Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and...

65
Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Transcript of Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and...

Page 1: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Page 2: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada

(CCAAC)

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Page 3: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

The Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada

(CCAAC) is dedicated to promoting quality, publicly funded child care accessible to all.

Our organization is non-profit, membership-based and regionally

representative.

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Page 4: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

Purpose of project: to facilitate a national dialogue on curriculum issues in national policy making resulting in the establishment of a national curriculum policy framework.

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Page 5: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

Objectives :1. Increased knowledge of curriculum in

national policy making through dissemination of research findings and current issues.

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Page 6: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

Objectives :2. Increased collaboration between

sectors involved in early learning and child care through engagement in public consultation to identify and implement common values and early childhood education goals.

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Page 7: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

Objectives :3. Create a national curriculum / pedagogical

framework that will provide a common foundation on which to build programs that enhance children’s early learning and development.

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Page 8: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

What is a national curriculum / pedagogical framework ?

Articulating our Vision:What, as a nation, do we envision for our children in the context of early learning and child care services?

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Page 9: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

John Bennett of the OECD (2004) defines curriculum:A short, general framework that includes: •A statement of principles… •A summary of programme standards…•An outline of goals for children…•Pedagogical principles and guidelines

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Page 10: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

The term “curriculum” is used…to describe the sum total of the experiences, activities, and events, whether direct or indirect, which occur within an environment designed to foster children’s learning and development.

- New Zealand’s Te Whariki

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Page 11: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

This curriculum framework for a children’s service is a foundation out of which come the daily experiences of children, their families and the professionals who work with them. It is not mainly about what professionals in children’s services do or how they go about their practice; rather, most importantly, this curriculum framework is about why: a rationale for practice. – New South Wales, Australia

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Page 12: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Curriculum approach continuum (John Bennett 2004)

Broad Developmental Goals

FocusedCognitive Goals

Page 13: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

Two main approaches to ELCC curriculum:

1.The Social Pedagogy Approach2.The Infant School Approach

(John Bennett 2004)

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Page 14: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

The Social Pedagogy Approach•A focus on the whole child; “education in the broad sense”•Strong inter-generational and community outreach•A short core curriculum to guide early education practice, local interpretation encouraged(John Bennett 2004)

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Page 15: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

The Social Pedagogy Approach

•Curricula are generally developed in the centres, based on the objectives and content of the core curriculum•A Play-based, active and experiential pedagogy…with an emphasis on the outdoors•Little system monitoring of child outcomes or measures (the centre’s responsibility…)(John Bennett 2004)

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Page 16: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

The Infant School Approach

Focus on readiness for school •Parent/community dimension is underplayed except in at-risk situations•A detailed curriculum by a curriculum authority for 3-6 year olds, central specification(John Bennett 2004)

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Page 17: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

The Infant School Approach

Structural quality is less•A restrained, teacher-directed play-based pedagogy•Attention is given to achieving curricular aims and to measuring individual performance(John Bennett 2004)

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Page 18: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

The Social Pedagogy Approach:•Sweden, Finland, Norway, Eastern European countries

The Infant School Approach:•USA, Belgium, France, Ireland, Korea, UK, Mexico, Netherlands

(John Bennett 2004)

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Page 19: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

OECD: Starting Strong

OECD review of ELCC identifies Canada as the only nation of twenty with no articulated vision for early childhood care and education (ELCC)

Canada’s Emerging Vision

Page 20: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

OECD: Starting StrongCanada is among the richest nations yet•Lowest spender•Lowest provision of services•High rates of child poverty

Canada’s Emerging Vision

Page 21: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Recent Developments in CanadaNational Forum on Child Care – CCAAC / CCCF (1994)

Guiding Principles for Quality Child Care in Canada:•Affordability•Quality•Availability and Accessibility•Accountability

Canada’s Emerging Vision

Page 22: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Recent Developments in Canada

National Children’s Agenda•Child Poverty•Children’s Rights

Canada’s Emerging Vision

Page 23: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Recent Developments in Canada

First Ministers’ Communiqué: Early Childhood Development AgreementSeptember 2000

Canada’s Emerging Vision

Page 24: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Recent Developments in Canada

