Skip to content

Details of new Education Act released

Parents and students can now see Education Minister Thomas Lukaszukís new 10-point action plan for schools across the province. The plan, released Jan.

Parents and students can now see Education Minister Thomas Lukaszukís new 10-point action plan for schools across the province.

The plan, released Jan. 10, calls for more opportunities for students to earn more high school and post-secondary credits while in school, will be formally introduced during the spring sitting of the Legislature.

The plan was drafted after collecting the opinions of thousands of parents, teachers, students and educational support staff. Data was collected through forums, social media, e-mails, mail, phone interviews and Alberta Educationís website.

ìOur intent for the consultation was to hear from those who may not have had an opportunity to share their vision for the Alberta education system. I want to extend my appreciation and a personal thank you to everyone who participated,î said Lukaszuk.

ìThe feedback from parents, students and teachers leaves me no doubt that this review was the right thing to do.î

Forums held between Nov. 26 and Dec. 9 saw 1,130 attendees give opinions to Lukaszuk.

ìParents, teachers, students and others have given me two types of advice: philosophical approaches that are best addressed in legislation and practical solutions to the challenges students face every day,î said Lukaszuk. ìLegislation will come forward in the spring, and work on practical steps will begin immediately.î

However, the ideas arenít all good according to one local politician.

ìI didnít see anything thatís going to improve the education system,î said Rob Anderson, Airdrie-Chestermere MLA and education critic. ìHow about instead of equipping buses with WiFi, letís make sure we have enough schools and teachers.î

Dave Morris, associate superintendent of learning for Rocky View Schools sided with Anderson.

ìWe have really good wireless accessibility (in RVS),î said Morris, associate superintendent of learning.

ìIíd like to see the schools receive that ability before trips and travel.î

Overall, Morris is ìsupportive of the direction theyíre trying to go.î

The idea of reviewing provincial achievement testsí legitimacy is valid, said Anderson.

ìI believe in testing our students but Iím not convinced that the current PATs are very useful,î he said.

ìIíd like them to study some alternatives.î

The new Education Actís priorities include:

ï Reducing travel time for students who spend more than one hour on a bus and enabling students to better use technology when they travel;

ï Creating more opportunities for students to earn credits in high school and post-secondary at the same time;

ï Updating school design specifications to better support communities;

ï Co-ordinating building playgrounds and new schools;

ï Reducing the administrative burden for charter schools;

ï Supporting First Nations students by working more closely with the federal government;

ï Creating a stronger voice for parents in the education system;

ï Providing better information to increase the transparency, clarity and accountability of the education system;

ï Reviewing provincial achievement tests;

ï Examining the operational requirements of full-day kindergarten.


Airdrie City View Staff

About the Author: Airdrie City View Staff

Read more


Comments


No Facebook? No problem.

Here is how you can stay connected to the Airdrie City View and access local news in your community:

Bookmark our homepage for easy access to local news.
Pick up a copy of our newspaper and read local news that you cannot get elsewhere.
Sign up for our FREE newsletters to have local news & more delivered daily to your email inbox.
Download our mobile icon to have access to our news right at your fingertips.

push icon
Be the first to read breaking stories. Enable push notifications on your device. Disable anytime.
No thanks