteem and academic performance, as well as parent and community participation in school activities (Wide
Open School Foundation, 2011).
73
Box 17. A Romanian initiative to enhance bilingual education
In Romania, since 2005 a bi-lingual experiment has been run by a Roma NGO, Amare
Romentza in partnership with the school inspectorate. Roma children and their teachers
use a bi-lingual (Roma and Romanian) curriculum. Nine groups from different counties
now use the curriculum. According to Ministry of Education figures, the number of
children attending Romanes language classes at kindergarten has risen steadily in
recent years.
88
Within the IECE project, co-funded by the World Bank and the Romanian
Government, a strong emphasis is placed on teacher training responsive to the needs
of Roma children. The approach is opening the door to a more inter-cultural approach
sensitive to Roma culture and language. These bi-lingual kindergartens call attention to
Roma history, traditions, language and literature and are generally accompanied by books
and resource materials in Romanes to be used by children and teachers.
Where there are no kindergartens
A special challenge arises where there are no kindergartens available an absence
experienced by many Roma settlements in the countries reviewed. For example, an
analysis of Ministry of Education figures from Hungary show that that kindergarten
services are not available in 29 per cent of the settlements in Hungary (927
settlements) and that half of these settlements (without kindergartens) are Roma
settlements or Roma majority townships (Havas, 2004). It would seem logical that in
such cases, the community services proposed in Recommendation 4 above should
be extended upwards to include children of kindergarten age and that trained Roma
assistants should be employed to organise and supervise a simple community service.
Visits from mobile preschools could also be envisaged. Excellent work on this issue
Where there are no Preschools has been achieved in Poland by the Commenius
Foundation: http://www.frd.org.pl/en.
7. Evidence-Based Policy in Favour of Roma Children Is Urgently Needed
The case for collecting disaggregated data has been made many times notably
in the Open Society Foundations publication No Data, No Progress (McDonald and
Negrin, 2010). This publication shows that European countries with strong records
of protecting citizen privacy and human rights do collect disaggregated data in
their health and education systems. It concludes that the lack of reliable data about
Roma communities remains a major obstacle to reducing inequality and eliminating
discrimination. For example, in the early childhood field, it is difficult to respond with a
sufficient degree of accuracy to the challenges encountered by young Roma children
and their families, because of the lack of disaggregated data. One does not know how
many children one is talking about, what services might they need, whether they have
particular difficulties in education and why. Some teachers say that Roma children are
often ahead of others in gross motor skills; others say that they are developmentally
behind in other developmental areas, but there is little real information available on
such issues. Effective, tailored programmes require baseline data, if the progress of
children is to be measured and monitored.
88 M. Sarau, Ministry of Education, Research, Youth and Sports, 2010.
c h a p t e r 3
74
r o m a e a r l y c h i l d h o o d i n c l u s i o n t h e R E C I o v e r v i e w r e p o r t
Why such a weak supply of data on Roma?
The situation of data collection and research in the early childhood field has been briefly
outlined in Chapter 2 part 6. All four countries have difficulties in supplying reliable data
on Roma populations. The National Reports confirm that the lack of data is sometimes
due to the reluctance of Roma households to supply information about themselves or
even to declare themselves as Roma. Generations of exclusion and oppression as
well as finding protection in anonymity has made many Roma fearful about revealing
information. This concern needs to be treated with empathy and Roma households
reassured that volunteered information will remain anonymous and will not be used
against them. As has been found in the health and education fields, it will be crucial
to employ Roma data collectors to carry out enumeration for the census or other data
collection exercises. In consultation with Romani NGOs, legal experts can also take up
the issue to ensure that strong data protection protocols are in place.
Another reason advanced by the National Reports for the paucity of data is the reluctance
of government to engage with this field. It is difficult to understand why. Is it a reluctance
to recognise the size of the Roma population, the extent of their poverty or a wish not to
be held accountable? Whatever the reason, it is clear that evidence-based public policy
cannot be made without the continuous and consistent collection of statistical data,
baseline research and evaluation studies. In France, a country that does not allow the
collection of ethnic data, strong statistical information exists on all aspects of health and
education, based for the most part on age, gender and economic situation.
The situation may improve as a result of EU Framework
The situation, however, is improving due to pressure from the European Union and its
flagship projects for Roma. In its recent Communication: An EU Framework for National
Roma Integration Strategies up to 2020, the European Commission has commented on
the difficulty of obtaining accurate, detailed and complete data on the situation of Roma
in the Member States. It goes on to say that:
It is necessary to put in place a robust monitoring mechanism with clear benchmarks
which will ensure that tangible results are measured, that money directed to Roma
integration has reached its final beneficiaries, that there is progress towards the
achievement of the EU Roma integration goals and that national Roma integration
strategies have been implemented.
The Commission also engages to report annually both to the European Parliament and
the Council on progress on the integration of the Roma population in Member States and
on the achievement of the goals. More specifically regarding data collection:
It will also build on the Roma household survey pilot project carried out by the
United Nations Development Programme in cooperation with the World Bank and
the Fundamental Rights Agency. The Commission requests the Fundamental Rights
Agency to expand this survey on Roma to all Member States and to run it regularly to
measure progress on the ground. The Fundamental Rights Agency, working together
with other relevant bodies, such as the European Foundation for the Improvement of
Living and Working Conditions, will collect data on the situation of Roma with respect
to access to employment, education, healthcare and housing.
