George Brown Polytechnic is located on the traditional territory of the Mississaugas of the Credit First Nation and other Indigenous peoples who have lived here over time. We are grateful to share this land as treaty people who learn, work and live in the community with each other.

When all three levels of government announced a plan to expand access to affordable child care and address a critical workforce shortage, George Brown College jumped into action. We moved quickly to launch a compressed diploma program to increase the number of highly qualified early childhood educators (ECEs) in the field.
George Brown’s Director of Early Childhood Patricia Chorney Rubin says the ECE sector faces complex challenges. A significant sector expansion, an acute shortage of trained professionals, and the pandemic present hurdles the college is helping the industry overcome.
“All levels of government have come together to recognize the importance of early years and the need for child care to support not only children’s learning and development but also families’ ability to work outside the home,” she said.
“With our compressed program, we’re proud to be part of the solution to get more highly qualified ECEs into the workforce faster.”
About 50 students started the new Early Childhood Education (Compressed) program in July 2022 — a 14-month diploma program that includes three work placements (the standard ECE diploma program is two years). Government funding for the program covers tuition for domestic students and the cost of textbooks and other learning supplies.
“We were able to launch this program in a relatively short time frame given the number of qualified faculty at the School of Early Childhood.” Chorney Rubin said. “Because we have 12 Lab School Child Care Centres, we could provide rich placement environments.”
George Brown has the largest network of college-owned and operated child care centres in Ontario.
This opportunity is funded in partnership with the City of Toronto, The Region of Peel, The Region of Durham, The Region of Halton, the Province of Ontario and the Government of Canada under the new Canada-Ontario Early Childhood Workforce Agreement, which provides one-time federal funding to support the retention and recruitment of a high-quality child care and early years workforce.
