Ontario plan to boost Educational Basic - podcast episode cover

Ontario plan to boost Educational Basic

Apr 19, 202340 min
--:--
--:--
Download Metacast podcast app
Listen to this episode in Metacast mobile app
Don't just listen to podcasts. Learn from them with transcripts, summaries, and chapters for every episode. Skim, search, and bookmark insights. Learn more

Episode description

Education is one of the cornerstones of living an extraordinary and fantastic life. Learning what is around us and what not only is on our planet, but what is out in the cosmos is been a cornerstone of my life and I couldn’t have done it without some of the basic skills that we need, reading, writing, and of course math
https://depictions.media/ontario-invest-into-education/
#education
#learning #school #algebra #people

Become a supporter of this podcast: https://www.spreaker.com/podcast/policy-and-rights--3339563/support.

Transcript

Thank you for listening to Depiction's Media Radio. Welcome to Policy Rights to show about government policy and human rights. Welcome back to Policy and Rights here in Depictions Media Radio. I'm your host, Michael Cloggs. Education is one of

the cornerstones to leading to a extraordinary and fantastic life. Learning what is around us and what not only is on our planet, but what is out my cosmos has been a cornerstone to my life and I couldn't have done it without some of the basic skills that we need reading, writing, and of course math. Now most people won't go much further than algebra, and many who said the cosmos they study much more than that with advanced calculus and things like

that. But those skills that they learned in elementary school is what led them down. These paths, led them to the thought processes, the logic paths that they used to study. Many of school systems are falling short on these ideas of the basic skills and some of the things that we actually need. Maybe some of these things are being a little too much replaced by computers. Maybe some of these things can be spent up with the right softwares of putting

it, putting them into automated systems. But we're going to hear from the Ontario Education Minister, Stephen Lees as he talks about how Ontario is going to improve the education system. But they're looking to improve the basics dal's first, reading, writing, and math, and we'll learn how Ontario is going to do it and we can watch to see where their successes are. So let's listen to that segment now and maybe learn how we can help more kids across

Canada. Good morning, Thank you Wall. Thank you so much Patrese for the introduction and for your leadership in the ministry. I want to just first off give a quick shout out to our amazing host here at the Album Library for welcoming us a brilliant space where literacy is promoted every single day and stem education. And I also want to thank Alicia Smith from Dyslexia Canada and Kevin Maynard from the Canadian Foundation for Economic Education for joining us for this important announcement.

We know that for your children to strive to reach their full potential, we must ensure they master their foundational skills. Every day parents tells they want their children's school to focus on the fundamentals improving reading, writing and math. So today we're outlining our strategy to boost math and literacy skills in Ontario by going back to the basics. In every stage of life, mastering mathematics and

reading is critical. Yet this province, and frankly around the entire industrialized world, too many children are falling behind and the EQUAO data confirms this. We have schools that have consistently underperformed in these fundamental skills. And so today we are challenging the status quo, raising the bar all of us, from educators to school boards, to governments to community working harder and smarter, eading to

better outcomes for your children. And so today Patrise and I are proud to unveil on terrorist plan to boost literacy and math skills designed to deliver better schools, better jobs and outcomes for your children. So first, we're going to be investing more than one hundred and eighty million dollars in additional funding for the

coming school year focused on math and reading supports. Through this investment, our government is supporting the hiring of nearly one thousand specialized math and literacy educators, all designed to deliver better schools for your children. Now specific to math. We're going to be investing more than seventy one million dollars in a new math plan supported by the recently introduced modernized math curriculum that mandates financial literacy and coding

in every single grade. On tarist plan to boost math skills will hire hundreds of specialized math educators. We will also double the number of school math teacher coaches in classrooms. These are math coaches that are to provide direct hands on support to both the teacher and to students in classroom that are falling behind.

To ensure school boards have one senior leader that is exclusively focused on improving math competence and the training of our teachers with new strategies to lift math skills in the classroom, will be funding one dedicated math lead in every single board. They will spearhead math curriculum implementation. They will standardize the training and provide additional

supports for math coaches in schools and in classrooms. This is another accountability measure we're introducing to help every single board lift their scores and the skills of their kids. We're also enhancing skills of new teachers through dedicated training and covering the costs of additional math qualification courses professional development to help enhance math fluency and competency

of our frontline educators. We're also going to be expanding financial literacy learning and resources in the classroom to ensure more of the hands on practical learning like personal budgeting, how to save, how to pay taxes or take a mortgage, or live within one's means. And finally, we're going to continue to expand access to digital math tools. That's the live teacher led virtual tutoring offered in

