Caring for our youngest learners

蹤獲扞⑹ Stories
Kelly Thirkettle outside of the 蹤獲扞⑹ Childcare Centre
蹤獲扞⑹ Child Care Centre Manager Kelly Thirkettle has helped nurture the young minds at our on-campus daycare for 25 years.

Kelly Thirkettles passion for early childhood education came from her mother, Donna Thibodeau. A survivor of the Sixties Scoop, when Indigenous children were taken from their home communities and placed in foster homes or adopted by non-Indigenous families, Thibodeau taught Thirkettle what it means to be a caregiver, educator and role model.

She is a nurturing, loving person and she was my first teacher, Thirkettle says. I had always wanted to be a teacher when growing up, and the early years are a fundamental time of a childs development."

For 25 years, Thirkettle has nurtured the youngest minds at the Prince George campus at the 蹤獲扞⑹ Childcare Centre.

Thirkettle joined the Centres staff as a casual employee in June 1996, just a few months after the daycare opened its doors. She became a permanent employee in August 1996, working in Porcupine Pals with children aged 30 months to school age.

Having the 蹤獲扞⑹ Childcare Centre on campus is so important for students, so they can focus on their studies knowing their children are in a nurturing and positive place, and for working parents, so they can go to their jobs knowing the same, Thirkettle says. 

She became program supervisor at Porcupine Pals and then when the founding manager and Thirkettles mentor Anne Marie Prediger left in 2001, Thirkettle took on the managers role and has stayed in the job ever since.

Thirkettle says working with a great group of people, both grownups and children, makes her job worthwhile.

Our staff inspire me every day with their perseverance, strength, passion and love for the field, she says. I also enjoy working with the parents, as they are the primary caregivers of the children and they know their child best. 

And, of course, the children who we learn from every day. We are fortunate to experience the wonder and beauty of our world all over again through their eyes as we create an environment for curiosity, engagement, and hands-on experiences.

Thirkettle has many fond memories during her time at 蹤獲扞⑹, including seeing children from the daycare programs grow up to be 蹤獲扞⑹ students and parents themselves.

To see some of the former students go on to graduate from 蹤獲扞⑹ and other institutions is so wonderful and heartwarming, she says. The goal of early learning is to help support children with social and emotional intelligence and support their cognitive ability so that they grow into their full potential.

The on-campus location provides the Childcare Centre with unique opportunities to collaborate with different campus organizations. The children are able to visit the I.K. Barber Enhanced Forestry Laboratory to learn about plants, take campus tours with stops at the popular B. Staffan Lindgren Reef Tank, enjoy the outdoors, including the , and interact with Family Nurse Practitioner students during the students Integrating Primary Health Care Practicum.

From the beginning, one of the most popular campus trips is to the gym. In the early days, Thirkettle remembers fondly taking the children to the old gymnasium in what is now the Northern University Student Centre Event Space. Now they go to the Charles Jago Northern Sport Centre.

The 蹤獲扞⑹ Childcare Society was thrilled to be a part of a key moment in 蹤獲扞⑹ history when the children rode tricycles in the welcome parade at the opening of the Northern Sport Centre, Thirkettle recalls.

The NSC isnt the only change Thirkettle has witnessed over the past 25 years.

The growth on campus has been wonderful, she says. Its gratifying to see more Indigenous and international students coming to study at 蹤獲扞⑹. Our enrolment and waitlist continue to grow, a testament to both the quality of care and education we provide as well as the Universitys continued development.

In addition to her role at 蹤獲扞⑹s Childcare Society, Thrikettle has served on board and was part of the Prince George Childcare Awards Gala for several years.

She is looking forward to seeing continued steps towards universal childcare and integration between early childhood education and the Kindergarten-Grade 12 system.  

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