First Ministers’ Communiqué:Multilateral Framework for Early Learning and Child Care (2003)

Canada’s Emerging Vision

Page 25: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Recent Developments in Canada

Moving Forward on Early Learning and Child Care:Bilateral Agreements between the Government of Canada and each Provincial Government (2005)

Canada’s Emerging Vision

Page 26: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Recent Developments in CanadaTermination of Bilateral Agreements; replaced with:•Universal Child Care Benefit (UCCB) direct subsidy to parents ($100 / month)•Additional transfers under the CST to provinces and territories ($250 million)

Canada’s Emerging Vision

Page 27: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Recent Developments in CanadaThe primary purpose of child care in Canada has been seen politically as the provision of care in the parent’s absence, generally so that parents can be employed or engage in training/education.- OECD

Canada’s Emerging Vision

Page 28: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Recent Developments in CanadaIn recent years, there has been a move away from this conception of child care to a more developmental perspective, at least among the administrators, national councils and community groups responsible for the sector. Though this concern has not always been translated into reality by governments – often due to inadequate financing…- OECD

Canada’s Emerging Vision

Page 29: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Recent Developments in CanadaThe women’s movement has for decades highlighted the lack of child care as a significant barrier to achieving women’s equality and gender equity.“Child care is the ramp that provides equal access to the workplace for mothers...” Judge Rosalie Abella, 1984

Canada’s Emerging Vision

Page 30: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Recent Developments in CanadaSignatories should take appropriate measures to encourage the provision of the necessary supporting services to enable parents to combine family obligations with work responsibilities and participate in public life, in particular through promoting the establishment and development of a network of child care facilities.United Nations, Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women, 1982 (Canada is a signatory)

Canada’s Emerging Vision

Page 31: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Recent Developments in CanadaHow can these competing concepts be integrated into a single vision or model?

Peter Moss (2006) discusses the change from a child care discourse to a pedagogical discourse in England:

Canada’s Emerging Vision

Page 32: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Parenting

Gender

Employment Children as

Citizens

Page 33: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Recent Developments in CanadaQuality by Design, Canada’s most comprehensive research on quality (Beach, Friendly – CRRU) identify the elements of a quality system beginning with ideas:

Quality

Page 34: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Recent Developments in Canada“…begins with a statement of the values held by the society and what it wants for its children. The values statement is based on implicit societal values and beliefs about the nature of the child and childhood. It is coloured by the history, circumstances and context - economic, social and cultural - in which the society exists.”

Quality

Page 35: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Vision

What do provinces value in ELCC?

Page 36: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Vision

All provinces and territories* endorsed a vision, values, and goals for children as

part of the National Children’s Agenda in May 2000. The Communiqué on Early

Childhood Development (2000) and the Communiqué on the Multilateral

Framework Agreement (2003) further refine agreement.

(*with the exception of Quebec)

Page 37: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

2005 Early Learning and Child Care Agreements in Principle:

Extensive discussion and consensus building across levels of government in identifying key principles for early learning and child care.

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Vision - Provinces

Page 38: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

2005 Early Learning and Child Care Agreements in Principle:Provinces and territories began to develop their own action plans. While these agreements have now expired, many jurisdictions are following through with these plans, and have experienced considerable progress in achieving their goals.

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Vision - Provinces

Page 39: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

In most provinces, vision statements (and in some cases, values, principles, and goals) are intended to guide the development of all policy and program initiatives for children, including early learning and child care programs.

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Vision - Provinces

Page 40: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

The majority of provinces and territories do not have a distinct “vision” for children who participate in early learning and child care programs.

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Vision - Provinces

Page 41: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

•A number of provinces have developed broad statements to either describe their intent for the nature of early learning and child care programs, or to guide the development of program delivery systems. •tend to focus on the system elements, rather than to describe visions for children who participate in early learning and child care programs

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Vision - Provinces

Page 42: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

Vision Statements regarding children and families typically do not clearly define a provincial or territorial position as to whether early childhood education and care programs are to value children for who they are in the “here and now” or whether the intent is to prepare children for “who they may become”.

