小黄书视频

News & Stories: Publications

May 5, 2017

Declaration: For Recognition of All Children鈥檚 Right to Quality Educational Services, from Birth Onward

Excerpt: "Here is the Declaration of the Summit on Early Childhood Education for recognition of the right of every child to quality education services from birth. If you wish, you can make a citizen gesture by signing this Declaration electronically. In doing so, you will affirm your adherence to the principles set out therein and which promote equal opportunities for every citizen."
June 10, 2017

Fundamental flaws flash over Ontario鈥檚 child care plan

Excerpt: "There is much to commend in the ministry鈥檚 document, but the fundamental flaws are flashing. As long as child care remains a market-driven service, designed as a workforce support and co-existing alongside an unlicensed black market, quality, affordable, universal, transparent, and accountable will remain words, and not the drivers of system transformation."
June 12, 2017

Early childhood services that work for children, families and islanders

Excerpt: "The research is designed to evaluate: The effects of the continuous early years program participation on children鈥檚 readiness for school; The value of a focused professional development agenda on child outcomes; The impact of public investments in early years programming on child outcomes."
October 31, 2017

Excerpt: "More than 190,000 people are part of Canada鈥檚 early childhood education and care (ECEC) workforce. ECEC workers are employed in early childhood programs operated by non-profit agencies and for-profit companies. They work in the public sector in postsecondary institutions, for school boards, and for local and provincial governments. They also work in private homes as unregulated child care providers, as independent contractors for regulated child care agencies, and as live-in nannies."
November 21, 2017

A few dissenters should not prevent Ontario from modernizing child care

Excerpt: "Many children enter a child care setting around 12 months starting out in an infant room which takes children up to 18 months old. Within six months they will transition to a toddler room and then transition again a year later to a preschool room. Multiple transitions sever children鈥檚 relationships with their educators and peers creating unnecessary anxiety and insecurity for young children and their families. The proposed option reduces means children transition only once from infancy to entry to FDK."
February 7, 2018

Posted on The Conversation.

Excerpt: "A trend is emerging in education in Canada: We are recognizing that early childhood education is beneficial for children, for families, for everyone.

Provinces and territories are focusing more attention on programs for preschoolers and the federal government is prepared to invest billions of dollars in child care in the coming decade."
February 12, 2018

Posted on apolitical.

Excerpt: "鈥淲hat really spurred the development of early childhood policy in Canada was the OECD country profile,鈥 said Kerry McCuaig, a Fellow in Early Childhood Policy at the University of Toronto. 鈥淚t had been entirely an afterthought in terms of public policy.鈥 Along with her colleagues at the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education (小黄书视频), McCuaig has recently released the Early Childhood Education Report 2017, providing an update on what's been achieved since. Encouragingly, the report finds that more than half of Canadian pre-schoolers now attend an early education program before starting school, up from around 20% in 2008. Meanwhile, provinces and territories have been increasing spending on early childhood since a national framework was introduced in 2006: from C$2.5b ($1.98b) in 2004 to C$10.9b ($8.6b) a decade later."
April 16, 2018

Ontario鈥檚 early years revolution

Excerpt: "Ontario has become the first jurisdiction in North America to make early learning and child care an entitlement for all children, setting a new bar for child care policy."
October 31, 2018

Posted on UNICEF Canada.

Excerpt: "The report measures the rights and well-being of children in rich countries over the past 18 years. UNICEF compares countries so they can learn and do better. The 2018 UNICEF Report Card 15 is focused on equality in education."

Special thanks to from UNICEF Canada went to Kerry McCuaig and Dr. Emis Akbari, Atkinson Centre for Society and Child Development, University of Toronto, for producing data and analysis for early child education in Canada.
November 26, 2018

Canada needs a national strategy to address the shortage of early childhood educators

Excerpt: "Canada has about 2.4-million children age 5 and younger. If we were to exclude those under 1 year old, because their parents are potentially covered by federal parental leave, that leaves about 1.9- million preschoolers. For those 1.9 million preschoolers we have about 800,000 preschool child care spaces or enough capacity for about 40% of these children."
January 17, 2019

The Rationale for Expanding Public Education to Include Preschool-Aged Children

Excerpt: "Unlike schools, Canada鈥檚 current patchwork of child care and preschool programs is primarily delivered as a market service. Access varies, as does quality. Evidence in Canada and elsewhere indicates that mixed delivery of preschool creates access, quality and accountability challenges. Relying on a mix of delivery agents 鈥 public, private, non-profit 鈥 necessitates negotiating multiple relationships and systems. Public education offers a sturdy platform that avoids, or at least reduces, these challenges. Building public education down to provide universal preschool is an alternative to market delivery."
February 24, 2019

Policy Oversight of Outdoor Play in Early Childhood Education Setting in Canadian Provinces and Territories

Excerpt: "This report provides an overview of Canadian provincial and territorial perspectives of outdoor play in child care and kindergarten settings. It reviews curriculum frameworks that guide early childhood practice and the legislative oversight of early childhood environments to assess potential contradictions. While legislation can be a barrier to outdoor play, the paper finds other restrictive factors including educator/parent perceptions, lack of green space, fear of litigation, restrictive standards and funding mechanisms. The overarching barrier to outdoor play is limited access to early childhood programs."