Times Colonist

B.C.’s rural-urban divide is doing students no favours

- GEOFF JOHNSON gfjohnson4@shaw.ca

The Canadian Council on Learning suggested in a report that while ruralurban difference­s in education can be found in many developed countries around the world, Canada has one of the most significan­t rural-urban gaps with respect to levels of education in the workforce.

A significan­t problem that contribute­s to the gap and one that differenti­ates urban and rural educationa­l opportunit­y is that it is difficult for small rural schools to attract and retain qualified teaching staff.

Even teacher-training students nearing graduation often express a preference to wait for an opportunit­y in an urban school district rather than take a job in a rural district. Because of hiring requiremen­ts and seniority lists in many teacher contracts, once he or she leaves an urban area for a rural job, it is difficult for a young teacher to get back into an urban district.

It is that kind of thing that poses problems for government­s seeking to establish equality of educationa­l opportunit­y throughout a province.

There are certainly lessons to be learned about the consequenc­es of an urban/rural gap from November’s U.S. midterm election, which did more than effect a change in the political power base.

That ideologica­l divide between urban and rural voters goes beyond the political and geographic; it is sociologic­al and economic. According to the Brookings Institutio­n, the “think tank” most frequently cited by the U.S. media and politician­s, the gap is also educationa­l.

A Brookings posting in November about how the U.S. midterm elections results emerged partly from American education policy stated: “Nationwide, education was not a top issue for many voters on Election Day — far from it. Rural schools are America’s forgotten educationa­l institutio­ns.”

The Brookings Institutio­n also suggests that over the past decade, America has focused resources and opportunit­ies in education more for urban areas, with little attention to rural poverty and the lack of learning opportunit­ies for poor students in these areas across America.

About one-third of all public elementary and secondary schools are in U.S. rural communitie­s, while the power-holders and influencer­s live in the big cities. That’s where the money and focus have shifted in the past few decades.

An article in the New York Times by Emily Badger quotes a May 2018 Pew Research report that confirms that the divides across urban, suburban and rural areas result in place-based resentment­s — “no one respects rural America” or “Trump is at war with cities” — sentiments that can be and are easily exploited by some politician­s.

In B.C., about 32 per cent of students in B.C.’s public K-12 system attend schools outside of the main urban centres of Greater Victoria, the Lower Mainland and Kelowna.

There are about 140 communitie­s with only one school, and these schools tend to be highly integrated in the social, cultural and recreation­al network of the community.

Every attempt has been made by the B.C. government and its Ministry of Education to avoid the pitfalls of the U.S. scenario. According to a 2018 Ministry of Education paper, Funding Model Review Discussion K-12, the current funding model attempts to recognize a range of geographic factors that identify specific funding allocation­s to support rural areas.

Included in the core operating grant are some allocation­s for geographic supplement­s that direct additional resources toward rural areas. The Rural Education Enhancemen­t Fund, Student Transporta­tion Fund, and the Rural and Remote Workplace Sustainabi­lity Fund, are special grants and programs that have been establishe­d specifical­ly to support rural school districts.

Even so, rural districts experience higher costs such as providing transporta­tion in geographic­ally dispersed areas, especially where travel through difficult terrain, such as mountains or bodies of water, is required.

Examples from my own experience include School District 83 North Okanagan-Shuswap where the school at Celista/Anglemont is 80 km on the other side of the lake from the school board office. Even the smallest maintenanc­e call becomes a full-day job and a 160-km drive.

On the other hand, urban New Westminste­r has eight schools — all more or less within walking distance of each other and the school board office.

If we are to avoid the bitterness of the urban/rural divide that has created such political chaos in the U.S., there will be a need for a continued and developing recognitio­n not just by government but by the British Columbia Teachers’ Federation and the teachertra­ining institutio­ns that working together to ensure equality of educationa­l opportunit­y for our schools and B.C.’s kids is more important than politics. Geoff Johnson is a former superinten­dent of schools.

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