Ottawa Citizen

Ontario seeks more inclusive education

- MICHELLE McQUIGGE

MISSISSAUG­A Ontari says it’s A launching a three-year strategy to make the province’s education system more equitable and inclusive for people of all background­s and cultures.

Education Minister Mitzie Hunter released details of the plan on Thursday, filling in some objectives of the three-year strategy that was previously projected to cost roughly $7 million.

The Education and Equity Action Plan calls for a new approach to Grade 9, a time when students typically decide whether to pursue their education in an academic or an applied stream that often shapes future career choices.

Hunter says Grade 9 is too early to make such a decision, adding that the plan calls for expanded opportunit­ies for students to explore options such as college, university or apprentice­ships.

The action plan calls for identifyin­g disparitie­s in suspension and expulsion rates among some student groups as well as providing more teaching material to address a variety of cultural background­s.

To do this, Hunter says the government will collect demographi­c data on students, including details on race, to help identify systemic barriers.

The plan says staff needs to better reflect the diversity of the student body, adding that senior administra­tors will be encouraged to keep equity in mind when hiring and promoting staff and that such efforts will be included in their performanc­e appraisals.

“I strongly believe that we must continue to deepen the connection­s between achievemen­t, wellbeing and equity,” Hunter said at a news conference at a school west of Toronto. “These must be inextricab­ly linked, almost like a braid, just wound together. And we must put the student experience at the centre of all that we do.”

Hunter revealed few details about the plan, including potential changes to the Grade 9 curriculum.

She said the government wants to work with school boards and other educationa­l partners to determine how best to address what she sees as a premature decision forced on an age group that’s not equipped to handle it.

She said Ontario is currently the only province that makes students choose an academic or applied stream at that age, saying the plan will help devise a new approach.

The government announced that at least 25 school boards had already expressed an interest in implementi­ng a more culturally responsive curriculum to reflect the experience­s of a diverse student body.

Word of the government’s plans to collect demographi­c data on students sounded alarm bells in some quarters.

Ann Cavoukian, who served three terms as Ontario’s privacy commission­er, said gathering sensitive informatio­n about race and ethnicity may have negative unintended consequenc­es.

The government has sound intentions, she said, but such demographi­c details are not necessary to address systemic barriers.

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