Medicine Hat News

EDUCATION

– UCP bill would ease rules for charters, home schooling

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The province is proposing to change the rules on charter schools and home-schooling.

Bill 15 introduced Thursday would allow a group seeking to establish a new charter school to bypass the local school board and apply directly to the government.

“The Choice in Education Act will protect and expand student access to the full range of schooling options while strengthen­ing parents’ rights as primary decision makers in choosing their kids’ education,” Premier Jason Kenney said. “The bill also reduces red tape for the creation of new charter schools including vocation-focused charter schools.

“We are paving the way to reinvent the vocational high school because we believe as Albertans that practical and experienti­al learning like vocational learning can prepare young people for fulfilling lifetime careers.”

Charter schools are independen­tly run, nonprofit public schools that provide education in a different or enhanced way, such as an all-girls school or a school for the academical­ly gifted.

Alberta has 13 charter schools, most in Edmonton and Calgary.

Kenney’s government lifted the long-standing cap on charter schools last year.

The bill would also allow unsupervis­ed, unfunded home-schooling. Home-schooling parents would have to submit a plan to achieve an acceptable appropriat­e level of learning outcomes.

NDP education critic Sarah Hoffman said the bill misses the mark and furthers a government agenda to bleed resources from public schools.

“What Alberta parents are telling me they want is a properly funded education system with a modern curriculum and with no barriers to education,” said Hoffman.

Jason Schilling, head of the Alberta Teachers’ Associatio­n, said the legislatio­n doesn’t do much to improve school for most students but said he is pleased the bill doesn’t introduce a voucher system for private schools.

“Parents in Alberta already have significan­t choice, and the vast majority choose public education,” said Schilling.

“In Alberta, public education includes schools in public, separate and francophon­e school divisions; 93 per cent of Alberta’s students attend those schools. We believe that parents and teachers want to see those students supported most.”

On home-schooling, Schilling said, “unsupervis­ed home education should be a concern to all Albertans. A child’s right to a quality education must not be sacrificed in the name of parental choice.”

If passed, the bill would take effect Sept. 1.

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