SINGAPORE -
Media OutReach Newswire - 29 December 2025
– Tanoto Foundation convened government leaders, international organisations, researchers, and civil society at the
2025 International Symposium on Early Childhood Education and Development (ECED), in Jakarta under the theme "
ECED Ecosystem Synergy in Promoting the Best Start in Life."
The symposium comes at a critical moment, as shared challenges across
health, nutrition, education, and caregiving continue to shape early
childhood development outcomes in Indonesia and globally, where many
young children continue to face barriers to healthy development, from
gaps in nutrition and care to limited access to quality early learning.
These challenges highlight the need for closer coordination across
health, education, parenting, and social protection to ensure children
receive holistic and equitable support from the earliest years.
Without strong cross-sector collaboration, Indonesia risks losing
momentum in building its human capital and realising its demographic
dividend towards Indonesia Emas 2045.
In partnership with key government ministries and cross-sector
organisations, Tanoto Foundation convened the symposium as a platform to
align policy, practice, and evidence across sectors, bringing together
representatives from central and local government, international
organisations, academia, civil society, and philanthropy.
The symposium featured two main discussion tracks focused on health and education, and parenting in early childhood.
The morning segment,
"Synergising Health and Education for ECED", focused on
integrating health, nutrition, and early learning services, highlighting
innovations in growth and development monitoring, nutrition
interventions, and early stimulation within primary service systems.
The afternoon session,
"Parenting and Early Learning", placed families and caregivers
at the centre of the ECED ecosystem, exploring responsive caregiving,
interaction-based learning, and policy support to strengthen parents'
capacity to nurture children's development.
Indonesian Minister of Health Budi Gunadi Sadikin officially opened the
symposium, emphasising the decisive importance of early childhood for
national development.
"The age of 0 to 5 years is a highly decisive phase in determining
whether a person will grow into a healthy, intelligent adult who can
contribute to the nation, including to increase per capita income," the Minister said.
"If we do not act quickly, we risk missing Indonesia's demographic dividend. This is our responsibility to our children."
The Government of Indonesia has reaffirmed early childhood development
as a national priority through the Long-Term National Development Plan
2025 to 2045 and the Medium-Term National Development Plan 2025 to 2029,
with Holistic and Integrated Early Childhood Development (PAUD-HI)
designated as a key performance indicator.
Opening the afternoon session, Indonesian Minister of Women Empowerment
and Child Protection, Arifatul Choiri Fauzi, highlighted the symposium's
contribution to policy strengthening.
"This forum brings together strategic cross sector perspectives. We
encourage the resulting recommendations to be used to strengthen
policies, regulations, and service innovations for early childhood
development," she said.
Indonesian Deputy Minister of Higher Education, Science, and Technology,
Prof. Stella Christie, underscored the importance of science-based
parenting and high-quality interaction.
"Caregiving with optimal interaction between children and caregivers has
the greatest potential to maximise child development," she said. "No
technology, including artificial intelligence, can replace the power of
human interaction."
She added that children learn through curiosity, imitation, and everyday
experiences, making responsive and evidence-based parenting critical
for brain development and lifelong learning.
CEO of Tanoto Foundation Benny Lee reaffirmed the Foundation's long-term
commitment to early childhood development as a cornerstone of human
potential.
"The early years are when the foundations of brain development, health, and character are formed," Benny said.
"This is not the work of one institution. It requires a truly supportive
ecosystem built through collaboration among government, civil society,
academia, and philanthropy."
He emphasised that Tanoto Foundation, founded by Sukanto Tanoto, Founder
and Chairman of Royal Golden Eagle (RGE), views early childhood
development as a primary investment, where collective action can deliver
lasting and sustainable impact. "This symposium is about ensuring that
every child receives the strongest possible start in life, every parent
receives the support they need, and every sector moves forward
together," he said.
The symposium brought together up to 200 participants, with speakers
from government, development organisations, academia, research
institutions, and philanthropy.
https://www.tanotofoundation.org/en/