Wynn Ann Fahey: Supervisor and Early Childhood Educator,
Bloomsbury Child Care Centre, St. John’s Newfoundland
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Child care is a labour of love. Just ask Wynn Ann Fahey, a former
primary school teacher who took a big pay cut when she got her
first job in child care 17 years ago.
A pilot outreach child care program at the YWCA is what started
it all. She was hired to implement it and along the way became
interested in working with four-year-olds.
Fahey subsequently got a job at a child care centre, working
her way up to assistant operator. By the time she was hired at
Bloomsbury in 1995, she’d already been working as a supervisor
for a number of years.
When the provincial government brought in Early Childhood Education
(ECE) certification requirements in the late 1990s, Fahey “fell
in between the cracks” and had to take courses to certify
even though she’d worked for two years as a primary school
teacher.
After about two years of distance education, she received her
Level 4 ECE. Completing all the requirements in such a short time
was hard, but she was exempted from many of the courses because
of her teaching experience.
Fahey starts work at 7:40 a.m., working a full day on the floor
with the four-year-olds. Her administrative duties—issuing
receipts, and cheques for staff salaries; dealing with staffing
issues; and planning the centre schedule and activities—are
all done afterwards. “I love working on the floor,”
she says. “I would not want to just take on an administrative
role.”
The biggest challenge is finding qualified staff. “It all
boils down to making ends meet. ECEs can’t survive on the
money they’re making.”
Nonetheless, Fahey loves her job: the staff at her centre work
as a team, and she finds it gratifying that she is contributing
to the social, emotional and cognitive development of children.
“Every child should attend day care—for the social
experience alone,” she says.
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