The News (New Glasgow)

Some N.S. teachers say doing ‘a little bit extra’ unlikely in imposed contract

-

Some Nova Scotia teachers working under a government­imposed contract say they will not resume old norms of making themselves available after class and offering to coach teams and clubs.

Art teacher Sally Capstick said she doesn’t see herself returning to volunteer roles she’s held over the years, ranging from art gallery field trips to co-ordinating lunch-hour clubs at her junior high school in Sydney.

“To legislate a contract, it destroys that little part of you that wants to do a little bit of extra,” she said in a telephone interview Thursday, two days after the Liberal government imposed a four-year contract.

Capstick said she felt remorse that teachers were refusing to provide additional help during the work-to-rule job action, but “now I feel my employer doesn’t care.”

Paul Wozney, a high school teacher in Halifax, said in an interview he’ll be asking his students to formally schedule time for extra help rather than expecting he’ll be in class at noon for drop-in visits.

“This idea of on-demand, extra help ... teachers are thinking long and hard about whether that’s sustainabl­e or desirable or something they’re willing to do,” he said in an interview.

He also said the days may be over of teachers posting material such as tutorial videos or class notes on websites for parents and students to view.

“We’re already dreading the angry emails and accusatory emails ... We never had to do it, and now I think teachers know they don’t (have to),” he said.

After years of volunteeri­ng to schedule the junior varsity basketball league – working out when and where 13 teams play 20 regular season games a year – Wozney said he will find other uses for his time.

“It’s hundreds of hours of phone calls and emails ... I did it because nobody was stepping forward,” he said.

“I’ve come to the realizatio­n it’s time I can spend with my family, or marking or communicat­ing to parents. It’s not a vindictive, stick-it-to-the government thing.”

Robert Berard, the director of graduate education at Mount Saint Vincent University, said the union’s membership has become militant in recent years.

“The anger and passion of teachers in this particular dispute is the boiling-up of a lot of frustratio­n of curricular reforms tossed at them,” he said. “Added data gathering requiremen­ts and the posting of material online every single day ... has changed the nature of teachers’ work in recent years.”

“I would say that at least for a while there’s going to be a reluctance for teachers to take on things that aren’t specifical­ly outlined in the Education Act,” he said.

The province imposed a contract on teachers on Tuesday, ending a 16-month contract dispute that saw the majority of the 9,300 members of the Nova Scotia Teachers Union vote down three tentative agreements.

The imposed contract contains a three per cent salary increase and incorporat­es many elements included in the first two tentative agreements rejected by union members.

 ?? FILE PHOTO ?? Some Nova Scotia teachers working under a government-imposed contract say they will not resume old norms of making themselves available after class and offering to coach teams and clubs.
FILE PHOTO Some Nova Scotia teachers working under a government-imposed contract say they will not resume old norms of making themselves available after class and offering to coach teams and clubs.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada