Category: Early Learning and Child Care

Issues related to immigrant children and parents participation in and access to early learning and child care programs and to how well EL & CC programs meet the needs of diverse groups of families in Canada.

  • Social support networks: A study on recent Chinese immigrant mothers and children

    CERIS (The Joint Centre of Excellent for Research in Immigration Studies and Ontario Metropolis centre) has released a new research working paper (No. 66). Development of Social Support Networks by Recent Chinese Immigrant Women with Young Children Living in London, Ontario is a research study conducted by Wei Wei Da. The study was guided by two research questions:

    Where do recent Chinese immigrant women with young children go for information on child-rearing?
    Where and to whom do they turn to when they want help in raising young children in a new socio-cultural context?

  • Ontario consultation on full day learning for 4 and 5 year olds

    The Ontario Ministry of Children and Youth Services (MCYS) is inviting feedback from the public on its intention to develop and implement what is being called “full day learning for 4 and 5 year olds“. The early learning advisor, Dr. Charles Pascal, provides an introduction to the initiative and provides a list of assumptions he is working under, and a discussion guide, which includes opportunity for input. 
    We are pleased that Dr. Pascal acknowledges and highlights issues related to immigrant children and families. From his list of assumptions, this statement:

    Respect for diversity, equity and inclusion are critical for honoring children’s rights, optimal development, learning, and contributing to a more inclusive society. Ontario is a province of many cultures, religions, and languages and early childhood programs need to reflect those differences. Environments that promote attitudes and beliefs that celebrate equity, diversity and democracy and are inclusive of children with special needs enable character development and provide children with a strong sense of self in relation to others. Quality early learning environments incorporate the diversity of their participants to enrich programming for all. As well, while universally available, effective early learning programming should adapt to a wide variety of individual differences and needs of children and families.

  • Canadian Public Health Association conference: Sessions on immigrant children and families

    The Canadian Public Health Association is holding its annual conference this year in Halifax, Nova Scotia from June 1-4. Sessions on or related to immigrant children and families include:

    Immigrant and Migrant Health – I

    Development of a framework to examine the determinants of health among Canadian immigrants, with Marie DesMeules
    Studying intra-metropolitan health disparities in Canada: how and why globalization matters, with Ted Schrecker
    Migration, Health and equity issues for Canada in the context of global migration, with Janet Hatcher Roberts
    Using administrative data to analyze the health experience of African Nova Scotians, with Mikiko Terashima

    Focus on Children’s Health

    Children immigrants’ risk of physical inactivity according to family origin and length of residency, with Mathieu Bélanger

    Immigrant and Migrant Health – II

    Meanings of health, illness and help-seeking strategies among punjabi-speaking immigrants, with Beatrice McDonough
    Migration and perinatal health surveillance: An international DELPHI survey, with Anita Gagnon
    Migration to industrialized countries and perinatal health: A systematic review, with Anita Gagnon
    Childbearing migrant women and equal access to research participation, with Amy Low
    For more information, see the PDF program.

  • SSHRC Strategic knowledge clusters – 11 new research initiatives

    The Social Sciences and Humanities Research Council (SSHRC) announced funding of 2.1 Million for 11 new Strategic Knowledge Clusters last week. Funding continues for the next 7 years.
    In announcing the funding, the Minister of Industry, the Honourable Jim Prentice said “Canadian scholars and researchers will continue to produce world-class results so that we, as a country, may use this knowledge to enhance the quality of life of all Canadians“.
    Chad Gaffiled, President of SSHRC said “These talented researchers will help advance understanding of complex issues in our society and inform decision makers in government, business and communities across Canada”.
    Of the 11 newly funded initiatives, these 3, of interest and relevance to the Early Childhood Working Group and Canadian Coalition for Immigrant Children and Youth:

    Canadian Forum for Public Research on Heritage, with Luc Noppen, Université du Québec à Montréal
    Canadian Refugee Research Network, with Susan McGrath, York University
    Strategic Knowledge Cluster on Early Childhood Development, with Michel Bovin, Université Laval.

    The three are clearly linked and we look forward to the work undertaken and especially to the linkages that must be made among them, if the knowledge clusters are to, as Gaffield says “advance understanding of complex issues” and as the Minister of Industry emphasized “to enhance the quality of life of all“.

  • Multilingual parent resource sheets from welcomehere.ca

    welcomehere.ca, (see blog entry here March 19/08), has published a series of parent resource sheets in ten languages, including: Arabic, Chinese (simplified and traditional), Hindi, Punjabi, Somali, Spanish, Tagalog, Tamil and Vietnamese.
    Topics include: Building active habits, Family routines, Parents at play, Promoting positive behaviour, and Supporting children’s play.
    welcomehere.ca is a collaboration of the Canadian Association of Family Resource Programs and settlement agencies across Canada.

