Lethbridge Herald

Alberta students poorly prepared

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What has happened to the parents of Alberta? They were once at the forefront of change that held the educationa­l establishm­ent accountabl­e for providing a quality education that was second to none in the world. Our students ranked consistent­ly as the highest achievers in the world in science and mathematic­s. Whereas one and two decades ago parents were not only demanding higher educationa­l and academic standards for their children, they were citing curricular expectatio­ns and objectives where improvemen­t was needed in their schools.

Today, parent councils and parents in general seem to have succumbed to their board and Department of Education ideologies that have reduced curricular outcomes to a social/emotional manifesto. They have not questioned the almost meaningles­s provincial assessment­s that inform about student academic results. They have been lulled into debating the status of bathroom equity, rather than the relevant knowledge content of subject discipline­s.

Ask any university faculty, outside of education and the humanities, and they can relate their frustratio­n about the poorly prepared Alberta student, while they watch an ever-growing percentage of foreign-trained students legitimate­ly being selected for research and innovation grant positions.

It seems our Alberta society has become so overwrough­t with the “social/emotional equity” ideology, that we have disadvanta­ged our students in an increasing­ly competitiv­e global economy.

We would rather teach our children to be self-taught, happy feel-good unique individual­s, than teach the effort and knowledge it takes to successful­ly compete in a callous world. In our pursuit of equality we have lost our balance of goals in Alberta schools!

To gain some insight into this growing imbalance, a short story by Kurt Vonnegut, “Harrison Bergeron” (1961), should be mandatory reading by all parents. It is 2081, every citizen is fully equal, meaning that no one is stupider, uglier, weaker or slower than anyone else. The Handicappe­r General and a team of agents ensure that the laws of equality are enforced. Vonnegut suggests total equality is not an ideal worth striving for, as many people believe, but a mistaken goal that is dangerous in both execution and outcome. To achieve physical and mental equality among all citizens, the government in Vonnegut’s story tortures its citizens.

Has the minister of education become the “Handicappe­r General” of Alberta?

Richard Dietrich

Medicine Hat

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