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Vision - Provinces

Page 43: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

Curriculum Frameworks

Although no province or territory has formally introduced an early learning and child care curriculum, there is considerable work underway across Canada to do so.

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Vision - Provinces

Page 44: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

Five provinces now have draft versions of documents at varying stages of readiness:

QuebecNew BrunswickSaskatchewan

British Columbia Ontario

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Vision - Provinces

Page 45: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Vision

What do other countries’ citizens value in ELCC?

Page 46: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Vision

Ireland

All young children will have access to and participate in a range of quality education and care services and supports of an internationally accepted standard through a plan implemented over the next ten years (2005-2015).

Page 47: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

VisionIreland - Principles for ECCE Policy: •Valuing children’s competence and contribution•Holistic support for young children’s well-being, learning and development•Universal access for all children to early childhood care and education•Ongoing quality development in policy, infrastructure and service provision•Building on existing partnerships

Page 48: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Vision

SwedenChild care in Sweden has two primary

aims:1. to support and encourage children's

development and learning and2. to enable parents to combine their

childcare responsibilities with education or employment

Page 49: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Vision

SwedenECCE has had high priority for several decades

and is viewed as:• a central component of family policy in Sweden• a cornerstone of the Swedish publicly funded

social welfare system. • an important task for society• the first step in the life-long learning process

Page 50: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Vision

New Zealandto grow up as competent and confident learners and communicators, healthy in mind, body, and spirit, secure in their sense of belonging and in the knowledge that they make a valued contribution to society.

Page 51: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Vision

FinlandThe foundation on which these values rests expresses the ethical attitude which shall characterise all pre-school activity. Care and consideration towards other persons, as well as justice and equality, in addition to the rights of each individual shall be emphasized and made explicit in all preschool activity.

Page 52: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Vision

FinlandChildren assimilate ethical values and norms primarily through their concrete experiences. The attitudes of adults influence the child’s understanding and respect for the rights and obligations that apply in a democratic society. For this reason adults serve an important role as models.

Page 53: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Consultation

Process•Facilitated meetings, focus groups, workshops with Canadians representing our diverse geography•Community members and government officials

Page 54: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Consultation

Groups and Sectors

•Disability•Aboriginal•International•Rural, remote, northern

•Anti-poverty•Labour•Research / Academia•Etc.

Page 55: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Vision

What we heard

•Canadians want a system to support children and families•Governments at all levels have a responsibility for both leadership and investment

Page 56: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Vision

What we heard – Canadians value:•Children in their current state of childhood•Optimal child development•The importance of parents in the early childhood years

Page 57: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Vision

What we heard – Canadians value:•Communities’ roles in contributing to children and families’ well-being•Community-based and developed services•Balance – family/work and community/individual

Page 58: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Vision

What we heard – Canadians value:•Strong parental involvement and decision making•Universality•Inclusion – particularly for children with diverse abilities•Equality /equity

Page 59: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Vision

What we heard – Canadians value:•Culture and language•Diversity•Respect for nature and outdoors•Fairness and democracy •The importance of loving relationships in children’s lives

Page 60: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Vision

What we heard – Canadians value:Elements contributing to quality:•ECE professionals who are adequately compensated, respected, and educated•Standards: more than safe and healthy – nurturing, developmental, well-resourced, bright attractive environments

Page 61: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Vision

What we heard – Canadians value:

•Federal leadership•Shared jurisdictional responsibility•Collaboration at all levels: federal, provincial/territorial, municipal, regional, aboriginal, and community

Page 62: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

Canada’s Vision must incorporate:•Our progress to date – build on what we have•A collaborative approach with provinces and territories that recognizes jurisdictional responsibility while providing continuity and equity for all children and families in Canada

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Moving Forward

Page 63: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

Canada’s Vision must incorporate:

•Valuable lessons from other nations•The voices of Canadians

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Moving Forward

Page 64: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

The complete project documents will be posted on the CCAAC website in the near future:www.ccaac.ca

Sign up online for our list serve to receive notice of the posting.

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Moving Forward

Page 65: Pedagogy, Policy and Quality. Child Care Advocacy Association of Canada (CCAAC) Pedagogy, Policy and Quality.

Pedagogy, Policy and Quality

Putting your money where your mouth is…