Literacy has been broadly defined by the Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) as “understanding, evaluating, using and engaging with written texts to participate in society, to achieve one’s goals, and to develop one’s knowledge and potential”. In addition, literacy also involves numeracy, defined by the OECD as “the ability to engage with mathematical information in order to manage the mathematical demands of a range of situations in everyday life.” Low levels of literacy reduce a person’s ability to carry out basic daily activities. For example, this may mean the inability to work, use public transportation or understand important documents necessary to receive medical or social services. Providing all Canadians with meaningful opportunities to develop and sustain quality literary skills will result in stronger communities bolstered by active participation in economic, employment, health, and social systems.
Category: **Resources: ESPC Documents:
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A Profile of Poverty in Edmonton
While most Edmontonians have good jobs and adequate incomes, a new report on poverty in Edmonton shows that one in eight Edmontonians live in poverty and one in five children live in a poor family. A Profile of Poverty in Edmonton gathers the latest federal, provincial and municipal data on income, employment, poverty by family size, housing, homelessness and food bank use.
ESPC Documents/PUBLICATIONS/A.06.C RESEARCH UPDATES/Poverty_Profile_Jan21_FINAL.pdf
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2014 November fACT Sheet Farmers’ Markets in Edmonton
The first farmers’ market in Alberta was established in Edmonton in 1903. A number of markets in other locations began to emerge throughout during the next four decades. Following WWII, when many people moved away from rural areas towards urban centres, food increasingly was purchased from supermarkets and less directly from farmers and producers. Farmers’ markets began to re-appear in the 1970s but there was a lack of consistency with how each was set up and operated. In Alberta, there are now two different types of markets—Alberta approved farmers’ markets and public markets. Both types of markets involve a gathering of vendors who sell their products directly to consumers. The difference lies in the ownership/management of the market and the privileges accorded to each type of market.
ESPC Documents/Fact Sheets/fACT_Sheet_Farmers_Markets_2014.pdf
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1975 May Recent Edmonton Social Planning Council History
Title:Recent E.S.P.C. History
Corporate Author: Edmonton Social Planning Council
Publisher:Edmonton Social Planning Council
Place of Publication:Edmonton
Date of Publication:1975
Language:English -
1975 Annual Report of the Edmonton Social Planning Council
Title: Annual Report of the Edmonton Social Planning Council
Corporate Author: Edmonton Social Planning Council
Publisher: Edmonton Social Planning Council
Place of Publication: Edmonton
Date of Publication: 1975
Language: English
Material Type: Report -
1975 An Analysis of the Edmonton Social Planning Council 1928-1975
Title:Edmonton Social Planning Council: an analysis 1928 – 1975.
Author(s):Soderstrom, Roger
Publisher:University of Alberta
Place of Publication:Edmonton
Date of Publication:1975
Language:English
Material Type:Report