Northland early childhood educators say a teacher and reliever shortage in the region means they sometimes have to call parents to do relief work, or go into work sick.
This week education union NZEI said there were reports that 30 per cent of ECE centres had unfilled vacancies for qualified teaches, and while Education Minister Chris Hipkins recently announced a package to address the teacher shortage in primary and secondary schools, the ECE sector was left out.
Suzi Rasmussen, a teacher at Hillcrest Kindergarten in Kaikohe, and Zoe Brown from Mission Place Kindergarten in Kaitaia, said they felt "undervalued".
"There's this perception that early childhood educators are glorified baby sitters and that's just not true," said Rasmussen.
"Not anybody can come and do this work, it has such a lasting impact on children. In the first three years the most important developmental changes are happening," Brown said.