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It takes a child to raise a village

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of Mothers Who Work by Age of Youngest Child, Canada, 1976-2004 ... Canada relies on a steady influx of young newcomers to stem its population decline. ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: It takes a child to raise a village


1
It takes a child to raise a village
  • How societies
  • understand and apply
  • their knowledge
  • of human development
  • will determine the kind of cultures,
  • societies, civilizations
  • that are created.

2
Families
  • Families are the basic social units of human
    societies.

3
of Mothers Who Work by Age of Youngest Child,
Canada, 1976-2004

4
Pluralism
  • Canada relies on a steady influx of young
    newcomers to stem its population decline.
  • Immigration accounts for two thirds of population
    growth.

5
Population Growth of Infants (0 to 5) in Canada,
by Region, 1999-2005 ()
Alberta
Population Growth in Infants ()
Ontario
Manitoba
British Columbia
Quebec
Saskatchewan
Atlantic Canada
6
Developing Regions
  • More than 20 of
  • Africas 20 million children
  • are at a very high risk
  • for poor development.

7
Aboriginal Exclusion
  • The UN ranked Canada as number 1 for quality of
    life.
  • The UN ranked aboriginal peoples living on
    reserve as number 62.

8
Pluralism
  • Successful societies are pluralistic.
  • ECD affects education, health, the social
  • capital, and the overall equity
  • within populations.

9
Integrated ECD Programs
Behaviour
Equality
Learning
Health
Social Economic
Development
10
How are children doing?
  • What gets measured improves and what gets
    measured gets attention
  • Charles S. Coffey

11
Assessment
  • Community initiatives and public policies aimed
    at improving outcomes for children can be
    supported by suitable outcome measures.
  • Reliable data and analysis can provide direction
    to public policy development.
  • Regular assessment and reporting on initiatives
    is an important component of democratic
    accountability.

12
Outcome measures
  • Community initiatives
  • public policies
  • aimed at improving
  • outcomes for children
  • can be supported
  • by suitable outcome measures.

13
Monitoring development
  • Longitudinal surveys
  • birth cohort studies
  • allow researchers
  • policy makers
  • to monitor
  • childrens development.

14
Public policy
  • Reliable data analysis
  • can provide direction
  • to public policy
  • development.

15
Democratic accountability
  • Regular assessment reporting
  • on initiatives
  • is an important component
  • of democratic accountability.

16
Receptive Vocabulary, Age 5 (NLSCY, 2002-03)
Source Thomas, 2006
17
Social competence, Age 5 (NLSCY, 2002-03)
Source Thomas, 2006
18
¼ of children
  • ¼ of Canadas children between birth to age 6 are
    experiencing some learning or behavioural
    difficulty.

19
Vulnerable children by family income
of children
40
30
20
10
0
Lower-middle
Upper-middle
Highest
Lower
Family income
Source Chao and Willms, 2002
20
Socioeconomic status
  • Where families fit on the economic ladder
    contributes to childrens developmental outcomes.
  • But income is not the whole story.
  • Many children in low-income families are doing
    just fine, and some children living in affluence
    are not doing well.

21
Vulnerable children by parenting style
Authoritative
Permissive
Authoritarian
Chaotic
of Children
Source Chao and Willms, 2002
22
Participation in ECE Activities at Age 3 ()
Source Thomas, 2006
23
Vocabulary Scores at Age 5 by Participation in
ECE Activities at Age 3
PPVT (vocabulary) score
Source Thomas, 2006
24
Later difficulties
  • These problems in the early years
  • have been shown to correlate
  • with later difficulties in
  • school performance,
  • social adjustment
  • and health.

25
Measuring ECD Before Grade 1
  • Readiness to learn tests
  • in kindergarten
  • can predict 60 or more
  • of the variance
  • in Grade 3 tests.

26
The Early Development Instrument
  • Assesses community outcomes in child development
    in respect to
  • health
  • learning
  • behaviour

27
Measuring ECD Before Grade 1
  • Readiness to learn tests
  • in kindergarten
  • can predict 60 or more
  • of the variance
  • in Grade 3 tests.

28
The Early Development Instrument (EDI)
  • Assesses community outcomes in child development
    in respect to
  • health
  • learning
  • behaviour

29
EDI characteristics
  • completed by kindergarten teachers based on
    several months of observation
  • Reliable at an individual leveldoes not provide
    diagnosis of developmental problems
  • population level measureresults can be
    interpreted for groups of children.
  • results used to identify weak strong community
    sectors
  • results used by communities to mobilize for
    improved child outcomes

48
30
5 domains of the EDI
  • Physical health and well-being
  • Social competence
  • Emotional maturity
  • Language and cognitive development
  • Communication skills general knowledge

49
31
Canada Children with Low EDI Scores by SES
51
Source Offord Centre for Child Studies, 2007
32
Community reporting
  • Community reporting
  • assesses how well
  • children are doing
  • within their environmental context
  • the impact of local programs.

33
Community reporting
  • suggests some associated factors
  • can be used to determine resource allocation and
    set benchmarks for improvements.
  • track progress within and between communities.

34
Community reporting
  • By measuring, analyzing, and interpreting this
    data, we can modify outcomes reduce gaps among
    different groups of children.
  • Ongoing monitoring indicates if advances are
    being made.

35
Neighbourhood comparison North York ON, 1999
36
Cross-Canada comparisons
  • The Offord Centre has compared EDI in Montreal,
    Toronto, Winnipeg, Vancouver.
  • Geographically aggregated census data are
    correlated with the childrens neighbourhood
    location via postal code.

37
Later difficulties
  • These problems in the early years
  • have been shown to correlate
  • with later difficulties in
  • school performance,
  • social adjustment
  • and health.

52
38
Social Risk Index
  • Socio-economic status is determined by the
    use of the Social Risk Index (SRI),
    a composite index based on
    nine socio-economic
    indicators of risk.

39
Social Risk Index
  • 9 comprehensive indicators of social risk
  • those with rate higher than the national average
    contributing to the overall risk
  • zero (0), indicating no social risk
  • nine (9) indicating the highest risk

40
SRI 9 indicators
  • Rate of households with a low-income status
  • Unemployment rate
  • Proportion of individuals without a high school
    diploma
  • Proportion of families with children headed by a
    lone parent
  • Proportion of the population with no knowledge of
    either English or French
  • Rate of recent immigration (1996 to 2001)
  • Rate of those moving in the past year
  • Rate of home ownership
  • Proportion of income from Government Transfer
    payments

41
Vulnerability
  • Because of the size
  • of the middle class,
  • the largest number
  • (rather than the highest )
  • of children with serious difficulties
  • are in moderate income families.
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