In order to get useful data in the long term, the Commission will also foster
cooperation between national statistical offices and EUROSTAT so as to be able
to identify methods to map the EUs least developed micro-regions, where the
most marginalised groups live, and in particular Roma, as a first step. This territorial
75
approach to data collection has a direct relevance to tackling Roma poverty and
exclusion. In addition, the Fundamental Rights Agency should work with Member
States to develop monitoring methods which can provide a comparative analysis of
the situation of Roma across Europe.
In addition, the Commission requests the Fundamental Rights Agency to work with
Member States to develop monitoring methods which can provide a comparative analysis
of the situation of Roma across the EU.
In November 2010, the Open Society Foundations Roma Initiatives also made a detailed
plea about organising data collection within the framework of the Roma Decade:
3
The Decade governments should take up the UNDPs work to establish guidelines
and set clear indicators for monitoring the effects and impact of the Decade action
plans and planning policies.
3
The Decade governments should strengthen national statistical agencies; a research
centre or NGO with solid expertise in data collection, monitoring, and evaluation
should be assigned to work closely with these agencies to develop methodologies
that increase Romani participation in data collection processes.
3
The Decade governments should adjust their statistical systems to collect data
disaggregated by ethnicity. Governments can incorporate ethnic data components
into regular statistical surveys of the labour force and household budgets. They
can also obtain data by conducting specialized sample surveys in marginalized
Roma communities. Most of the indicators for monitoring living conditions can be
constructed in manifold ways and data gleaned with diverse methodologies.
3
National statistical agencies should gather and process data not only on the national
level, but also ad hoc within local and regional initiatives, to confirm whether the
mainstream policies are reaching Romani beneficiaries.
3
National statistical agencies should explore various census methodologies, such
as allowing respondents to choose both primary and secondary identification as a
national or ethnic group, providing multiple identity categories to help improve the
chances of Romani self-identifying, and using ethnically neutral markers such as
traditions, language, etc., as proxies to help determine ethnicity.
3
National statistical agencies should include Roma in census activities as data
collectors, as they have much greater access and credibility in Roma communities,
which can result in more Romani self-identifying and responding to the census. Data
collectors should also inform the Romani community about basic terminology when
filling in the census forms, e.g., understanding the difference between nationality
and ethnicity to help improve the accuracy of data collected during censuses, and
encourage members of the Romani community to declare their Romani identity.
3
Different statistical and data collection institutions within and between countries
should coordinate their efforts, using similar definitions and methodologies for
collecting data. The primary goal should be to ensure more standardized national data
collection to facilitate the compilation of reliable, cross-sectoral data that would also
allow for international comparability.
Source: Rorke, 2010.
Research
Although good figures on the health of Roma children were available in Macedonia, the
National Reports of both the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia and Romania
observed that the level of early childhood research in these countries needs to be much
strengthened. One suspects that research on Roma communities in the Czech Republic
c h a p t e r 3
76
r o m a e a r l y c h i l d h o o d i n c l u s i o n t h e R E C I o v e r v i e w r e p o r t
and Serbia also needs attention, although again, the UNICEF MICS for Serbia provide
good data on which to base research. Overall, across the four countries, there were few
documents or arguments to show that long-term intensive early education intervention
programmes are having strong effects, either economically and/or socially, even on
majority children. The relevance of early education programmes for Roma or other
disadvantaged children receives even less attention.
In order to begin to construct country profiles of Roma children, researchers would need
to have the following minimum information:
3
The actual Roma population in each country, broken down by age, occupation,
employment status, socio-economic deciles, etc.
3
The actual number of Roma children below 6 years in each country by geographical
distribution, child mortality rate, immunisation, developmental status (including the
number of children with special needs.
3
The supply and distribution (mapping) of public early childhood services across the
country.
3
Enrolments and profiles of children enrolled in both community and kindergarten
early development programmes, by age, gender, ethnicity, disability, class, and
other indicators that can provide administrators and parents with an accurate idea
of access.
3
Care arrangements for children aged 012 (i.e. who cares for them during the day,
including out-of-school care).
3
The early childhood workforce numbers, qualifications, pay and profile (e.g. age,
gender, ethnicity).
3
The number of Roma health and education assistants, their profiles and work
achieved.
3
The programme quality standards both aspired to and actually in place, e.g. child:staff
ratios; group sizes; environmental standards; teacher qualifications and training; time
for in-service training and documentation.
3
Disaggregated outcomes for children across broad developmental domains. How are
children progressing within the services? How do they measure-up on developmental
readiness for school? Is there evidence to prove that the investment in early
childhood services is justified on educational grounds?
3
Data on school entry and school performance collected and disaggregated by school;
type of school; class; grade; gender home language; ethnicity and other indicators.
3
The progression of Roma children through kindergarten and school in order to identify
the sensitive moments.
Although such research was not always available to the authors of the National Reports,
they searched out and provided much useful information, which will provide a sound basis
for further research. In addition, the future for research on Roma children has become more
promising. The European Commission now requires Member States to report their on-
going work for Roma inclusion in the national reports which they are expected to present
in the context of the Social Inclusion OMC. This is a positive directive that one hopes will in
the future provide the necessary data and information that governments need in order to
make informed policy decisions for Roma children and families.
