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November 22, 2011
For immediate release

Prince Edward Island Ranks High Nationally in Early Childhood Education

Education and Early Childhood Development

A major study on the state of early childhood education in Canada ranks Prince Edward Island’s early childhood education second in the country, says Education and Early Childhood Development Minister Alan McIsaac.

“We are very encouraged by this national recognition of our commitment to early childhood education,” said Mr. McIsaac. “Working closely with the early childhood community, we have accomplished much in a short period, including the establishment of a school-based kindergarten program which is delivered by early childhood educators.”

The Prince Edward Island Preschool Excellence Initiative continued with the introduction of Early Years Centers, with all trained staff, regulated parent fees, parent advisory committees and a provincial early learning framework.

The Early Years Study 3, the third in a trio of reports on the state of early childhood learning by the Honourable Margaret Norrie McCain and the late Dr. J. Fraser Mustard, was released today.

**** As released by the Margaret and Wallace McCain Family Foundation ****

Report reveals provinces are stepping up for young children

TORONTO, November 22, 2011 – The federal government may have ended the national child care plan in 2007 but that hasn’t stopped the provinces from making progress, a new report released today in Toronto and Montreal reveals. “Our report shows we may be developing a Canadian early learning and child care program one province at a time,” says the report’s co-author, the Honourable Margaret Norrie McCain.

Early Years Study 3 is the third in a trio of reports on the state of early childhood learning by Mrs. McCain and world leading scientist Dr. J. Fraser Mustard who died last week. The study provides the social, economic and scientific rationale for public investments in young children and recommends that all children be entitled to an early education from age two.

“Our contemporaries in the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) have changed the discussion from the need to mind the children of working parents, to stimulating all children,” the report reads. “Driven by a massive body of research that points to the importance of the early years for future health, behavior and learning, they have invested heavily in early childhood programs, largely by including younger children in public education.”

The Early Years Study 3 introduces the Early Childhood Education Index, a tool that examines the state of early education across the provinces. “The index allows us to go beyond counting spaces and adding up dollars, to ask if public funding is being spent effectively to ensure the programs children attend are good,” says Kerry McCuaig, fellow in early childhood policy at the Atkinson Centre, Ontario Institute for Studies in Education and the third author on the report.

Three provinces passed the halfway mark on the Index’s 15-point scale. Quebec comes in first with 10 points, closely followed by Prince Edward Island with 9.5 and Manitoba with 7.5. The other provinces range between 1.5 and 6.5 points. “This represents progress,” Ms. McCuaig observed. “If the assessment was conducted as recently as three years ago, only Quebec would have stood on the podium.”

Today provinces spend over $7.5 billion on early education programs - a 100 percent increase over the last assessment the OECD did in 2004. Across Canada over 50 percent of 2 to 4-year-olds now regularly attend a program - more than twice as many as the OECD found in 2004. In addition provinces have taken steps to strengthen early education by rationalizing oversight, improving program quality and addressing the low wages of early childhood educators.

“The big story behind the Index is high-quality, publicly-funded preschool education for all 2- to 5-year-olds is not a utopian fantasy, particularly if it is built on the assets we already have in public education. Much of the groundwork has been laid, many of the tools have been developed and most provinces still have ambitious plans to put in place,” said Mrs. McCain.

EYS 3 and related documents are available at earlyyearsstudy.ca and pointsurlapetiteenfance.org.

For more information contact:

Toronto: Allison Black, Margaret and Wallace McCain Family Foundation, ablack@mwmccain.ca, 647.283.6403

Montreal: Jean Serge Grisé, Directeur, Communications et Affaires publiques, Fondation Lucie et André Chagnon, grisejs@fondationchagnon.org, 514.816.7520 For French language interviews outside Quebec, Linda Lowther, llowtherpei@gmail.com, 902.393.0679

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Media Contact: Rebecca Bruce
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