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Access to Early Learning for professionals

Helping children from families with complex needs to participate in a quality three-year-old kindergarten program.

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Overview

Access to Early Learning (AEL) is an early intervention program that helps young children to take part in early childhood education and care programs.

AEL is a targeted program for three-year-old children from families with complex needs. It aims to make sure that these 3-year-old children get the full benefits of attending a quality kindergarten program.

Through AEL, degree-qualified facilitators can connect families to quality education and care services that provide a quality kindergarten program.

Families referred to AEL have complex needs that can affect children regularly attending kindergarten programs. AEL gives these families extra support to help enable regular attendance and access to 15 hours per week of free kindergarten.

Facilitators also work with families in their homes to explore learning activities they can do with their children.

AEL facilitators:

AEL benefits both families and early childhood educators by:

Eligibility

Children are eligible for AEL if they are referred by:

Children may also be referred by other services, including a Maternal and Child Health service, or Early Childhood Education and Care service.

Professionals and/or services will refer children from families with two or more complex needs, including:

Please refer to the list of providers below to see if AEL operates in your area, and contact your local AEL site if you have any questions about eligibility.

How it works

AEL facilitators work with families and services using a child-focused and strength-based approach. They are experienced in trauma-informed practice and trained in attachment theory and relational practices.

Facilitators have a strong knowledge of the local service system and often work alongside other child and family services, such as Enhanced MCH and The Orange Door.

An AEL facilitator:

Pre-Prep eligibility of AEL supported children

From 2026, children who have been supported by AEL in their Three-Year-Old Kindergarten year are eligible for Pre-Prep (more hours of Four-Year-Old Kindergarten). In 2026, services can deliver between 16 and 25 hours per week of Pre-Prep to eligible children. In 2028, this will increase to up to 30 hours per week. Learn more about Four-Year-Old Kindergarten is becoming Pre-Prep.

There are no changes to the AEL program for 3-year-olds as a result of the introduction of Pre-Prep. AEL will continue to provide one year of support for three-year-old children to access 15 hours per week of free or low-cost kindergarten.

Program guidelines

The AEL Guidelines give extra guidance and resources to support the delivery of the program for AEL providers and program partners, including family services, Child Protection, Maternal and Child and Health, and Early Childhood Education and Care services.

Proven benefits of AEL

An evaluation of AEL was completed in 2024 by ATRD Consultants in partnership with the Centre for Community Child Health, Murdoch Children’s Research Institute (MCRI).

The findings were consistent with an earlier independent evaluation completed by MCRI in 2017 providing further evidence the AEL model supports high levels of kindergarten attendance and engagement of children in significantly disadvantaged circumstances.

The 2024 evaluation found AEL:

AEL facilitators aren’t there to judge you, they are there to support and help.

Parent

Aspects of the program that support strong positive outcomes include:

With [the AEL facilitator’s] support we managed to get the children to attend our program regularly. [The AEL facilitator] also came and observe the children in Kinder setting and home setting and always provided us with valuable input about the children’s learning.

ECEC staff survey response

Download the 2024 evaluation report:

Download the 2017 evaluation report:

Locations of AEL providers

AEL providers operate in 23 sites across Victoria. Each site supports up to 16 three-year-old and their families each year.

AEL providers and local government areas:

For more information about AEL, contact your local AEL provider.

AEL-School Readiness Funding program

AEL-SRF provides children from families with complex needs, who may otherwise miss out on kindergarten, with a rich educational experience before they start school. Services interested in taking part in AEL-SRF can use their School Readiness Funding to implement an Access to Early Learning program in their local area.

To access Access to Early Learning–School Readiness Funding (AEL-SRF), early childhood education and care services can pool resources using School Readiness Funding (SRF) to purchase an AEL program, delivered by a suitably skilled provider.

There are some differences between AEL-SRF and AEL:

How services can participate in AEL-School Readiness Funding

Kindergarten service providers can implement an Access to Early Learning program across a single or multiple sites in their network where applicable. They can also partner with other services in their area, through agreement to a third-party agreement or Memorandum of Understanding which would determine the program’s implementation, funding and respective roles and responsibilities across the services.

The Early Childhood Improvement Branch (ECIB) supporting SRF implementation in your regional office can link services that are interested in purchasing AEL-SRF with other interested services.

The ECIB can also suggest local services with capacity to employ and support an AEL facilitator, such as local child and family service providers or local government.

More information

Early childhood education and care

Updated 27 March 2026



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