77
References
Badescu, G., Grigoras, V., Rughinis, C., Voicu, M. and Voicu, O. (2007), Barometrul Incluziunii
Romilor, Fundatia pentru o Societate Deschisa, Bucuresti.
Ball, J. (2002), The Challenge of Creating an Optimal Learning Environment in Child Care: Cross-
cultural Perspectives, in Proceedings from the Symposium of Canadian Language and Literacy
Research, Toronto.
Barnett, S. (2003), The State of Preschool, Rutgers University Press, NIEER (National Institute of
Early Education Research).
Bartik, T.J. (2011), Investing in Kids: Early Childhood Programmes and Local Economic Development,
Kalamazoo, Upjohn Institute for Employment Research.
Baucal, A. and Stojanovic , J. (2010), Indicators of Equal Access for Quality Education for Roma,
Belgrade, Open Society Fund.
Belgian Presidency (2011), Preventing Social Exclusion through the Europe 2020 Strategy: Early
Childhood Development and the Inclusion of Roma Families, Brussels.
Belgian Ministry for Social Integration and UNICEF (2011), Preventing Social Exclusion through
the Europe 2020 Strategy: Early Childhood Development and the Inclusion of Roma Families,
Brussels.
Bennett, J. (2010), Early Childhood Care and Education in Europe and North America: An Overview,
Paris, UNESCO.
Berger, L.M. and Waldfogel, J. (2011), Economic Determinants and Consequences of Child
Maltreatment, Paris, OECD.
Bernard van Leer Foundation (2006), A Guide to General Comment 7: Implementing Child Rights in
Early Childhood, The Hague. Available online at: http://www.bernardvanleer.org/.
Bernard van Leer Foundation (2009), Realising the Rights of Young Children: Progress and
Challenges, Early Childhood Matters, No. 113, The Hague.
Biro, M., Smederevac, S. and Tovilovic , S. (2009), Socioeconomic and Cultural Factors of Low
Scholastic Achievement of Roma Children, Belgrade, Psichologija, 2009, Vol. 42 (3),
pp. 273288.
Bowman B., Donovan M.S. et Burns, M.S. (Eds.) (2000), Eager to Learn: Educating Our
Preschoolers. Washington, D.C.: National Academy Press.
Bruner, C., et al. (2007), Village Building and School Readiness, Des Moines, Secptan.
Cagliari, P., Barozzi, A. and Giudici, C. (2004), Thoughts, Theories and Experiences: For an
Educational Project with Participation, Children in Europe, 6, 2830.
CNCD (2008), Discrimination Phenomena in Romania Perception and Attitudes, Bucharest,
INSOMAR.
Commenius Foundation: http://www.frd.org.pl/en.
Connolly, P. (2009), Diversity and Young Children in Northern Ireland, Bernard van Leer Foundation,
The Hague.
Council of Europe (2000), Recommendation on the Education of Roma/Gypsy Children in Europe,
Strasbourg.
__________ (2006a), Education of Roma Children in Europe: Texts and Activities of the Council of
Europe Concerning Education, Strasbourg.
__________ (2006b), The situation of Romani School Mediators and Assistants in Europe, EU/Calin
Rus. Strabourg.
__________ , Roma and Traveller Division: http://www.coe.int/t/dg3/romatravellers/default_en.asp
and http://www.coe.int/t/dg3/romatravellers/Source/documents/stats.xls.
78
r o m a e a r l y c h i l d h o o d i n c l u s i o n t h e R E C I o v e r v i e w r e p o r t
CRRU (2007), Quality by Design, Toronto.
Cunha, F., Heckman, J., Lochner, L. and Masterov, D.V. (2005), Interpreting the Evidence of Life-
Cycle Skill Formation, IZA Discussion Paper Series, No. 1575, Institute for the Study of Labour,
Bonn, Germany, July.
DECET (2008), see http://www.decet.org.
EACEA (2009), ECEC in Europe: Tackling Social and Cultural Inequalities, Brussels, EC Education,
Audio-visual and Culture Agency.
EPPE (2004, 2008, 2010), Effective Provision of Preschool Education, London, Institute of Education
and Department for Education and Skills.
EU-Common Basic Principles on Roma Inclusion, accessed 2011: http://register.consilium.europa.
eu/pdf/en/09/st10/st10394.en09.pdf.
EU-Decade of Roma Inclusion, 20052015, accessed 2011: http://www.romadecade.org.
EU-Framework for National Roma Integration Strategies up to 2020, accessed 2011:
http://ec.europa.eu/justice/policies/discrimination/docs/com_2011_173_en.pdf.
EU-MAP (2007), p. 25.
EU-MIDIS and EU Fundamental Rights Agency (2009), European Union Minorities and
Discrimination Survey, Vienna.
EU-Platform for Roma Inclusion, accessed 2011: http://ec.europa.eu/justice/discrimination/roma/
roma-platform/index_en.htm.
EU-PROGRESS programme, For Diversity: Against Discrimination information campaign, accessed
2011: http://ec.europa.eu/justice/fdad/cms/stopdiscrimination/about.html?langid=en for details
of the campaign.
