Sudbury

Cambrian College ready as province announces increase to child care spaces

Earlier this month, the provincial government released an early learning policy framework. Child care services are expected to accommodate 100,000 more children.

College hopes its Alternative Delivery program helps students get ready for work, faster

The new child-care spaces are part of an Ontario Liberal government pledge to provide 100,000 more children aged four and under access to licensed child care over five years. (Loic Venance/AFP/Getty) (Mike Dotta/Shutterstock)

Ontario will soon need close to 20,000 new early childhood educators.

Earlier this month, the provincial government released an early learning policy framework. Child care services are expected to accommodate 100,000 more children.

The government is also offering a grant program to encourage early childhood educators to upgrade their qualifications.

Cambrian College hopes its students are ahead of the game: the college offers the only Alternative Delivery Early Childhood Education program in the province.

Professor Lois Mahon said students can continue working in the field while they're in the program.

"We have lots of people who are currently working in the profession who are not qualified," Mahon said. "So this gives people an opportunity to maintain their work, and to receive an early childhood education diploma."

Lois Mahon, a professor at Cambrian College, says the Alternative Delivery Early Childhood Education program is the only one of its kind in the province. (Roger Corriveau)

Mahon said so far the program has welcomed all kinds of students, not just the ones straight out of high school.

"Adult learners come back to school to learn about early childhood education," she said. "They bring with them their knowledge, and I think this makes for a really rich educational opportunity."