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Meanings of pre-school education in English
We have no meanings for "pre-school education" in our records yet.
Usage of pre-school education in English
1
This has hit everything from pre-schooleducation to police and fire services.
2
Almost half the money will be spent on expanding pre-schooleducation.
3
What's missing is a distinct strategy on pre-schooleducation Read more: education policy 6.
4
The strongest impression I had from today was the desire for more pre-schooleducation.
5
Fine Gael has pledged to provide a year of funded pre-schooleducation for all children.
6
PRE-SCHOOL providers have raised concerns about the viability of the Government's free pre-schooleducation plan.
7
A quality universal pre-schooleducation for every child is the biggest bang for your buck.
8
Those families are often the ones whose children most need the educational and behavioural benefits of good pre-schooleducation.
9
She states the government have to back ECD projects, to 'build on existing platforms and deliver excellent pre-schooleducation'.
10
Our commitment to free pre-schooleducation is rooted in the Labour Party's core conviction that education should be universal and free.
11
Those who choose to work in the childcare sector do so out of a genuine interest in children and pre-schooleducation.
12
I would instead announce the results of our investment in pre-schooleducation programmes -how well prepared are our pre-schoolers for formal education?
13
High-quality pre-schooleducation provides measurable and sustained benefits to children in deprived areas, a new report on improving schools in Northern Ireland has concluded.
14
Educationalists have recognised for decades that properly funded and regulated pre-schooleducation is one of the foundation stones of a just and stable society.
15
Four-year-old children who get pre-schooleducation develop more social skills than their peers in primary schools, according to a study of early education in Ireland.
16
The progress report also found more tamariki receiving pre-schooleducation and more Maori and Pasifika school leavers achieving NCEA Level 2 compared to 2009 figures.