EUROSTAT (2008), Population and Social Conditions: Social Protection in the European Union,
Brussels.
__________ (2011), Child Well-being Index, accessed 2011: http://www.eurofound.europa.eu/emcc/
content/source/eu06015a.htm?p1=ef_publication&p2=n.
Europe de lEnfance (2010), Dclaration, Brussels.
Eurobarometer (2008), Discrimination in the European Union: Perceptions, Experiences and
Attitudes, Brussels.
European Agency for Fundamental Rights (2009), EU-MIDIS European Union Minorities &
Discrimination Survey, Main Results Report, Conference Edition, http://fra.europa.eu/
fraWebsite/attachments/eumidis_mainreport_conference-edition_en_.pdf, Vienna.
European Commission (2004), The Situation of Roma in an Enlarged European Union: Employment
and Social Affairs. Fundamental Rights and Anti-discrimination, Brussels.
__________ (2010), Europe 2020: A Strategy for Smart, Sustainable and Inclusive Growth, Brusssels.
__________ (2010), General Comments on the Social Inclusion Report from the EC Committee on
Employment and Social Affairs.
European Commission (2011), DG Employment: Evaluation of European Social Fund Support
for Enhancing Access to the Labour Market and the Social Inclusion of Migrants and Ethnic
Minorities.
European Commission Communication (2011), Early Childhood Education and Care: Providing All
Our Children with the Best Start for the World of Tomorrow, COM(2011) 66 final, Brussels.
__________ (2011), An EU Framework for National Roma Integration Strategies up to 2020, COM
(2011) 173 final, Brussels.
European Commission Education and Culture DG/NESSE Network (2009), ECEC: Key lessons from
research for policy makers, Brussels.
European Court of Justice (2007), see ERRC (European Roma Rights Centre) for the documents
attached to the case: http://www.errc.org/cikk.php?cikk=2945.
79
European Foundation for the Improvement of Living and Working Conditions (2006), Sector Futures:
childcare services sector, Dublin.
__________ (2009), Childcare Services in Europe, Dublin.
European Panel on Sustainable Development (2010), Taking Children Seriously: How the EU Can
Invest in Early Childhood Development for a Sustainable Future, Gothenburg.
European Parliament (2010), Explanatory Note on the EU strategy on Roma inclusion
(2010/2276/INI).
European Roma Rights Centre (2001), State of Impunity: Human Rights Abuse of Roma in
Romania, ERRC Budapest.
__________ (2007), The Impact of Legislation and Policies on School Segregation of Roma Children,
ERRC Budapest.
___________(2009), Persistent Segregation of Roma in the Czech Education System, ERRC
Budapest.
___________ (2011), ERRC: http://errc.org/cikk.php?cikk=3918.
European Voice (2011), A Disturbing Backdrop to Roma Talks, The Economist Intelligence Unit,
7 April, 2011, Brussels.
Fleck G. and Rughinis, C. (2008), Come Closer: Exclusion and Inclusion of Roma in Present-day
Romania, Bucharest, Guvernul Romaei.
Frazer, H., Marlier, E. and Nicaise, I. (2010), A Social Inclusion Roadmap for Europe 2020, Antwerp,
Garant.
GAC (2009), Educational Disparities of Roma Pupils in Elementary Schools in Roma Neighbourhoods
in the Czech Republic, http://www.gac.cz/.
Greenspan, S.I. and Shanker, S. (2004) G. The First Idea: How Symbols, Language, and Intelligence
Evolved from Our Primate Ancestors to Modern Humans, Cambridge, MA, Da Capo Press.
Hammarberg, T. (2010), Council of Europe Commissioner for Human Rights.
Hancock, I. (2002), We Are The Romani People / Ames sam e Rromane Dzene, Interface Collection,
Hatfield: University of Hertfordshire Press, xvixxii.
Hanushek, E.A. and Wossmann, L. (2005), Does Educational Tracking Affect Performance and
Inequality? Differences-in-Differences Evidence across Countries, in Economic Journal, Royal
Economic Society, vol. 116(510). NBER Working Paper No. 11124.
Harlen, W. and Malcolm, H. (1999), Setting and Streaming: A Research Review, The Scottish
Council for Research in Education, SCRE Publication.
Heckman, J., Heckman-Cunha (2007), Investing in Young People, www.ftp.iza.org/dp5050.pdf.
Human Rights First (2010), Combating Violence Against Roma in Hungary, Blueprint, http://www.
humanrightsfirst.org/wp-content/uploads/pdf/HungaryBlueprint.pdf.
INSOMAR and CNCD (2009), Discrimination Phenomena in Romania Perception and Attitudes,
Bucharest.
International Step by Step Association (2001), School Success for Roma Children: Step-by-Step
Special Schools Initiative, New York.
Irvine, J.J. (Ed.) (2002), In Search of Wholeness: African American Teachers and Their Cultural
Classroom Practices. NY: Palgrave Global Publishing.
ISSA (2002), Transforming the Role of Teaching Assistants in Slovakia, in Classroom Practices (No.
3, 2002), Dawn Tankersly, Budapest.
