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14th Annual Summer Institute on Early Childhood Development

A group of people sitting in chairs, watching a speaker on-stage.
June 2, 2017
14th Annual Summer Institute

Addressing Inequity in Canada through Early Childhood Education

The Summer Institute is an annual collaboration between the School of Early Childhood at George Brown College and the Atkinson Centre for Society and Child Development at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education/University of Toronto. The Institute strives to offer timely information to inform research, policy and practice.

Research tells us that quality early childhood education can be a game-changer for children, particularly those from disadvantaged backgrounds. Yet many policies and practices prevent racialized, Indigenous and vulnerable children from participating in early childhood programs or stream them into low quality settings.

A new framework for early learning and childcare is in development. Canadian jurisdictions are using the occasion to update their early childhood policies. It is important that change be informed by evidence and viewed through an equity lens.

Keynote Speakers

Dr. Kang Lee

Dr. Eric Jackman Institute of Child Study, Ontario Institute for Studies in Education

Dr. Lee uses psychophysical methods to study how children and adults process both stable and dynamic information in a face. This includes how children and adults perceive, encode and recognize different kinds of faces, and how children and adults detect and interpret others’ gaze in various social contexts. In addition, he explores neuro-physiological correlates of face processing in children and adults.


Presentation Resources
Kang Lee on stage at Summer Institute 2017.

Keith McCrady

Native Child and Family Services of Toronto

Mr. McCrady is an Ojibway and Cree from the Bear Clan and was raised traditionally by both parents, receiving traditional teachings from his father, community members and grandfather. Keith was born in Thunder Bay, Ontario and raised in Biinjitiwaabik Zaaging Anishinaabek (formerly Rocky Bay First Nation); Residing in Toronto for the last 7 years.  Keith is a proud father of 4 children ranging in ages 17, 18, 20, & 22 years old.

Keith is currently employed full-time for the past 8 years and is Senior Supervisor of the Scarborough Child and Family Life Centre & Child Care and Aboriginal Head Start Programs for Native Child and Family Services of Toronto. Keith has been working with aboriginal children and families for over 20 years, been a foster parent to over 30 aboriginal children and has won the Prime Ministers Award for Excellence in Early Childhood Education; Certificate of Excellence.


Presentation Resources
Keith McCrady on stage at Summer Institute 2017.

Craig Alexander

Senior Vice-President and Chief Economist, The Conference Board of Canada

Craig Alexander crosses the country each year giving presentations on the state of the economy and policy issues. He is a strong supporter of literacy and a champion of the charitable sector. Mr. Alexander brings over 19 years of experience in the private sector as an economic and financial forecaster to the position of senior vice-president and chief economist with the Conference Board of Canada. Prior to joining the private sector, he spent four years as an economist at Statistics Canada.


Presentation Resources
Craig Alexander on stage at Summer Institute 2017.

André Lebon

President, Commission sur l’éducation à la petite enfance

A psychoeducator by training, André Lebon has run the Centre de psychoéducation du Québec. He has collaborated in the establishment of the Centre of Excellence for Early Childhood Development. From 2003 to 2006, he was the early childhood development director at the Fondation Lucie et André Chagnon, where he is still acts as a consultant for early childhood. His most recent assignment has been to oversee the development of the Observatoire des tout-petits project, launched in April 2016.


Presentation Resources
André Lebon on stage at Summer Institute 2017.

Workshops

Challenging the Dialogue in Professional Training

Presenters:

  • Rachel Brophy, Professor, School of Early Childhood, George Brown College
  • Bernice Cipparrone McLeod, Professor, School of Early Childhood, George Brown College

This workshop challenges the way educators talk and teach about diversity in ECEC. We will compare new innovations to more traditional ways of approaching and measuring “diversity” and think about how these varying methods respect and inform the experience of ECE students. We consider the importance of representation, creating space for conversation and critical thinking, and the possibility of re-imagining our classrooms, and what this might offer the field.

