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Living wall in the OISE lobby, dropdown view.
August 28, 2024

Nouvelle direction du CREFO

Nouvelle direction du CREFO à compter du 1e juillet 2024 en remplacement de la professeure Le Pichon, en sabbatique pour un an.
August 28, 2024

Getting it right from the start

Submission to the Government of Canada's Guide on Building a Canada-Wide Early Learning and Child Care System, August 2024

The Atkinson Centre urges the Government of Canada to ‘get it right from the start’ by enforcing the principles governing the building of the Canada-Wide Early Learning and Child Child system. Profit has no place in child care. Quality does.
August 27, 2024

Excerpt: "Licensed school-age child care centres will be able to access new funding to help them deliver before and after school programming for Island children. To ensure Island families can continue to access affordable child care programming, the Province is investing $537,900 to support operational costs and encourage more organizations to offer school-age child care programs. The new funding will include a one-time stabilization grant for existing operators and a new licensing incentive grant for new operators."
The image has a dark blue background with a light blue cloud design and outlines of raised hands. The text lists the following committees: Accessibility Committee, Constitution Committee, Equity Committee, Finance Committee, Sustainability Committee, and Strategic Funding Committee. It instructs interested individuals to fill out a Google Form by September 30th and provides an email address for questions: oise.gsa@gmail.com. The OISE GSA logo is at the bottom right corner.
August 27, 2024

Call for Committee Members

The OISE Graduate Students’ Association is excited to extend an invitation to all OISE students to participate in one or more of our standing committees.
August 26, 2024

Excerpt: "Through the Province’s StrongerBC: Future Ready Action Plan, $12.5 million over three years is supporting provincewide recruitment and training initiatives for teachers. This year, almost $4 million is going toward recruitment and training programs, with a focus on supporting teacher retention in the sector, improving flexibility in teacher education programs, and recruiting more teachers in rural and remote communities."
August 23, 2024

Excerpt: "Alberta’s government and its education partners are continuing to modernize the education system and improve student success by developing and piloting a curriculum that will drive a passion for learning. The new draft K-6 social studies curriculum, which was developed after nine months of consultation with education partners, teachers, parents and Albertans, focuses on building students’ critical thinking skills and empowers them to be engaged citizens. Since the new draft K-6 social studies curriculum was released in April 2024, 62 school authorities and more than 1,700 teachers across 429 schools have signed up to pilot the curriculum during the 2024-25 school year."
August 23, 2024

Excerpt: "Phase 1 of the school lunch program includes every school that has elementary school grades, which adds up to more than 75,000 students and potentially more than 13 million lunches served in the coming school year. It is a pay-what-you-can program, meaning families can choose to pay the full $6.50 cost of the lunch, part of the cost or nothing. All payment information is kept confidential. Lunches will start in schools on October 1, 15 or 28, with ordering opening two weeks before the first lunches are served. Families will be able to choose between two lunch options every school day, with at least one vegetarian (no meat) lunch offered each day. In total, there will be 40 menu options that rotate weekly when the program starts in October. Each meal provides balanced nutrition and meets the standards outlined in Canada’s Food Guide and the Nova Scotia School Food and Nutrition Policy."
August 22, 2024

e-News
August 22, 2024

Child care in North faces unique challenges

Excerpt: "The Knowing Our Numbers study of the Ontario early childhood education workforce has just released its findings on the status of the sector in Northern Ontario. Workforce challenges in the North are unique. Its small population is spread across a vast geographical area that spans two time zones. Its land mass covers 90% of the province but is home to only 5.1% of the population. Low population density, high cost of food and building supplies, transportation barriers, extreme weather conditions, seasonal and shift work, and workforce shortages in other sectors all impact child care operations. Delivering child care services to Indigenous communities presents additional challenges related to historical and ongoing systemic inequities."