math. That is a lot, but to ensure these resources have impact, we are also announcing the creation of a Math Action Team to drive improvement. These are highly trained educators who will be seconded in the Ministry of Education and deploy to those boards where we need to raise standards to improve the training and the outcomes of our kids. The Math Action Team will drive improvement by working with school boards to identify and recommend targeted, high impact teaching practices to improve

math achievement right across this province. It is an all hands on deck approach to boost financial literacy and math skills in the classroom. Now, when it comes to literacy, we know many young children have faced regression over the past years. It's experienced parents around this country have said they've seen themselves. So first, we're going to overhaul the entire language curriculum, which will be in place this coming September. This curriculum will help every single child read, including

those kids with intellectual or developmental disabilities. And I'm pleased to announce our plan to boost literacy skills through a historic investment of more than one hundred and nine million dollars, the largest investment in the country to boost literacy because we take this seriously, because if we don't intervene at the front end and course correct these challenges for these young kids, it can lead to long term impacts.

It Literacy costs our productivity in our economy billions, It undermines self conference and impacts mental health and their job opportunities. So starting this September, in addition to a new curriculum, I'm announcing that every student in their second year of kindergarten, in grade one and in grade two will be screened to ensure their

meeting their provincial standard. This is critical to establish some measurement tool so that we can intervene with additional supports in the schools and classrooms and to those kids that will need it most. On Arrel's plan to boost literacy includes over one hundred million dollars, and that includes new supports, including nearly seven hundred additional frontline reading specialist educators. They'll be deployed to help those children to get them

on track. This will ensure all young learners receive the necessary foundational skills and the early interventions they're going to be critical for their lifelong success. This represents the largest investment in math and literacy in the country. It is by far the most comprehensive literacy promotion strategy in the nation, and we're doing this because

we recognize the challenge ahead. Now we're also extending on Terrell's free tutoring program to the end of the school year, again with the focus on boosting those fundamental skills in reading, writing, a math, and other STEM disciplines. This plan will up our game and it sends a clear signal to the entire province that we have to do better to boost the skills that actually matter to

the success of your child. So yes, back to basics, back to learning what matters most, so that your children can graduate they could own a home and get a good paying job. So thank you for joining us, and I'm now please to welcome Kevin Maynard, the vice president of the Kadian Foundation for Economic Education, to the podium. Thank you, Minister, let students, other invited guests, thank you for inviting me to this great event.

We know that learning happens throughout our lives, and that learning occurs at libraries such as this, at home with the support and guidance of parents and other caregivers, and in schools with teachers equipped with the skills and resources that are required in today's ever changing world. We know that education is in the business of preparing our youth to build successful futures, and we all have a role to play. A key challenge is the rapidly changing world of work.

As jobs disappear, jobs are created, and jobs change, and the label markets adjust to these new realities. Employers are looking for new skills, different types of knowledge, and their needs and interests will continue to change in the future. It is essential that we equip our youth with the fundamental skills that will able them to adapt and respond to these changes, and to sustain success

and respond to opportunities in our evolving world. This initiative by the Minister of Education and Math Resources and Professional Development Support makes a tremendous contribution to the potential for improving the readiness of Ontario students for the future. After all, we are all after the same goal, improving the potential of our youth through investments that will lead to building financial capability and ensuring that our full potential can be

reached as individuals and in our community, throughout the province and beyond. Thank you again, and now I'd like to invite Alicias Smith, Executive director of Dyslexio Canada, to come up thank you. Every year, for the past twenty years, we've had at least a third of students leave high school in Ontario without having reached the level of literacy that they need to fully participate in the modern economy. That's one out of every three students who are being shut

out of life's opportunities due to low literacy. Low literacy puts these young people at an increased risk for many negative long term outcomes, including under an unemployment, poverty, homelessness, and issues with mental health and addiction. And we know from decades of data that racialized and indigenous students, students from lower socioeconomic backgrounds, and students with disabilities like dyslexia are disproportionately impacted. But it doesn't

have to be this way. Research conducted in Canada and internationally, along with real results from room teachers right here in Ontario, clearly show us that if

we change our approach, we can improve our outcomes. When schools align instruction with reading science, implement universal screening using evidence based tools to identify students who are at risk of dyslexia and other causes of reading difficulties, and provide targeted early intervention starting in kindergarten, reading difficulties can be prevented for over ninety five percent of all children. We have had the information and the tools necessary to

improve outcomes for over twenty years. The Ontario Human Rights Commission Right to Read Inquiry was launched to discover why it is that the Ontario education system had yet to adopt current evidence based practices. The HRC has provided a comprehensive set of recommendations for system change at all levels and education, including at the Ministry, school boards, schools, and in our faculties of education. Dyslexia Canada is

