1 / 41

Understanding The Early Years Niagara College ECE Program  October 2007

Understanding The Early Years Niagara College ECE Program  October 2007. Glory Ressler, B.A., Dip. GIT Coordinator, Understanding the Early Years Niagara Region Early Childhood Community Development Centre 905-646-7311 or eccdc@eccdc.org.

Download Presentation

Understanding The Early Years Niagara College ECE Program  October 2007

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Understanding The Early YearsNiagara College ECE Program  October 2007 Glory Ressler, B.A., Dip. GIT Coordinator, Understanding the Early Years Niagara Region Early Childhood Community Development Centre 905-646-7311 or eccdc@eccdc.org The Understanding the Early Years initiative is funded by Human Resources and Social Development Canada.  For further information, visit: www.hrsdc.gc.ca

  2. AGENDA • Overview of UEY • Local Research • Products and Activities • Impacts to-date • Discussion • Evaluations

  3. INTRODUCTION TO UEY • Funder: HRSDC (36 sites across Canada) • Sponsoring agency: ECCDC • History: Niagara Falls from 2001-2007, Niagara Region from 2005-2008 • Community Coalition: Early Years Niagara Planning Council • Partners: Region of Niagara, Ontario Early Years Centres, DSBN, NCDSB, various early years service providers, community groups, businesses and service clubs

  4. PURPOSE OF UEY • Promote awareness and understanding concerning the importance of the early years • Examine the relationship between community factors and early learning and development outcomes in Niagara • Report on local and national findings • Support evidence-based decision making and planning in the community (capacity building)

  5. UEY KNOWLEDGE GATHERING • UEY Timeline • 2001 EDI – UEY Niagara Falls • 2002 National Longitudinal Study of Children & Youth (NLSCY) • 2001 Census/Statistics Canada - UEY Niagara Falls, UEY Niagara Region • 2002 EDI – UEY Niagara Falls/Ontario Early Years Niagara Region • 2003 EDI – UEY Niagara Falls • 2003 Community Resources Inventory Survey – Ontario Early Years Niagara Region/UEY Niagara Falls • 2005 EDI - UEY Niagara Falls/Ontario Early Years Niagara Region • 2005 NLSCY – UEY Niagara Falls • 2006 EDI – UEY Niagara Region • 2007 Community Resources Inventory Survey – UEY Niagara Region • 2007 PIDACS – UEY Niagara Region CHILD DEVELOPMENT, FAMILY & COMMUNITY EXPERIENCE Readiness to learn (EDI) Parent Interviews & Direct Assessments (NLSCY, PIDACS) COMMUNITY ASSETS Community Resource Inventory Survey COMMUNITY FACTORS Socioeconomic Conditions and Social Risk Index (Census)

  6. EARLY DEVELOPMENT INSTRUMENT (EDI) An important part of the picture for the community, as well as early years service providers and decision makers. • Population-based measure, • Developmentally grounded, and • Links to community factors, literacy levels, school performance, health outcomes, and curriculum.

  7. EDI CONT’D Measures ‘readiness to learn at school’ –whichrefers to 4-6 year olds’ ability to meet task demands, such as: • Being comfortable exploring and asking questions, • Listening to the teacher, • Playing and working with other children, • Remembering and following rules, and • Benefiting from the educational activities provided.

  8. EDI CONT’D SK teacher recorded measure on five domainsof early child development: • Physical Health & Well-being, • Social Competence, • Emotional Maturity, • Language & Cognitive Development, • Communication Skills & General Knowledge.

  9. EDI ANALYSIS • There are inequalities in outcomes • Data at the domain, sub-domain and neighbourhood levels reveals more information • Vulnerability measures have strongest predictive valuere: future success in education, employment and well-being • Largest %s of children with vulnerabilities found among low income families • Largest #s of children with vulnerabilities found among middle/upper income families • Good predictor of grade 1 achievement, accounting for 33.8% of variance • Small changes for large proportions of the population will have most impact

  10. LOCAL EDI RESULTS In early 2006, Senior Kindergarten teachers from across the Niagara Region and both School Boards implemented the EDI with over 3,000 Niagara students. What follows are some of the results…

  11. We scored significantly higher than the national averages on all five of the school readiness to learn domains in 2006!

  12. 77% of SK children in 2006 were on track for learning in school!

  13. National Average = 26%

  14. COMMUNITY CONDITIONS • Low income, lone parenting and education level of parents are factors that seem to increase vulnerability scores on the EDI • Access to resources also seems to impact early development and readiness to learn in school

  15. UEY PRODUCTS / ACTIVITIES • Maps & Mapping Studies, EDI Reports, Community Studies • Community Updates, School Board Reports, Parent Brochures • Research Communiques, Articles, Specific Requested Reports • Custom Presentations, Workshops, Community Forums, Conference Session, and Event Displays • Website where all of the above can be downloaded (www.uey.eccdc.org)

  16. UEY IMPACTS TO DATE • Professional development sessions provided • School Board and service delivery planning influenced • Regional and neighbourhood needs identified and used in community plans • New programs developed, existing revised • New resources allocated, existing re-allocated • Successful proposals, grants, and reports written • Research, event, training, and product development partnerships formed • Community action inspired • Resources provided to parents and early years professionals • Local and national knowledge enhanced

  17. DISCUSSION • Do you anticipate being able to use the local data and knowledge in your practice with young children? • How might ECE’s, JK/SK/Resource teachers and other early years professionals use the data to improve programs and services? Please complete an evaluation. Thank you for your time and attention! ~ Glory

More Related