The Cumberland Wire

Programs aimed at increasing number of N.S. teachers

- CONTRIBUTE­D

Two new, accelerate­d bachelor of education (B.Ed.) programs at Cape Breton University will help get more teachers into Nova Scotia’s classrooms faster.

The new programs will increase the number of funded seats at the university to 115 from 40, with the province providing funding for the 75 additional seats for the next three years.

“Teachers are the foundation of our education system. We need more of them to respond to our growing population, support teachers already in the system and meet the needs of students across the province,” said Becky Druhan, minister of Education and Early Childhood Developmen­t. “These new programs provide new ways to offer the same high-quality bachelor of education program online and in a shorter amount of time to help get teachers into classrooms faster.”

The accelerate­d programs meet Nova Scotia’s teacher certificat­ion requiremen­ts. One is an eight-month online pilot that will allow students to complete the program and their practicum from anywhere in the province. The program will begin in January and participan­ts will be ready to enter the school system for the September 2024 school year.

The second option is a 12month in-person program that will begin in May 2024 and replace the university’s current 15-month program.

Both new programs consist of 48 credits of coursework and 12 credits of practicum work, as does the 15-month program. The Department of Advanced Education will closely monitor the outcomes of the accelerate­d programs.

Informatio­n about how to apply is available online at: www.cbu.ca/academics/programs/bachelor-of-education/.

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