encouraged that the Government of Ontario has committed to implementing the OHRC's recommendations. We see today's funding announcement as a positive and necessary step that will help Ontario school boards shift their approach to early literacy to align with evidence based practices. I know many Ontario school boards and teachers who have made significant progress over the past

several years in updating their practices. It is so exciting to see the data that is coming out of these schools and classrooms and to hear about the positive impact that these changes are having on children, not only on their reading ability, but also in their confidence, self esteem, the behavior, and their enthusiasm for reading and learning. But there's a lot of work to do to ensure that every child in every school board is provided with the instruction and the

support that they need to get off to a good start with reading. With today's announcement, we are one step closer to that goal. I'd like to thank Minister Leche and his team for engaging with us in productive discussions over the past year. Dyslexia Canada remains committed to working collaboratively with all parties and all stakeholders in education. As we work towards fully implementing the right to read recommendations. Thank you, and I'd like to invite Minister Leche to answer questions.

Thank you. We will now open the floor for questions. Please step forward to the mic and state your name and outlet. Just a reminder, it's one question and one follow up perscussion. Minister Leach, you spoke about hiring around a thousand and staff towards this new program. There are four thousand, eight hundred schools in the province. Any hiring that was done during the pandemic, school boards have said was done through pandemic funding. Most likely those seven

thousand jobs. Many of those people will be laid off. So with only a thousand people being offered up, which is less than twenty percent of schools across the province, how much of an impact do you really think that new staff will make? Well? The problems will be providing the fulsome education funding details for school boards very shortly where that answer it could be provided for today. What I can commit to is providing more capacity and staffing that was there

in years past. I mean the literacy program. This one hundred and nine million dollars is entirely new. We never had a program dedicated specifically lifting standards in literacy right across Ontario through new curriculum, through new staffing, and frankly more resources in the classroom on mathematics. You know, last year we were investing about fifty five million dollars. This year, according to the plan,

it's over seventy million. We're going to sustain the staff and hire additional ones because we recognize we've got a zero in on those classrooms that are underperforming. The goal with respect to math is to really focus on that lower twenty percent of schools that quintal of schools that are really underperforming, use those supports,

those additional staff to get into those classrooms and lift standards. So the message we're sending really is we're going to help every child get ahead by focusing in on new supports, resources and people to improve literacy and mathematics. But we're also going to really focus in on the lowest performing schools to lift them up too, so that every child's able to succeed in the economy. So you just mentioned sustaining the staff that have already been hired during the pandemic, a

commitment we haven't really heard before. You mentioned the budgets are coming up and that you will make those commitments soon. The budget, of course do in June. There's only less than two and a half months to go. Why wait so long to release those details to school boards. Well, the funding for school boards usually comes out in the early to mid spring, sometimes late

winter, so this is not abnormal. And what I can confirm to you as the rebudget confirmed is that the funding for next school year is going to be up by over one billion dollars one point three billion in baseline funding increase for school boards. We're going to be really focusing in on strengthening reading, writing, and math skills. We're going to improve supports for mental health and

special education. So I think families could be assured that this plan today to really go back to the basics on emphasizing and improving literacy and mathematical competencies is going to go a long way, especially after the pandemic, and of course in very short order we'll be able to provide the broader investment for school boards and be assured that we're going to be there for kids. We're going to ensure we invest in them through the resources and staffing because we all want them

to succeed. We've seen the decline in reading, writing, mass skills, and today's plan is a clear signal that we're not going to sit idle. We're not going to hope for the best. We're going to invest through a comprehensive plan that really lifts the skills and the standards and frankly the ambitions of kids by making sure that they can exit their high school experience having mastered those

fundamental skills. Thank you, thank you. Regarding the new literacy screening for younger students, what kind of programming and funding and resources will be put towards the kids who are falling behind? And are you going to track them as they go through the school system, So thank you for that. So we are going to be providing school boards with the full funding to procure the tool,

as well as the funding required for the licensing. So we're going to be covering all the costs associated with that tool and that technology, standardizing the training across Ontario to make sure the teachers are comfortable with this screening tool. It's going to help over on hundred thousand kids every year get a basic screening

assessment up to two times per year and that's going to be important. It's also going to be accessible and available on the report cards for parents to see, to create that transparency that young people that parents rather know about their youngest learners, how they're doing and how frankly they're improving. And then with respect

to the investments associated for those kids and may need some intervention. Let's say that your child is falling behind or below the standard we're now putting in place, the hiring and the funding of nearly seven hundred teachers who are specialized in literacy promotion to work specifically with those kids to lift up the standards and frankly, just to help them get a bit more support so they can get back on track. I also wanted to ask you about the Halton Public Board.

