Move to provide free kindergarten education in Bahrain

The proposed legislation aims to ensure equal opportunities for Bahraini children, enhance the quality of education and improve working conditions for employees in the sector

The Parliament unanimously approved an amendment to the 2005 Education Law   

Manama, Jan 22, 2025: Bahrain may soon see the establishment of government kindergartens offering free early education to Bahraini children. 

During its weekly session yesterday, Parliament unanimously approved an amendment to the 2005 Education Law. The proposal, presented by Strategic Thinking Bloc member Bassema Mubarak, emphasised the need for the Education Ministry to expand its role to include establishing and managing preschools, while also supporting and overseeing private sector initiatives in early education. 

The proposal has been recommended for approval by Parliament’s services committee. 

Mubarak told her colleagues that it aims to integrate kindergartens into mainstream education. She added that fair wages should be provided to all employees, with qualified educators in public kindergartens receiving salaries equivalent to those of teachers in government schools. 

Mubarak asserted that the proposed legislation would ensure equal opportunities for Bahraini children, enhance the quality of education and improve working conditions for employees in the sector. 

Parliament’s financial and economic affairs committee, chaired by MP Ahmed Al Salloom, said the bill, if approved, would ease the financial and living costs for Bahraini families while improving wages in nurseries. 

“Although implementing the law would require additional budget allocations, it represents a strategic investment in Bahrain’s human capital, ultimately promoting sustainable economic growth,” he added. 

Bahrain Education Minister Dr Mohammed Mubarak Juma said the ministry’s role in early childhood education primarily involves licensing and supervising kindergartens, while their establishment and management are handled by the private sector, in accordance with international best practices. 

The ministry already offers direct and indirect support to kindergartens and their staff based on available resources, he said. The institutions are required to comply with the provisions of private education laws and any violations result in administrative or legal actions. 

“The government has issued a regulatory framework for independent early childhood education institutions to enhance their operations, improve service quality and strengthen oversight,” Dr Juma noted. 

“For the academic year 2022-23, 19,043 children, aged three to six, were enrolled in kindergartens, which is a large number for the ministry to absorb, under the proposed move – whether the numbers are constant or increasing,” he added. 

The proposed legislation will be drafted by the government and referred as proper law to the National Assembly within six months. 

 

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