__________ (2010), Pedagogical Standards: Competent Educators of the 21st Century: Principles of
Quality Pedagogy, Amsterdam.
ISSA and International Step by Step Association (2009), Communiqu: Investing in Early Childhood
Development: The Most Effective Use of a Nations Resources, Budapest, Author.
80
r o m a e a r l y c h i l d h o o d i n c l u s i o n t h e R E C I o v e r v i e w r e p o r t
__________ (2009), Side-by-Side: Education for Social Justice in the ISSA Network, Budapest.
Ivanov, I. (2010), A Roma Civil Society Assessment of the EU Platform for Roma Inclusion and the
EU Roma Summit, ENAR Review, February, 2010.
Kaga, Y., Bennett, J. and Moss, P. (2009), Caring and Learning Together, Paris, UNESCO.
Kavanagh, M. (2011), Case Study of the Mesd Project, Budapest, Roma Education Fund.
Kzdi, G. and Kertesi, G. (2006), Expected Long-Term Budgetary Benefits to Roma Education in
Hungary, Budapest, Institute of Economics, Hungarian Academy of Sciences.
Kovac C.T. (2007), On Roma Education: A background document prepared for the 2005 Roma
Education Fund Donors Conference, Budapest, Roma Education Fund.
Lancet, The, (2005), Volume 365, Issue 9478, 25 June 2005, Child Survival: Countdown to 2015.
Lancet, The, (2007), Volume 369, Issue 9555, 6 January 2007, Early Childhood Development: The
Global Challenge.
Lee, R. (2005), Learn Romani / Das-duma Rromanes, Hatfield: University of Hertfordshire Press.
Lpfo (1998), Swedish Preschool Curriculum, Stockholm, Ministry of Education.
Marmot Review (2010), Fair Society, Healthy Lives, London.
Matras, Y. (2005), Romani: A Linguistic Introduction, Cambs: Cambridge University Press, pp. 513.
McDonald, C. and Negrin, K. (2010), No Data: No Progress, Budapest, OSI.
Mother and Child Nutrition Organisation (2009), http://motherchildnutrition.org/nutrition-protection-
promotion/.
Moss, P. (2011), Democracy as First Practice in Early Childhood Education and Care, Encyclopaedia
on Early Childhood Development, Montreal, Centre of Excellence for Early Childhood
Development.
Mustard, F. (2008), Investing in the Early Years: Closing the Gap Between What We Know and What
We Do, Adelaide, Department of Children and Families, South Australia.
National Middle School Association (2007), Research Summary Heterogeneous Grouping:
http://www.nmsa.org/Research/ResearchSummaries/HeterogeneousGrouping.
NICHD (2000, 2004), National Institute of Child Health and Human Development, Bethseda, MD.
OECD (2001, 2006), Starting Strong I and II: Early Childhood Education and Care, Paris.
Ogbu, J. (1978), Minority Education and Caste: The American System in Cross-Cultural Perspective.
San Diego, CA: Academic Press.
OSCE (2003), Action plan on improving the situation of Roma and Sinti within the OSCE area,
Maastricht.
OSCE and ODIHR (2010), Sustainable Solutions for Displaced Roma, Ashkali & Egyptians and
Policies to Improve the Reintegration of Repatriated Roma, Belgrade: OSCE/ODIHR, http://
www.osce.org/odihr/75578.
Open Society Foundations (2008), Monitoring Education for Roma: A Statistical Baseline for
Central, Eastern, and South Eastern Europe, online publication.
OSI (2004), Transition of Students: Roma Special Schools Initiative, New York.
__________ (2006), Monitoring Education for Roma: A Statistical Baseline for Central, Eastern and
South-Eastern Europe, Budapest.
__________ (2007), Equal Access to Quality Education for Roma, Vols 1 and 2., Budapest: http://
www.soros.org.
__________ (2010), Roma children in Special Education in Serbia: Overrepresentation,
Underachievement, and Impact on Life, OSI monitoring reports, Budapest.
OSI EU Monitoring and Advocacy Programme (2007), Equal Access to Quality Education for Roma,
Vols 1 and 2, Budapest.
81
OSI REI (2007), Experiences of the Roma Education Initiatives (REI), Budapest.
Peters, J. and Vandenbroeck, M. (2009), Caring and Learning Report on Ghent, Paris, UNESCO.
Pramling, N. and Pramling Samuelsson, I., (Eds) (2011), in press: Educational Encounters: Nordic
Studies in Early Childhood Didactics, Dordrecht, The Netherlands: Springer.
Roma Education Fund (2008), Persistent Segregation of Romani Children in the Czech Republic,
Budapest.
Romanian Government (2006), Department of Interethnic Relations: The interethnic Climate in
Romania before EU Integration, Bucharest.
__________ (2008), Report of the Presidential Commission for analysis and elaboration of policies in
the field of public health care in Romania, Bucharest.
Rorke, B. (2010), Monitoring and Evaluation of Roma Projects and Policies, Open Society
Foundations Roma Initiatives.
Ross, D. et al. (2000), Family Income and Child Well-being, in ISUMA, Vol. I, No. 2, Ottawa, ISUMA.
Serbian Government (2009), Law on the Fundamentals of Education (2009) p. 30.
