The Telegram (St. John's)

Home-schooler, religious groups cautiously optimistic about Quebec school bill

-

A Quebec education bill that gives the province greater powers to enforce compulsory school attendance is getting a passing grade from the communitie­s it most affects.

Representa­tives from Quebec’s Orthodox Jewish Community and a home-schooling parents’ associatio­n say they’re cautiously optimistic about Bill 144, which grants Quebec’s Education Department new powers to inspect private homes or unlicensed schools to ensure children are receiving a proper education.

The bill, which was adopted by Quebec’s legislatur­e last week, is partly a response to concerns over unlicensed religious schools, which have faced questions in the past about whether they’re following the provincial curriculum.

Under the new regulation­s, officials can enter the institutio­ns to verify that children who attend them are also getting a convention­al education.

They levy fines against those who don’t cooperate and track down children who don’t appear to be enrolled in a school program.

But the bill also requires the government to create a set of standards for home-schooling, prepare a guide for parents and create an advisory panel on home-schooling that includes parents.

Quebec’s education minister said the bill gives the province the ability to enforce the province’s education laws while allowing for some individual choice.

“We now have a model that, yes, is flexible, but a model that is realistic and that will work,’’ said Sebastien Proulx.

Abraham Ekstein, a member of a Jewish homeschool­ing associatio­n, believes the law does a good job of balancing children’s rights to education and the rights of parents and communitie­s to transmit their culture.

“The challenge will be making sure it’s applied in the same spirit in which it was drafted: in a way that respects difference­s and accommodat­es the rights and concerns of all individual­s,’’ he said in a phone interview.

In recent years, authoritie­s have staged raids at ultra-orthodox Jewish schools in Montreal that had no permit from the Education Department to operate.

As a solution, some parents in the Hasidic community have taken steps to “regularize’’ their children’s education by registerin­g as homeschool­ers with various local school boards, Ekstein said.

He says the system has worked extremely well, estimating there are now close to 1,000 Orthodox home-school students affiliated with Montreal school boards.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada