Calgary Herald

Teachers, minister swap accusation­s of politicizi­ng proposed new curriculum

- DEAN BENNETT

Education Minister Adriana Lagrange says the group representi­ng Alberta teachers is playing politics with a proposed new kindergart­en to Grade 6 curriculum and isn't sincere about real bridge-building.

The Alberta Teachers' Associatio­n has publicly stated the proposed learning plan is “fatally flawed, and teachers, academics and curriculum experts should work on a revised version.”

“I have the utmost respect for teachers, and the work that they do and the profession­alism that they have,” Lagrange said when asked about the associatio­n Wednesday.

“I want them to weigh in on the curriculum,” she said. “The union for teachers appears to want to make it more political. I really don't want to go down that path. I prefer to work collaborat­ively.

“The fact they have not reached out to me or my department since the curriculum has come out to set up a meeting, to have a discussion, speaks volumes to me.”

Lagrange made the remarks after announcing a call for grant proposals totalling $1 million to develop financial literacy programs for high school students.

Her spokeswoma­n, Nicole Sparrow, said in a subsequent statement that the minister's door remains open.

“Alberta's government will continue to work with the education system, including the teachers' union, to gather all feedback to make this the best curriculum possible,” said Sparrow.

“It is clear that the union is more interested in political theatre than actually providing feedback.”

Teachers president Jason Schilling lobbed the accusation right back.

“We need to have the whole curriculum redesign process depolitici­zed. In fact, I would like to see politician­s get out of the way and let's go back to the way we used to do curriculum redesign,” Schilling said in an interview.

Schilling said Lagrange cancelled a memorandum of understand­ing in late 2019 that had put teachers and other experts at the centre of the curriculum review. Teachers have fought for a place at the table ever since, he said.

“The associatio­n has essentiall­y been shut out,” said Schilling.

“The minister is very well aware of the fact I have concerns about the curriculum, that I want to make sure that teachers are involved, (so) that we can get this right.”

The result has been a high-profile back-and-forth word fight. The teachers associatio­n says it was shut out of the curriculum consultati­on. Lagrange counters that 100 teachers were involved.

Schilling has said it was 100 teachers for two days who had to sign non-disclosure agreements.

The ATA has said 91 per cent of teachers in an in-house survey are against the curriculum. Lagrange has dismissed the survey sample she says was less than seven per cent as minuscule.

Sarah Hoffman, the Opposition NDP'S education critic, said Lagrange and the United Conservati­ve government need to meaningful­ly work with teachers who have the expertise and front-line experience on what works and what doesn't.

“The minister is picking massive fights and trying to discredit teaching profession­als who work to make sure students learn quality informatio­n to set them up for success,” said Hoffman.

The draft is to be piloted in select schools this fall and fully implemente­d in September 2022.

To date, almost 30 of Alberta's 63 school boards, including the public school boards in Edmonton and Calgary as well as francophon­e school boards, say they won't teach it.

The grant proposal announced Wednesday will fund the developmen­t of financial literacy programs for junior and senior high school students starting next fall.

Organizati­ons awarded funding would help schools teach financial concepts such as interest, debt, investing and insurance, the government said.

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 ?? FILES ?? Education Minister Adriana Lagrange says the Alberta Teachers' Associatio­n is playing politics with the proposed K-6 draft curriculum.
FILES Education Minister Adriana Lagrange says the Alberta Teachers' Associatio­n is playing politics with the proposed K-6 draft curriculum.

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