Conversations on Diversity: Re-imagining how we think about diversity with ECE students (PDF Presentation)

New Times for Early Education and Care in Ontario

Presenter: Shannon Fuller, Assistant Deputy Minister, Early Years Division, Ministry of Education

New opportunities for families, educators and providers are opening in Ontario. The province is committed to the largest single expansion of childcare in its history. The federal government is again playing a role in ECEC after a long absence. Local governments have new responsibilities for planning and managing a wider scope of service providers. This workshop helps providers and practitioners understand the new developments and how they can participate.

Renewing & Expanding Ontario's Early Years & Child Care System (PDF Presentation)

Supporting transitions for children with additional support needs

Presenter: Debra Mayer, Early Childhood Education Consultant, Manitoba Education and Training

Children’s transition into school is an emotional and complex time for any family. This transition may be even more challenging for families with children with additional support needs. Four Government of Manitoba departments/branches recently released an early childhood transition protocol to guide multidisciplinary partners in easing the transition of young children from their early learning program into school. The protocol helps service partners to reflect on any changes that may be needed within each agency’s own processes.

Protocol for Early Childhood Transition to School for Children with Additional Support Needs (PDF Presentation)

Promising practices from Aboriginal Head Start in Urban and Northern Communities

Presenters:

  • Janet Hare, Policy Analyst, Public Health Agency of Canada
  • Stephanie Cerutti, Research Analyst, Public Health Agency of Canada

Aboriginal Head Start in Urban and Northern Communities provides culturally appropriate early childhood development programs for First Nations, Inuit and Métis children (3-5 years old) and their families living off reserve in 134 communities across Canada. The six guiding program components of Indigenous culture and languages, education, health promotion, nutrition, social support and parental and family involvement are linked to performance measurement and evaluation results describing program delivery and outcomes for children, families and their communities.

Promising practices from Aboriginal Head Start in Urban and Northern Communities (PDF Presentation)

The role of those who work with young children is inherently feminist

Presenter: Lisa McCorquodale, Faculty, Fanshawe College

This workshop challenges ECEs to reconsider their work and the role they play in society. It shares an appreciation for how ECEs can critically reflect on normative expectations for working parents and how the relationship formed between mothers and ECEs has the potential to push public policy. Additionally, the findings support an advocacy role that professionals can play in advancing the position of both the field and working families.

Mothering: Reclaiming Feminine Voice (PDF Presentation)

Influence of educator and child expectations on children’s self-regulation and literacy outcomes in kindergarten

Presenters: 

  • Kristy Timmons, Doctoral Student, Dr. Eric Jackman Institute of Child Study
  • Janette Pelletier, Professor, Dr. Eric Jackman Institute of Child Study

This workshop explores the influence of educator and child expectations on children’s self-regulation and literacy outcomes in kindergarten. Despite the growing body of literature on the factors that influence student achievement and educational outcomes, there is limited research exploring how these factors may influence each other when both educator and child expectations are taken into consideration. Furthermore, most of the literature exploring these relationships involves older students. More research is needed to understand these relationships with children in the early years.

Influence of educator and child expectations on children’s self-regulation and literacy outcomes in kindergarten (PDF Presentation)

The Abecedarian approach to closing the equity gap

Presenter: Melanie D'Souza, Research Faculty, School of Health Sciences and Community Services, Red River College

The Abecedarian approach is internationally recognized as a strong, evidence-based early childhood intervention strategy, designed for families living with a wide range of disadvantages. This session provides an overview of the Abecedarian project in Manitoba, highlighting the international body of research, preliminary findings from the Manitoba intervention, new initiatives within the project, and the ongoing training, mentoring and support offered to ECEs implementing the approach.

The Abecedarian Approach (PDF Presentation)

Raising the Village: Providing data on child well-being to support equitable decision making

Presenters:

  • Tamara Augsten, Policy Development Officer, City of Toronto, Children’s Services
  • Lorraine Mcleod, Manager, City of Toronto, Children’s Services

Raising the Village is an initiative of the Toronto Child and Family Network, a collaboration between many child/family service providers. Raising the Village uses data from various sources to establish a common outcomes measurement framework. This workshop highlights the tools and resources developed to inform equitable service planning, including the race and gender toolkits and the Child and Family Inequities Score (a composite index of several socioeconomic variables). These innovative tools can inform collaborative service planning to address inequities.

