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A Final Warning from Canada's Watchdog on Schools
"This can't be done by government alone; anything that's done, any structure that's created has to be involving social partners, civil society and educators," Cappon insisted.
"It has to be supported by people like yourselves from the field who understand in your various domains what really happens and what could happen."
'A push for conservative modernization': Steeves
Many will mourn the loss of the CCL, but not everyone agrees with their final proposals. As part of a panel discussion that took place after Cappon's presentation, Peter Grimmett, head of curriculum and pedagogy in the faculty of education at UBC, laid out his concerns about the plan's reliance on national and international testing for students, and their effects on teachers.
"The heavy emphasis on the auditing of learning has been found in many studies to be a very strong contributor to the many difficulties that people have in their career prospects," he said.
"My point is that the factors that damage the career prospects for teachers arise in many instances from the audit culture that is currently invading our countries."
Similarly, Grimmett argued emphasis should be put on studying instead of learning. Studying "builds our capacity for making choices, for developing focus, for exercising critical judgment, and is so central to a well formed character."
Tobey Steeves, a graduate student at the Centre for Cross-Faculty Inquiries in Education, pointed out the similarities between the push for education "modernization" with those of the neo-liberal and neo-conservative movements.
"I'm reminded of Michael Apple who described kind of what I'm hearing here is a push for conservative modernization, and he linked it with neo-liberalism, neo-conservatism, neo-managerialism and authoritarian populism, and I see this as a very quintessential example of that push towards conservative modernization," he said.
Rob Cliff, a doctoral candidate in education studies, was more alarmed about the involvement of government in the goal-making process. He argued this had failed before in so many other sectors, as government's only interest has been cutting the costs of service delivery.
"What we need to start with is critically looking at what's happening in the policy realm now and having an honest discussion about that. The government's not interested in that," he said.
"So if you're asking to get more of the same, which is what I hear -- I'm hearing a call for more of the same at the national level, aggregating at the international level -- count me out."
From plan to action
In an interview after the presentation, Cappon says he wasn't shocked by any of the criticisms, saying many of them were just misunderstandings.
"Whenever you do a summary of a situation, there will be lots of nuances that are not brought up," he explained. He emphasizes the importance of assessment for data collection, but says it should never take precedence over learning in the classroom. Nor should government be left alone to make education decisions.
The Tyee contacted the federal Department of Human Resources, Skills and Development, but did not receive a call back by press time.
Cappon says the federal government was given an early copy of the report, and is scheduled to present to government bureaucrats soon. He isn't holding his breath for any public comment, however.
"Because as far as they're concerned they made the decision to cease the funding of CCL, so it doesn't exist," he says.
A call to the provincial Ministry of Education resulted in an email response lauding B.C.'s education plan: the introduction of all-day kindergarten, higher academic standards, personalized learning, flexibility and choice, and better teaching and learning.
Cappon acknowledges B.C.'s academic strengths, but says it's less likely now that B.C. students will remain in one province to get their education, and high standards need to apply across the board.
But despite the criticisms he received at UBC, Cappon says the majority of people he's spoken to thus far like the report, and he needs their support more than the federal government's.
"I think our recommendations will be considered and followed insofar as Canadians decide that this is really important in their lives: it means something to their families, to their communities, their regions and their province. But politicians are people from the community, so they will act if they are encouraged to act by their constituents," he said.
"That's the way democratic life works."
A Final Warning from Canada's Watchdog on Schools: Page 2 of 2




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North of Hope
28 weeks ago
BC Ministry of Ed BS
There is nothing new in the "Province's plan for education excellence." Teachers had to always teach to the curriculum. Teachers were supposed to be continuously evaluated to ensure quality teaching and students had some choice in secondary school wrt courses to be taken. The news release says nothing new, it is just a new language plan to pretend they are doing something.
tierra y libertad
28 weeks ago
BC Lib Wrecking Ball
As a teacher in BC, I'm not so much worried about a FEDERAL attack on public education as I am our very-own BC Liberals. They have done incredible damage to the public school system over the last 10 years! Gutting contracts regulating class-size/composition, picking fights with teachers over the BC College of Teachers, creating "business ventures" like International Students without giving them support, chronic, systemic underfunding, ranking schools by abusing FSA results and feeding data to the Fraser Institute, increasing standardized testing, lowering teacher morale etc...I also think education is far more than "prepping for a job"...it's far more than that...when done right it gives a person "armor" to combat the status-quo. After a decade of onslaught and trench warfare, BC teachers are worn out and jaded. Where's the educational leadership in BC? Nowhere to be found except for the teachers themselves!
asenhar
28 weeks ago
21st Century shift from Ed. to Training
Let's be honest. This shift to 21st century learning is a shift from education to training. We don't have enough people doing the grunt work and we may need critical thinkers but this widening of the "interaction with more adults" through technology rather than one on one is simply a cute way to ensure that there is no stable relationship with an mentor/teacher, the principal role of teachers.
Love technology for what it can do. However, have to wonder why business is so involved in education pushing it into schools. I don't tell the mining industry how to run its affairs, nor failed politicians how to recycle themselves into consultants. Okay, I understand. Schools are like shooting fishing or shooting fish in a barrel. A win-win situation for business. Once hooked, you can't let it go.
Death of CCL. Great. Conversations between Canadian educators that governments listen to will be better and guess what it is cheaper. Now while we are on the topic, look into the Council of Ministers of Education (CMEC) for cross-border coordination. Of course, it is not always responsive to federal gov. initiatives and that is a problem and probably (still) doesn't bow to industry very much.
Made in Canada policies with a world vision works.