Shanker, S. (2011), Lectures given at RECI Roundtables in Bucharest and Belgrade, London, Open
Society Foundations.
Slavin, R. (1990), Achievement Effects of Ability Grouping in Secondary Schools: A Best-Evidence
Synthesis, in Review of Educational Research, (Fall): pp. 471499.
Stojanovic , J. and Baucal, A. (2007), Equal Access to Quality Education for Roma: Serbia, in Equal
Access to Quality Education for Roma. Budapest: Open Society Institute EU Monitoring and
Advocacy Programme.
Surdu, M. (2004), Desegregating Roma Schools in Romania: A Cost-Benefit Analysis, in Separate
and Unequal: Combating Discrimination Against Roma in Education, eds. Rekosh, E. and
Sleeper, M., Budapest, Public Interest Law Centre, Columbia University.
TARKI (2010), Child Poverty and Child Well-being in the European Union. Report prepared for the DG
Employment, Social Affairs and Equal Opportunities (Unite E.2) of the European Commission,
Budapest. http://www.tarki.hu/en/research/childpoverty/index.html .
UNDP (2002), Vulnerable Groups in Central and Southeast Europe (statistical profiles), http://
vulnerability.undp.sk.
UNDP (2004), Avoiding the Dependency Trap: The Roma in Central and Eastern Europe, Bratislava.
http://europeandcis.undp.org.
__________ (2006), At Risk: Roma and the Displaced in Southeast Europe [The primary area
under study consists of: all the households in Roma settlements or areas of compact Roma
population].
UNESCO (1996), The Treasure Within (Delors Report), Paris.
UNESCO Slovak Commission (2005) Quality Education for Children from Socially Disadvantaged
Settings, Bratislava.
UNICEF (2006a), Early Childhood Development Indicators: MICS (Multiple Indicator Cluster Survey)
20056. www.unicef.org/statistics/index_24302.html.
__________ (2006b), Innocenti Social Monitor 2006: Understanding Child Poverty in Central and
Eastern Europe and the CIS, Florence.
__________ (2007a), Child Poverty in Rich Countries, Innocenti Report Card 7, Florence.
__________ (2007b), Child Poverty in FYR Macedonia, Skopje, UNICEF Country Office.
__________ (2007c), Breaking the Cycle of Exclusion: Roma Children in South East Europe, UNICEF
Serbia; February 2007.
__________ (2007d), Roma Children in South East Europe The Challenge: Overcoming Centuries
of Distrust and Discrimination in Social and Economic Policy for Children; Discussion paper,
Geneva, Regional Office for CEECIS Region.
82
r o m a e a r l y c h i l d h o o d i n c l u s i o n t h e R E C I o v e r v i e w r e p o r t
__________ (2007e), Education for Some More than Others? A regional study on education in
Central and Eastern Europe and the Commonwealth of Independent States (CEE/CIS); Geneva,
UNICEF Regional Office for CEE/CIS Region.
__________ (2007f), Roma Strategy Paper, Draft for Discussion, Geneva, UNICEF Regional Office
for CEE/CIS Region.
__________ (2008a), Early Childhood Development in the CEE/CIS Region: Situation and Guidance,
Geneva.
__________ (2008b), Children in the former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia: A Situation Analysis,
Skopje, UNICEF Country Office.
__________ (2008c), Emerging Challenges for Children in Eastern Europe and Central Asia: Focus
on Disparities, Geneva.
__________ (2008d), Toward Roma Inclusion: A mapping of Roma Education Initiatives in Central
and South-Eastern Europe, Geneva.
__________ (2009), Starting at the Beginning: The Meaningful Inclusion of Roma Children in Early
Childhood Services, Geneva.
UNICEF CEECIS Regional Office (2010), Situation Analysis: An Overview of Inclusive Education in
Central Eastern Europe and the Commonwealth of Independent States, Geneva.
UNICEF Romania (2009), Toward an Integrated Early Education and Parenting Strategy, Bucharest.
United Nations (1989), Convention on the Rights of the Child, available at: http://www.unicef.org/crc/.
United Nations Committee on the Rights of the Child (2006), Comment No. 7: http://www2.ohchr.
org/english/bodies/crc.
Vandenbroeck, M. (2007), Deculturalising Social inclusion and Re-culturalising Outcomes in
Promoting Social Inclusion and Respect for Diversity in the Early Year, The Hague, Bernard van
Leer Foundation.
van Ravens, J. (2010), Private Communication, Bucharest Roundtable.
Voicu, M. and Popescu, R. (2007), Roma Women Known and Unknown: Family Life and the
Position of Women in Roma Communities.
Wide Open School Foundation (2001), Job Description of Roma Teacher Assistants in Preschool and
Primary School: Training Module, Bratislava.
Wilkinson, R. and Pickett, K. (2009), The Spirit Level: Why More Equal Societies Almost Always Do
Better, London, Allen Lane.
World Bank (2003), World Development Report 2003, Washington, D.C.
__________ (2005), Roma in an Expanding Europe, Washington.
__________ (2008), Czech Republic: Improving Employment Chances of the Rom, Washington.
__________ (2010a), Factsheet Roma Inclusion in Central and Eastern Europe: Policy Note
focusing on Bulgaria, Czech Republic, Romania, and Serbia presented at the International
Steering Committee of the Decade of Roma inclusion.
