Ebru Karatosun – ANKARA
The enrollment rate in preschool education has reached 99 percent, Education Minister Mahmut Özer has said, noting this education will be provided free of charge.
Reminding that the number of kindergartens was about 2,700 when he first took to the office, Özer stated that this number has now reached 9,500.
The enrollment rate has also reached from 65 to 99 percent in this education period, the minister added.
Pointing out that his ministry has also solved the problem of girls’ education, which the country has been fighting for a long time, Özer described it as a…
kindergarten german
$4.1 million announced for the Seamless Day Kindergarten pilot program
In an effort to provide additional child care spaces for young families, the provincial government introduced a pilot program to provide child care in kindergarten classrooms across BC
On Monday, it was announced that more families will soon be able to access the program.
“This program right here is the start. We start off our students and our learners and our families in a good way every day and we can start this program. We can move them along through the school system,” said Rob Zandee, board chair of School District 53.
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Child care providers call for provincial funding…
Omemee school to expand with new kindergarten and childcare spaces: MPP – Peterborough
The province of Ontario has approved expansion for a kindergarten addition and a child care center at Scott Young Public School in the village of Omemee, the area’s MPP announced Friday.
Haliburton-Kawartha Lakes-Brock MPP Laurie Scott said the province has given the Trillium Lakelands District School Board approval to proceed to tender for a two-room kindergarten addition and a child-care center for the school on Walnut Street in the village.
The $5.9-million project includes additional funding of $2.4 million, says Scott, creating 104 new kindergarten spaces and 49 new child care spaces.
The board said the kindergarten addition is a…
Kindergarten Mi’kmaw immersion program aims to keep the language strong in Listuguj, Que.
On a warm, clear day in February, Brenda Germain picks up a large hand drill and asks her students to gather around.
Drill in hand, she shows the children how to cut through the thick ice covering Chaleur Bay, on Quebec’s Gaspé coast.
“Pase’g admire — the ice is this thick,” her colleague and aunt, Joyce Germain, tells the students as they kneel over the hole, hoping to catch some smelt, or kaqpesaw.
The class outing is being held entirely in Mi’kmaw — a language that Brenda Germain says she “didn’t speak a word” of, just a decade earlier.
“I…