Raising the Village: Providing data on child well-being to support equitable decision making (PDF Presentation)

Equity in Early Childhood Education and Care: What the research says

Presenter:  Isabelle Vinet, General Coordinator, Centre of Excellence for Early Childhood Development and Executive Director, Centre de Psycho-Éducation du Québec

The capacity of early childhood education and care to promote equity is dependent on the policy it operates under, the practice it fosters and knowledge of early childhood environments and their impacts. This workshop uses the Encyclopedia of Early Childhood Development as a resource for policy development, educator training and practice and reveals what we know, and what we do not know, about how inequity impacts children’s development.

Equity in Early Childhood Education and Care: What the research says (PDF Presentation)

Understanding usage patterns and oversight of unlicenced family child care in Canada

Presenters: 

  • Michal Perlman, Associate Professor, University of Toronto
  • Linda White, Associate Professor, University of Toronto
  • Petr Varmuza, Doctoral Student, University of Toronto

Considering the tragedies that have occurred in unlicensed care it is puzzling that governments continue to allow unlicensed family child care to operate. Despite the high stakes even basic information about unlicensed care, such as the number of children in care and the types of families using the care are unknown. This session provides information on usage rates based on parent reports from a national dataset. Different oversight models for unlicensed care and the costs associated with these are discussed in light of the data.

Understanding usage patterns and oversight of unlicenced family child care in Canada (PDF Presentation)

Social Justice Education in the Early Years

Presenter: Zeenat Janmohamed, Chair, George Brown College, School of Social and Community Services, School of Deaf and Deafblind Studies

Families arrive in early childhood programs with histories in race, social class and immigration status. They may also bring Indigenous ways of knowing and have expectations that practitioners are not prepared for. Policy development and practice in the early years can make the transition from dominant assumptions about children and families to a social justice paradigm that recognizes the role of power and privilege in early child and family support programs.

Social Justice Education in the Early Years (PDF Presentation)

The Impact of Curriculum Approaches on Equity in Early Childhood Education Settings

Presenter: Kamini Kamdar, Kindergarten Teacher, York Region District School Board

Examining the Full Day Early Learning Kindergarten curriculum in light of Te Whariki (New Zealand’s early childhood curriculum) and the Reggio Emilia philosophy, participants learn how to identify the “funds of knowledge” that support children’s learning and family engagement in early childhood education, and their influence on democratic participation, equity and inclusion.

The Impact of Curriculum Approaches on Equity in Early Childhood Education Settings (PDF Presentation)

How inequality is shaping child and youth well-being

Presenter: Lisa Wolff, Director, Policy & Education, UNICEF Canada

The UNICEF Index of Child Inequity reveals how far Canada allows the most disadvantaged children to fall behind the “average” child. The swirling debates about broad income inequality in Canada have largely overlooked the impacts on children. The session shows how inequality is shaping child and youth well-being. Inequality starts early, therefore we have to intervene early.

UNICEF Report Card 13: Fairness for Children: Inequality in child well-being within wealthy nations (PDF Presentation)

Engaging Fathers in Young Children’s Learning

Presenter: Brian Russell, Provincial Coordinator, Dad Central Ontario

Children learn important skills through how their fathers play, read and interact with them. Attachment theory shows that men’s style of interacting with their children supports children’s academic success. Participants will gain an understanding of the literature and discuss ways to engage fathers to support an equitable education for children.