More than a month ago, they said they were going to put a professionalism policy in place and hire a special advisor, neither of which have happened. How do you feel about the way the board is continuing to handle this issue. Well, they made commitments to parents in their community and we expect them to fall through on them. Just before I ask my questions, does anybody

speak French here? No? Okay, I always have to ask, so my first questions about the fact that in the twenty twenty three budget thirty seven million dollars had already been been announced for literacy and maths. So is the money announced today new money or is it on top? Yeah, so we're announcing over one hundred and nine million dollars specifically just for literacy. So those additional supports we're announcing today, um, and frankly, I think they're very

needed, as we heard from Alicia and others. I mean, if we can really invest in a plan that helps every child improve their literacy and their math skills, if we can give confidence to parents that we're going to increase the supports and resources for them, I think we're going to help ensure the kids can confidently graduate and ultimately get a good job. So this is additional money, this would be well, yes, I mean there's additional funding we're

unveiling today that it was not covered in the budget. The budget speaks to, for example, the fact that we're increasing investments in financial literacy. The budget commits to an increase of investment overall to the Ministry of Education for our schools at one point three billion DOAR baseline funding increase, so that's going to

help a lot. But today we're going much further through a comprehensive plan that brings it all together that's really premised on lifting standards, increasing resources, increasing the specialized frontline teachers that can work directly with children directly in classrooms and frankly

help get these kids on track. We know parents, We've heard them loud and clear, particularly parents of young children, that fear that if we don't act now in kindergarten, in grade one or two, in those early formative years, that their kids could have lifelong impacts and roadblocks to success. So we hear them, and we're investing in them with a plan to get them

on track. And how the money going to be divided among regions and schools because there must be regions in schools that are that need that money more than other. Yeah, so it's going to be I mean, some of the funding is based on enrollment of children and some of it will be triage to help kids in schools that have historically been low performing. That twenty percent of schools that have historically been underperforming in Ontario with respect to math. That's where

a lot of the resources will go. But frankly, every school, I mean, rather all school boards will benefit from the investment, and I think it's critical, especially as we see and we hear from job creators and employers who are saying to us, look, we've got to make sure that young people when they graduate, they've mastered the skills that matter most. That's why today's plan to bolster literacy and mathematical skills. I think it's going to have

a massive impact in the life and success of a child. Thank you well, Minister Andrew Brannan from CTV. I just wanted to talk actually a little bit about that, the triaging and how that process will work. So if it's twenty percent that are being identified, first of all, will they be getting twenty percent of each of the budget line funding or how will that work and how will it be allocated? Yeah, so it's an important question.

So for each grade priority schools include the lowest achieving twenty percent of schools, So we're going to really emphasize and focus it on those according to Equo data, and really ensure that they get the resources necessary. It'll be based on the needs of kids in all schools. But the fact is we have a

plan today to improve literacy and math across the board. But when it comes to mathematics, you know, we understand that financial literacy is fundamental to the success of a young person, not just in their own life, in their own household budgets, but also when respect to getting a job. So we are going to make sure we lift standards with accountability in place. The first approach is yes triaging and focusing on lifting up the standards of the lowest performing

schools and boards. The second is to provide a new curriculum with more math coaches. We're doubling them to provide support in schools. And finally, we have a Math Action Team, which is essentially a team of highly trained, highly skilled math educators who we've secconded. We've brought them into the ministry that we can now deploy into the classrooms or schools or boards that actually need to do better. And so we're using a multitude of actions, more staffing,

an action team, accountability. We're frankly sending a clear signal to parents and to the education sector that we've got to work harder and smarter and produce better results for children. And I think this math support is going to really help get kids on track after years of difficulty in the pandemic of course, only

set them for their back. So this is a realization, a recognition of a problem and a plan to help them succeed and just okay, so we learned something, and we also learned that hey, you know what, not all brains are wired the same, and it means that we have to have some flexibility in our education system. We still need those basic skills, the reading, the writing, and those basic arithmetic and mass skills, but how do we support those who have brains that are wired slightly differently? As we

heard from Alice Smith, the executive director for Dyslexia Canada. And there are other things out there are people out there who have different things other than dyslexia, autism being one, and there's many, many more of ways of how the human brain can be wired and that we're not all all wired the same,

but we all can achieve greatness. And by learning about how the human brain is actually wired in the samenesses and the differences, that we can learn how to improve our education system so our children can achieve way more than what we have ourselves. So thank you for listening to us. Her own policy and rights here Depictions Media Radio. I've been your host, Michael Cloggs. Please click that subscribe button wherever it may be and get continued updates from us

m H. The show has been produced by Depictions Media. Please contact us at Depictions dot media for more information. The show has been produced by Depictions Media. Please contact us at Depictions dot media for more information. M

Transcript source: Provided by creator in RSS feed: download file
For the best experience, listen in Metacast app for iOS or Android