Lethbridge Herald

Dorothy Gooder’s mission

- Isabella Lee

Dorothy Gooder arrived in Lethbridge in 1943 and became interested in the education of children with disabiliti­es. Gooder’s son was born with Down syndrome and was one of her main sources of inspiratio­n.

Doctors and school officials at the time recommende­d to parents that individual­s with Down syndrome and other disabiliti­es be institutio­nalized rather than be educated in public schools. Gooder believed that all children could have the same opportunit­ies to learn and grow as long as teaching methods were appropriat­ely modified.

Gooder was motivated to fight for the inclusion of students with disabiliti­es in the public education system after reading an editorial from the Calgary Herald that came out on Jan. 4, 1955. The editorial talked about the work that some parents were doing in Calgary for children with disabiliti­es.

In 1955, Gooder was voted president of the newly formed organizati­on that is now the People First Associatio­n of Lethbridge. She also began a pilot program in which six children with disabiliti­es were taught in a segregated classroom at the Kintown Playground building by Helene Urwin. This program demonstrat­ed that children with disabiliti­es can learn and benefit from being in the public education system rather than being institutio­nalized. Gooder began advocating for the funding of a school building for educating disabled individual­s which she saw as the first step to integrated schools.

With the help of various associatio­ns and the community, the building of a new school dedicated to the education of individual­s was opened in 1959. The new school was named the Dorothy Gooder School and was located at 18 Street and 9 Avenue North. It began with three classrooms and approximat­ely 50 students and quickly increased enrolment. An addition to the school building was completed in 1966. In 1970, Lethbridge School District No. 51 took over the operation of the Dorothy Gooder School. The school was open for 19 years until students with disabiliti­es were integrated into the general school population­s of Lethbridge in 1978.

Gooder played a key role in changing the way people with disabiliti­es are viewed and treated in Lethbridge. This change in our community allowed all children to grow and learn together.

You can learn more about Dorothy Gooder and education in southern Alberta at the Galt Museum & Archives.

Your old photos, documents, and artifacts might have historical value. Please contact Galt Museum & Archives for advice before destroying them.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada