The Chronicle Herald (Metro)

Ford says new measures to help fix ‘broken’ education system

- MOIRA WARBURTON

TORONTO — Ontario is taking steps to make its "broken" education system more equitable for Black and indigenous students in Canada's most populous province, Premier Doug Ford said on Thursday.

New measures include phasing out the so-called practice of streaming, when 9th grade students must choose whether they want to take university-track "academic" courses or hands-on "applied" courses in high school.

A 2017 report from York University in Toronto found streaming disproport­ionately channeled Black students into applied or vocational courses, while their white counterpar­ts took academic courses.

Applied courses are seen as less academical­ly challengin­g. The report said students and educators felt they affected self-esteem, discouragi­ng students from continuing on to university.

Ontario is the only province in the country to still use streaming.

"It's unfair and it's not right to ask these students at such a young age to make a decision that will determine the rest of their high school and postsecond­ary careers," Ford said at a press briefing in Toronto.

"At this age everyone needs the same foundation­s for learning ... The system is broken," he said, adding that about half of the province's Black youths were not entering the academic stream.

Other new measures include proposals to reform punitive suspension­s for kindergart­en to Grade 3 students, and strengthen sanctions for teachers who display racist behavior, Ford said.

Ontario is expected to reopen its schools amid the COVID-19 pandemic in September, although school districts are being asked to prepare for a range of reopening scenarios.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Ontario Premier Doug Ford.
REUTERS Ontario Premier Doug Ford.

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