My Dad Matters: Engaging Fathers in Young Children’s Learning (PDF Presentation)

Indigenous perspective on environmental inquiry in the early years

Presenters:

  • Hopi Martin, Kindergarten Teacher, Toronto District School Board and Early Years Flextime PhD Candidate, СƵ, University of Toronto
  • Haley Higdon, Educator, Dr. Eric Jackman Institute of Child Study, University of Toronto and Project Lead, Natural Curiosity

Have you ever wondered how Indigenous perspectives relate to learning about the environment in the early years? Have you ever wondered what Indigenous perspectives and principles apply to all of us, and how these can be supported in any learning environment? This session hopes to light the fire of your professional inquiry by exploring how an Indigenous lens to environmental inquiry transforms learning in the early years.

Indigenous perspective on environmental inquiry in the early years (PDF Presentation)

Early Childhood Education and Care, the Great Equalizer

Presenter: Emis Akbari, Professor of Early Childhood, George Brown College

Early childhood education and care viewed through an equity lens must consider who is served (the child); who is doing the labour (their gender, race, immigration status); where the labour is being performed (as a public service, as a market service, in private households); and under what conditions (waged, unwaged, unionized/non unionized etc.) — all of these factors impact the quality of services, the family (parental employment,gender equality, work/life balance)and society (equity gap/social cohesion/inclusion).

Early Childhood Education and Care, the Great Equalizer (PDF Presentation)

Leadership Development for Equity in Early Childhood Setting

Presenters:

  • Miranda Mackie, Manager of Services – Special Needs Resourcing, Child & Community Resources
  • Noreen McChesney, Manager of Services, OEYCPC/Specialized Services, Child & Community Resources

Research links high-calibre leadership to better outcomes for young children. Effective leadership is vital to the success of education and care setting; and we recognize that without skilled and committed leaders to help shape teaching and learning, the opportunity to create and sustain high-quality learning environments is minimized. Leadership can be professionally developed and includes elements that recognize identity, influence and responsibility, respect and purpose.

Leadership Development for Equity in Early Childhood Settings (PDF Presentation)

Culturally Relevant Family Engagement Strategies for the Classroom

Presenters:

  • Michelle Munroe, Manager, Parent Engagement, Toronto District School Board
  • Nancy Angevine, Family Engagement Consultant, With Equal Step

A critical step in making schools places where all children can learn is for educators to first see how their own cultural values operate in the classroom. This includes how they expect children to take part in discussions, to whether they expect classroom materials to be shared or used individually and whether they will, or will not, engage families.

Culturally Relevant Family Engagement Strategies for the Classroom (PDF Presentation)

Award Presentation: Native Child and Family Services of Toronto

ECE Award of Excellence - Recognizing the contribution of Native Child and Family Services of Toronto for their ongoing commitment to excellence in serving families in the community.

was founded in 1986 by concerned members of Toronto’s Native community. The founders were concerned about the high number of children in the care of Children’s Aid Societies and by the issues, such as poverty, addictions, family violence, and homelessness, confronting Native families in the city. The founders were further concerned that while the Native family had many issues before it, few services within the mainstream sector were available to meet the needs of an increasingly voiceless and marginalized community.

The founders were guided by a vision that saw the development of a single point of access to a host of needed services all under the control and guidance of the community itself. Important features of such services were that they be family and child focused, holistic in their orientation, integrated, and preventative, with a strong Native cultural base as their foundation.

After more than 20 years, the Agency has gone from an $80,000 budget with two staff to an Agency of 180 staff and a service budget of over $20 million. It has a broad mix of services, multiple funders, is a Society under the Child and Family Services Act, a United Way member, a registered charity and in 1999 the winner of the Ruth Atkinson Hindmarsh Award for best practices in the service of children. Major funders include the Province of Ontario, United Way Toronto, the City of Toronto, the Government of Canada, the Toronto Community Foundation, and the Royal Bank of Canada.

NCFST is a Children’s Aid Society under the Child and Family Services Act. As such we have a mandate to protect children from all forms of maltreatment and to provide residential care for those children who need it.

Although we take the protection and care of our children very seriously, we recognize that we must do what we can to help families and children who need assistance. As a result, we see our responsibilities as including the provision of support services to all family members.


The Annual Summer Institute on Early Childhood Development is presented by: