Moving Towards a Thriving Early Childhood Workforce (THRIWE)

THRIWE will conduct transdisciplinary research aiming to strengthen Early Childhood Education and Care (ECEC) workforce health and well-being, build sustainable systems for ECEC quality and promote children’s holistic development.

Workforce health and wellbeing and ECEC quality

The project responds to urgent workforce challenges in the field—poor educator health and wellbeing and high sick leave and turnover rates—compromising quality ECEC. By integrating insights from play research, co-creation methodologies, systemic leadership, complex interventions, and workforce studies, THRIWE will generate knowledge on how educational systems can adapt and thrive under challenging conditions.

The early years (0-6 years) play a crucial role in shaping a person's future. ECEC has become a cornerstone of care and learning for children, but quality is often sub-optimal. Holistic early childhood pedagogies supporting children’s movement, play and exploration, may equip children with the competencies they need to thrive and navigate a complex world. However, strengthening ECEC quality is challenging given poor educator health and well-being and high sick leave and turnover rates, which undermine both provision quality and research. In response, THRIWE will use a broader systems and complexity perspective on the ECEC sector, educator health and well-being, leadership, provision quality and children’s development.

Aims of the project

THRIWE will address two main research gaps to advance current understanding and future research on ECEC sustainability:

  1. Lack of solid experimental research using an integrated workforce well-being framework.

  2. Lack of stakeholder participation in experimental research. ECEC workforce well-being research is dominated by small correlational studies with a fragmented view on well-being.

Thus, more large-scale, high-quality experimental research is needed. To succeed with developing and implementing interventions that are relevant, acceptable and scalable, educators and other stakeholders need to engage, articulate their needs and adapt interventions to the local context.

In THRIWE, we aim to conduct transdisciplinary research on systemic and complex ECEC interventions that support the holistic development and well-being of children and educators through integration of design-based and experimental approaches to work life research.

THRIWE co-creation and feasibility study

We will conduct the THRIWE co-creation and feasibility study 2026-2029. The study will extend on established large-scale experimental studies focusing educator professional development and pedagogical practices to support movement, play and exploration (ACTNOW (2019-2022) and MoveEarly (2024-2026)) and design, conduct and evaluate a co-creation and feasibility study underpinning development of a large-scale experimental study.

Workshop methodology will be used to develop knowledge about conditions for educator health and wellbeing and design of an intervention together with kindergartens. A 4–5-month feasibility study will be conducted to evaluate the acceptability and feasibility of the intervention. If the evaluation is successful, and with additional funding, we aim to evaluate the effectiveness of the intervention in a large-scale experimental study and potentially implement it at scale.   

Partnerships for transdisciplinary intervention research and ECEC quality 

Through THRIWE, we aim to build a leading transdisciplinary research group on intervention research promoting ECEC practices where both children and educators can thrive. THRIWE is led by Professor Eivind Aadland and researchers from the Research group for physical activity and public health and KINDknow - Kindergarten Knowledge Centre for Systemic Research on Diversity and Sustainable Futures. The project is conducted in collaboration with a broad team of researchers spanning the fields of ECEC pedagogy, physical activity epidemiology, public health, organizational leadership, occupational health and workforce research and Bergen municipality and Kanvas kindergartens. The project is funded by the Western Norway University of Applied Sciences.

bilde av Eivind Aadland

Eivind Aadland

Professor

Involved researchers

Professor
Faculty of Education, Arts and Sports
Postdoctoral Fellow
Faculty of Education, Arts and Sports
Professor
Department of Health and Caring sciences
Associate Professor
Department of Sport, Food and Natural Sciences
Professor
Department of Pedagogy, Religion and Social Studies

 

  • Celene Domitrovich, Georgetown University School of Medicine (USA)
  • Helle Marie Skovbjerg, Kolding School of Design (Denmark) 
  • Suzanne Merkus, Statens Arbeidsmiljøinstitutt (Norway)
  • Andreas Holtermann, National Research Centre for the Working Environment (Denmark)