Visit the Institute of Marriage and Family Canada’s website for the press release and report
Direct link to the press release.
Direct link to the report.
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Click here to read the complete Globe & Mail article.
The Globe and Mail – November 25, 2009
The high cost of early learning
Ontario can’t afford its all-day kindergarten plan – better to let parents keep the money
By Andrea Mrozek, manager of research at the Institute of Marriage and Family Canada.
When Ontario’s Finance Minister announced last month that the provincial deficit would be substantially higher than predicted, it was followed up by talk of restraint. “We will change how we do business in this province,” he said. “We are becoming an even leaner and even more efficient provider of quality public services.”
Really? The government is on track to expand the public sector and push the province further into the red. The reason is full-day kindergarten, set to start next year.
A study by the Institute of Marriage and Family Canada shows that the real cost of full-day kindergarten is almost double initial estimates and will probably come in at $1.8-billion annually. And, unknown to many, it is but one step in a grander plan to create public-school hubs for the “prenatal period through adolescence.” This was the blueprint put forward by education adviser Charles Pascal and published by the government in June. The cost would be $6.1-billion annually, according to our study.
Activists are set on implementation of the full plan. “[Pascal's] report is about so much more than replacing part-time kindergarten with a full-day program for four- and five-year-olds,” two advocates said recently. They continued: “[I]t’s about transforming schools into vibrant, family-centred learning hubs. Instead of operating for the regularly scheduled six hours a day, 188 days a year, they would open from 7:30 in the morning till 6 at night year-round.”
This is, apparently, absolutely critical for kids and will create a sort of education nirvana: relaxed parents dropping their kindergarten kids, toddlers and babies off at the same public school.
The reality will be much different. These programs are not a slam dunk for children – the social science is divided on outcomes, a point apparently entirely lost on Dr. Pascal. And the financials are a guaranteed debacle. Our study includes realistic estimates of salary and benefit costs, capital and operating costs, as well as increased bureaucracy costs, but there are additional ones that Dr. Pascal’s report glosses over.




November 25, 2009
This is another example to confirm that political liberalism really is a mental illness.