  • OECD Thematic review of migrant education – an update

    As posted Jan 22 on this blog, the Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development – the OECD – is undertaking a thematic review of migrant education.
    The question being asked is ‘What policies will promote successful education outcomes for first and second generation migrants’? 
    The objectives and outputs are based on criteria for the assessment of the successful integration into the education system, including pre-school education, which is threefold:

    1. Access: Do immigrant students/children have the same opportunities to access quality education as their native-born peers?
    2. Participation: Do immigrant students/children participate (enrol and complete) as much as their native-born peers?
    3. Learning outcomes: Do immigrant students/children perform as well as their native-born peers?

    An interesting project. Here’s the site.

  • Authentic identities: Immigrant children and multiculturalism

    The May 8th editorial in the Calgary Herald is titled Caught Between Two Worlds and lightly touches on immigrant children’s identity development: the Canadian way or the way of the child’s family and culture of origin. “Forging an authentic identity in Canada is not an easy task” concludes the editor.
    canada.com reports Sat May 10th that Governor General Michaelle Jean, during her trip to France, called upon the people to remain “ever vigilant in the face of the slightest sign of intolerance, and to use every means possible to counter the lack of understanding by some that too often leads to the exclusion of others”.
    For children, inclusion and identity and inextricably linked.
    Media coverage of Jean’s official visit was rife with comments on the success of Canadian multiculturalism. Is (official) multiculturalism the best way to support forging authentic (Canadian) identities for immigrant children?
    A reading of the most recent report in the Bernard van Leer Foundation’s series on Early Childhood in Focus, blogged on below, provides a useful framework for this discussion. From the preface, “Traditionally, identity formation has been perceived as mainly as being about processes of development, socialisation and enculturalation, with child-rearing experts offering wide-ranging views on how these can best be achieved. One prominent view has seen the young child as immature, unformed and dependent. Acquiring identity has been understood as a gradual process of embedding into the norms, values and social roles of the parents’ culture, shaped by the training offered by parents and others. An alternative view has seen the child’s identity as largely preformed and maturing through play and exploration in the protected spaces offered by caring adults.
    Neither of these views accord with contemporary theories of identity formation, which respect children’s unique identity at birth and their role in constructing and reconstructing personal meaning within cultural contexts. There is also increasing recognition that children negotiate multiple, shifting and sometimes competing identities, especially within complex, multi-ethnic and multicultural contexts”
    .
    The Bernard van Leer Foundation asks us to consider “as children move into group care and education, further sensitive support is needed to enable them to forge new identities which do not conflict with the family and cultural identity they have acquired at home”.
    One more excerpt from this excellent report:

    ” When considering identity development in migrant families, the traditional view has led to seeing migrant children and adolescents as having to bridge two cultures or value systems. In this dominant tradition, it was believed that many children either reject their home culture in favour of the dominant culture (assimilation), or on the contrary reject the dominant culture and cling to the traditional beliefs and values of their origins (separation), although the ‘ideal’ situation would be the integration of both worlds recognising children’s multiple identities….Educational practices that foster children’s multiple identities need to avoid two pitfalls: colour-blindness and tokenism. Colour-blindness is the denial of differences, very often out of an honest concern to treat ‘all children equal’. In practice this means that parents and children from minority communities are welcomed, but receive the (unintentional) message that they need to ‘adapt’ as soon as possible to what is considered ‘normal’ within the dominant culture.
    Tokenism on the contrary involves teaching the ‘culture’ of a child’s home life as fixed and static. Parents’ and children’s identities are thereby reduced to their origin by assuming there is something called ‘the Magreb culture’, ‘the Asian way of doing things’ or a ‘typical lesbian family’. In practice this means that special, yet stereotypical, events or displays are set up for children and families (such as a festival celebrating Iraqi new year with traditional clothes and food). Such activities risk being both patronising and stimatising, in that they overlook the complexities of children’s personal histories and family cultures and ignore socioeconomic and other differences.
    An important way to avoid these pitfalls is to build real and symbolic bridges between the public culture of the early childhood centre and the private culture of families, by negotiating all practices with the families involved” (Michel Vandenbroeck, Senior Researcher, Department of Social Welfare Studies, University of Ghent, Belgium).

  • Developing positive identities: Young children and diversity

    The Bernard van Leer Foundation has released a resource on the theory and evidence of how identity can be impacted by adversity, discrimination and diversity in early childhood, entitled Developing Positive Identities: Young Children and Diversity.
    This release is the latest in the Bernard van Leer Foundation’s Early Childhood in Focus series. Earlier editions were Attachment Relationships: Quality of Care for Young Children and Early Childhood and Primary Education: Transitions in the Lives of Young Children

  • CIC funds children's book about immigration

    Citizenship and Immigration Canada (CIC) funded Toronto-based author Rukhsana Khan to write a book about emigrating to Canada. Coming to Canada was officially launched last week by CIC and will be distributed to Ontario public libraries in June and to elementary schools in the fall and to all newly arrived immigrant children in Canada.
    <Update: Coming to Canada was re-packaged as A New Life>.