almost everything is on the table. among other changes, m ore special needs students could be integrated into local schools and some programs may be cut. it is also likely that, at the end of the exercise, more children will be going to neighbourhood schools.
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some ocdsb elementary schools have 900-plus students, while others have less than 200, and those that don’t offer french immersion are the ones that often have lower enrolments. that’s causing inequities between schools and students. the board’s human rights and equity advisor, carolyn tanner, said english-only schools were “reinforcing inequities” between schools.
an ocdsb report released in 2019 suggested that there were considerable socio-economic differences between students enrolled in english and french immersion programs, that newcomer students were less likely to enrol and that students in the english stream were less likely to take courses they needed to qualify for university admission.
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at english-only elementary schools, a high proportion of students come from low-income families. the number of students learning english as a second language is also significantly higher in english-only schools. at nine of the 15 english-only schools, 25 to 50 per cent of students are learning english as a second language. at schools offering only f rench immersion , less than 10 per cent of students are learning english, according to the 2019 report.
a: some ocdsb schools offer only french immersion, some offer only english with core french, and others offer both. according to enrolment figures in october 2023, there were 21,797 elementary students enrolled in early french immersion plus 1,863 students enrolled in middle french immersion, compared to 16,990 enrolled in the english program.
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“ at this young age, a child’s critical thinking skills are best developed in their home language,” the catholic board says on its website. “spending a quarter of the day in french allows students to continue their growth in the second language while ensuring they develop a strong foundation in the english language.”
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new brunswick planned to introduce a new program in anglophone schools in the fall of 2023 that would involve all kindergarten and elementary students in anglophone schools learning math, english and reading in english, but spending half their days in “exploratory learning” in other subject areas in french.
that plan stirred controversy. some parents argued that french instruction was being taken away from immersion students. others felt a one-size-fits-all model didn’t address the needs of their children. after holding consultations where almost 13,000 people participated, new brunswick’s education ministry announced in february 2023 that it was rescinding the plan.
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