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Putting the Public into Early Learning and Child Care

A bunch of crayons.
December 1, 2023
Putting the Public into Early Learning and Child Care

This symposium highlighted how early learning and child care are delivered within schools can increase access, reduce uneven quality, improve the working conditions and professionalism of educators, allow for early detection and intervention, and provide a continuum of learning to benefit young children.

The Federal government’s $27 billion investment through the Canada-Wide Early Learning and Child Care (CWELCC) agreements raised the profile of early learning and child care in Canada. Parents are benefiting from reduced fees although availability is limited. Funding is limited to licensed child care, preventing schools from accessing new funding to expand services. Provinces and territories are left to implement the agreements with the pandemic-weakened, low-waged licensed child care sector. 

Forging a coherent social program out of a disjointed mix of commercial, charitable, religious, and non-profit providers operating under 13 different provincial and territorial agreements is no small task. There are lessons to be learned from across Canada on how education and child care could and should be integrated.

Keynote Presentation

Dr. David Philpott on behalf of Craig Alexander

Former Chief Economist at TD Bank, Deloitte Canada, Conference Board of Canada.
President: Alexander Economic Reviews

David Philpott

Panel One: The Power of Schools for Early Learning

Moderator: Dr. Michal Perlman, Professor: Â¥·ïÌìÌÃ

Expanding early learning and child care programs as part of public education optimizes existing infrastructure and recognizes early learning as a public good. Schools exist in all communities and can provide a hub of learning and family support activities. The panelists will share an overview of the status of early learning and child care across Canada and how schools are responding to the opportunities provided by CWELCC.

Emis Akbari photo.

Dr. Emis Akbari

Professor and Program Coordinator School of Early Childhood George Brown College, Senior Policy Fellow, Atkinson Centre 

Dr. Petr Varmuza

Dr. Petr Varmuza on behalf of Dr. Gordon Cleveland

Professor Emeritus University of Toronto Scarborough; Advisor Building Blocks for Child Care

Kerry McCuaig photo.

Kerry McCuaig

Senior Policy Fellow: Atkinson Centre

  • Presentation shared with Dr. Emis Akbari

Panel Two: Schools at the Centre - Pan-Canadian Actions

Moderator: Dr. Zeenat Janmohamed, Executive Director Atkinson Centre, University of Toronto

Hear about innovations from across Canada on how to best deliver early learning and child care through publicly-funded schools.

Region of Waterloo logo

Barbara Cardow

Director, Children’s Services: Region of Waterloo

Melissa Hilton

Melissa Hilton

Manager Extended Day Program: Waterloo Region District School Board

Melia Dirk

Melia Dirk

District Vice Principal of Early Learning and Child Care Okanagan Similkameen School District 53, British Columbia

Jill Piers

Jill Piers

Manager, Pre-Primary Operations: Ministry of Education and Early Childhood Development, Nova Scotia

Zeba Ahmad

Zeba Ahmad

CEO, Saskatoon Public Schools Foundation, Saskatchewan 

Panel Three: Policy Research Informing Best Practice

Moderator: Dr. Christine McLean, Associate Professor and Department Chair, Child and Youth Study, Mount Saint Vincent University, Nova Scotia

How public education can support diversity, inclusion, and anti-oppressive practice in early learning. 

David Philpott

Dr. David Philpott

Researcher/Consultant, Retired Professor, Memorial University, Newfoundland

Gail Hunter

Gail Hunter

Professor and Program Coordinator, School of Early Childhood, George Brown College, Ontario

Jessie-Lee McIsaac

Dr. Jessie-Lee McIsaac

Associate Professor and Canada Research Chair, Mount Saint Vincent University, Nova Scotia

Closing Remarks

Scott McCain

Scott McCain

Chair, Margaret and Wallace McCain Family Foundation

Stephen McNeil

Stephen McNeil

Former Premier of Nova Scotia