Kindergarten
Credit is a non-partisan grassroots group that aims to put
a halt to the McGuinty government's top-down implementation of
All-day Kindergarten and 'no-choice' government-controlled childcare
in Ontario communities.
We want Kindergarten and childcare arrangements
restored to their current form. If the McGuinty government does
not stop this plan, we demand that parents be given funds directly
a 'Kindergarten Credit' so they can make arrangements
that actually work for their families.
Kindergarten is under threat in Ontario.
Rebranded 'The Early Learning Program', this century-old tradition
of a few hours of play, arts and crafts, cookies and songs is
being replaced by a bureaucratically constructed program of early
childhood assessments & interventions, standardized outcomes and
all-day schooling. With provisions for an 'extended day',
some children could find themselves in a state-run school setting
from 7:30 in the morning to 6 at night, all year.
We trust parents. Research continually
shows that strong childhood development occurs only when and if
parents are empowered to act as their child's 'first agent'.
This plan by the McGuinty government, if coupled with the full
recommendations in their commissioned 'Early Learning Report',
goes well beyond all-day Kindergarten to include the potential
for a wholesale restructuring of social policy for families with
children from ages 0 to 12. It would diminish the role of parents
in the lives of their own children.
PRIMER
The following is a 'Primer', informing Ontarians
as to why All-day Kindergarten and the accompanying recommendations
in the 'Early Learning Report' form bad public policy.
Please click on the links in the following four headings to learn
more.
1. STATE-RUN
CHILDHOOD
All-day Kindergarten is the TIP OF
THE ICEBERG. The goals of the all-day Kindergarten proposal
can not be fully appreciated without understanding the full
scope of the 'Early Learning Report' that accompanies it.
The ICEBERG is the report prepared by Dalton McGuinty's
'Early Learning Advisor', Charles Pascal entitled, 'With Our
Best Future in Mind - Implementing Early Learning in Ontario'.
There is no way to read this report without realizing that,
if acted upon, it would represent an unprecedented - and dangerously
intrusive - level of government involvement in the lives of
families in this province. (Please see section on data collection
& data linkage.)
2. REAL
NEEDS & WISHES OF FAMILIES
The small but disproportionately vocal
group of people ideologically pre-disposed to having all parents
of young children out working and all little kids in government-controlled
daycare have manipulated facts to sell the public on the need
for 'more childcare'. Skewing public opinion in this way is
not helpful as it prevents us from developing programs for families
that they truly can benefit from.
3. RESEARCH -
IN THE BEST INTERESTS OF OUR CHILDREN
(click on Sections One and Two below for more
information)
While parents intuitively know that children
this age should not be in school all day, government officials
tell them otherwise. Parents are right - the existing body of
research on early childhood education actually points away from
the Pascal-McGuinty plan.
Section
One - A Critique of the Pascal Report: Pascal's report has
numerous misrepresentations of the accurate research and data
on early childhood education, often going so far as to cite
studies which adamantly do not support his recommendations in
a manner that makes it appear they do. In this section, we list
Pascal's citations, then what the studies actually say.
Section
Two - Evidence of lasting harms & no lasting benefits resulting
from similar policies AND Evidence of benefits from late, not
early, school entry age
This analysis is the work of Helen Ward, President
of the non-profit Kids
First Parents Association of Canada Ward's work as a childcare
researcher has been used domestically and internationally to
further the aim of developing policy that actually is in the
best interests of children.
4. KINDERGARTEN
CREDIT
This section is short because it is powerful
in its simplicity. Kindergarten Credit puts resources directly
into the hands of parents so they can continue to make childcare
and education choices that are in the best interests of their
families. There is no need for lengthy explanations because
parents know what to do – already, and every day, they care
for and educate their own children.
Contact Kate
Tennier: info@kindergartencredit.ca
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"I am very concerned about the growing trend toward
institutionalizing children as soon as possible and keeping
them institutionalized as long as possible. This is an alarming
trend, and, as a teacher, I see its negative results every
day - kids who don't know who they are!
These kids are suffering from school fatigue at 12
and 13. By the time I get them in grade 9, a good half have
lost all interest in learning. They are tired of jumping
through hoops. They have been robbed of their childhoods
and they know it. The earlier you start kids in any kind
of institutional process, the sooner they'll burn out and
lose all interest in that process.
We are going to reap a bitter harvest from a generation
of over-institutionalized, over-programmed kids. I believe
the rising incidence of depression and substance abuse in
later adolescence is, in part, the product of kids growing
up over-stressed and under-nurtured by state-run institutions
that claim to serve their needs."
– Michael Reist has taught high school English for
25 years. He is a Department Head, author of ‘The Dysfunctional
School' and father of four.
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