__________ (2010b), Roma Inclusion: An Economic Opportunity for Bulgaria, the Czech Republic,
Romania and Serbia, Washington.
83
Annex 1. Summary of the RECI National Reports
The Czech Republic
1. Country Information
The Czech Republic is situated in Central
Europe, bordering on Germany, Poland,
Slovakia, and Austria. It has been a member
of the European Union since 2004.
Traditionally, the country falls into two parts,
Bohemia to the west and Moravia to the
east. Today, the country is administered
into 13 regions plus the capital Prague. The
population is almost 10.5 million, of which
more than 90 per cent are of Czech origin,
4 per cent Moravian, 2 per cent Slovak and
some smaller ethnic groups, including the
Roma. The official 2011 census records
that only 12,444 people, less than 0.1 per cent of the population, declared themselves
to be Roma. Experts regard the figure as far too low, estimating the real size of the
Romani minority to be 150300 thousand people, that is, about 2.5 per cent of the
total population.
89
The national fertility rate in the Czech Republic is 1.44, but estimates
suggest that the fertility rate per married Roma female is 3.43. Up to the moment,
governments have not developed reliable measures to determine the real number of
Roma people living in the Czech Republic.
2. The Status of Roma in the Czech Republic
The Gross National Income (GNI) per capita of the Czech Republic is $24,144, about 80
per cent of the mean value for the EU-27 and significantly greater than that of the other
three countries in the RECI review. Levels of inequality are less than the EU average:
the Gini coefficient is .25 (EU average is 0.30), with 18.1 per cent of households living in
poverty (EU average is 22.6 per cent). By contrast, the Gender Gap Index
90
ranks the Czech
Republic as 65
th
in the world a low ranking for a European country. Employment rates for
women with a child aged 03 years are particularly low at 22 per cent (only Hungary has
a lower rate). Government expenditures on education and social protection are relatively
low: at 4 per cent for education compared to a EU-27 average of 5 per cent, and social
expenditure at 18.7 per cent of GDP compared to the EU-27 averages of 27.2 per cent.
All the usual freedoms and civil rights are granted by law to citizens of Romani origin
through the Czech Charter of Basic Rights and Freedoms (Listina zkladnch prv a svobod,
1992) and the Minority Act of 2001. These texts guarantee freedom of assembly, a right to
education, a right to receive and distribute information in the minority languages, a right to
participate in issues concerning ones minority. A commitment to supporting the economic,
social, political and cultural life of the minorities is also included. There is also a Government
89 250,000 would be about 2.5 per cent of the population.
90 The Gender Gap Index assesses countries on how well they divide resources and opportunities among their male
and female populations, based on 14 variables across four dimensions: economic participation and opportunity;
educational attainment; political empowerment; health and survival.
POLAND
GERMANY
AUSTRIA
SLOVAKIA
84
r o m a e a r l y c h i l d h o o d i n c l u s i o n t h e R E C I o v e r v i e w r e p o r t
Council for National Minorities (Rada vldy pro nrodnostn meniny); a Government
Council for Roma Community Affairs; a Ministry for Human Rights and National Minorities,
and the Ombudsperson; and since 2008, a Social Inclusion Agency. The Czech government
finances community social work which is provided by the NGO People in Need. Field social
workers operate in socially excluded localities. Social workers offer social counselling and
assistance services free of charge, inter alia, in the area of education or employment. The
services include help with administrative tasks, negotiations with public institutions, escort
to meetings, free legal advice, help with securing regular income, housing, regular school
attendance of their children, etc.
Despite the social achievement of the Czech Republic and not least, its excellent record
for infant survival, current legal provisions do not give adequate protection to the Roma
population against discrimination. As in other countries in the region, the Roma in the
Czech Republic suffer from racial prejudice (through negative stereotyping and denial of
their situation, identity and language blaming the victim); social exclusion (through spatial
segregation and high poverty levels); and widespread discrimination in access to housing,
employment and essential services, such as social welfare, health and education. In 2003,
the UN Committee on the Rights of the Child expressed its concern at the negative
attitudes and prejudices among the general public, media representations, incidents of
police brutality, and discriminatory behaviour on the part of some persons working with
and for (Roma) children, including teachers and doctors. Similar examples of discrimination
exist in the access of Roma families to maternal health and nursery schools (see below).
The socio-economic status of the Roma population remains very low compared with
the majority, in other words, Roma families are disproportionally poor and dependent.
While the overall unemployment rate in the Czech Republic is about 10 per cent, the
unemployment rate among Roma is estimated at around 60 per cent, with 7090 per
cent without work in some communities. Contrary to popular opinion, this is not because
Roma adults do not want to work (see World Bank, 2009).
91
Unemployment in the Czech
Republic is much influenced by gendered child-rearing responsibilities (women with
children are far more likely than men not to be in the labour market); region (the rural
areas of the Czech Republic to the south and east are particularly affected by lack of jobs);
long duration (chronic unemployment is higher in the Czech Republic than in other EU
countries) and education level (those with primary school education or less are likely to
be un- or under-employed). Such features affect disproportionately the Roma population.
In addition, social benefits and social welfare programmes in the Czech Republic are
relatively under-financed (18.7 per cent of GDP) compared to other European countries
such as France (31.1 per cent of GDP in 2006 Eurostat 2009). In addition, Romani
education levels are low, which excludes many from formal employment. It is reported
also that the casual approach of state authorities to the grey-market (cash economy)
makes it more profitable for Roma and other workers to combine illicit work with
registration at the unemployment office than to work legally.
3. The Status of Young Children in General
Child health and well-being in the Czech Republic are generally of a high standard. The infant
mortality rate is 2.8 infants per 1,000 live born children an excellent achievement (EU-25
average = 5.72 per thousand). In terms of child well-being, the Czech Republic ranks 16
th
91 World Bank (2009), Roma inclusion in Central and Eastern Europe: Policy Note focusing on Bulgaria, Czech
Republic, Romania, and Serbia, an analysis presented at the International Steering Committee of the Decade of
Roma inclusion, 2009.
85
in Europe.
92
The proportion of all households with a child under 6 years at-risk-of-poverty
was 18.1 per cent in 2005, compared to 17.2 per cent on the EU-27 (at-risk-of-poverty is
defined as 60 per cent of the median value of equivalized disposable income). Early care
services for children under 3 are provided by the Ministry of Labour and Social Affairs but
coverage has fallen radically since 1989 and now reaches only about 6 per cent of the child
population. Three main forms exist (municipal and private nurseries and family day-care/
baby-sitting services) but for financial and other reasons (all three types are paid services),
Roma families do not attend. Pre-school education is under the auspices of the Ministry
of Education and enrols 79.2 per cent of all 3-year-olds, 92.6 per cent of all 4-year-olds
and 94.2 per cent of all 5-year-olds, and around 20 per cent of 6 year olds who have had
compulsory schooling deferred and follow a preparatory class in the basic school. Education
in the preparatory class is expected to be line with the Framework Educational Programme
for Pre-school Education. Fees for early education are moderated (almost all kindergartens
are run by the municipalities) and an entitlement exists for the final year, which is free.
4. The Status of Roma Children and Their Families
Official statistics covering birth rates, infant mortality and general health levels in Roma
communities are not available in the CR. Some researchers (Langhamrov and Fiala,
2003) estimate that Romani infant mortality rates and health levels are similar to these
of the majority population some 28 years ago. Despite the lack of data, it is probable that
health risks for young children from socially excluded Roma families are much higher
than in the mainstream population. It is reasonable to assume that persistent poverty
over generations, weak access to pre- and post-natal care, intolerable housing and unsafe
environments, poor nutrition and unhealthy lifestyles seriously influence the general health
levels of young Roma children. In addition to the environmental risks linked to living in poor
neighbourhoods, access to health and social services is generally lower in such localities.
The whole situation is moreover complicated by the mistrust of many socially excluded
Roma families toward public institutions, which they connect with restrictions and forced
authority rather than help. (Nikolai, 2010).
The Czech National Report notes that disaggregated figures for early childhood education and
care are not available, but reasonable estimates suggest that Roma children rarely access
childcare services (less than 1 per cent) and are weakly represented in early education.
Efforts are made, however, to address the needs of socially disadvantaged children and since
2005, schools have been able to employ a teaching assistant for these children and open up
preparatory classes. About 8 per cent of Roma children attend nursery school before the
final year, but a higher percentage attends the preparatory school class. More than
70 per cent of Roma children are enrolled in normal primary school but Ministry of Education
figures confirm that 26.7 per cent of Roma children attend practical schools (former special
schools).
93
The actual attendance and completion rates of Roma children at primary school are
not published, although it is estimated that absences by Roma children are at nearly three
times the rate of their peers. According to official statistical data from 2001, 17.2 per cent of
Roma children at post-primary level gained access to some form of vocational training, while
3.3 per cent accede to full secondary vocational education with a school-leaving exam.
Although the Ostrava judgment by the European Court of Human Rights condemned the
abusive placing of Roma children in special schools, the practice still persists. The reasons
92 The European child well-being index measures member states (+ Norway and Iceland) on six dimensions of
child well-being: health; subjective well-being; childrens relationships; material resources; behaviour and risk;
education; housing and environment.
93 The National Report, Czech NGOs and independent research insist that a much higher proportion of Roma
children are in special schools or classes.
86
r o m a e a r l y c h i l d h o o d i n c l u s i o n t h e R E C I o v e r v i e w r e p o r t
why have already been described in numerous reports: the discriminatory attitudes of
municipal councils, parents and teachers; and the high-stakes
94
interpretation of diagnostic
tests used to assess the school maturity of young children. Segregated, special education
has a long tradition in the Czech Republic and inclusive education is still refused by many
pedagogical workers and education psychologists as being unrealistic and inappropriate.
Czech parents have also initiated mass de-registration of their children when the proportion
of Roma children in a majority school goes beyond 30 per cent. These schools then function
as segregated practical schools, usually under the label multicultural school. Curriculum,
teaching practice and pupil composition then reproduce the pattern of practical schools.
There is also the question of the preference of some Roma parents for special schools
where Roma children are a majority and feel safe. In addition, these schools are often better
financed, offer parents certain advantages and employ teachers with some experience
of Roma children, etc. However, a survey by C