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Take a tour of a school that will make you want to go back to kindergarten

The Rives du Saguenay school board hopes to make a splash with Au Millnaire school, which brings nature indoors and promises youngsters will learn three languages.

Offbeat learning project in Saguenay draws 1000s of parents for open house, rattles teachers union

Au Millnaire school comes equipped with the latest technology, including white boards and tablets. (Radio-Canada)

The Rives du Saguenay school board hopes to make a splash with itsAu Millnaire project when it opens next fall.

Even the hallway floors, checkered with bursts of random colours, impress the point: this school is one of a kind.

The school not only looks original,it will also sound different.

School board administrators are promising students will be exposed to six to eight hours of Spanish or English each week a proposal that is fuelling the enthusiasm of parents and concerns from the local teachers union.

Au Millnaire elementary school in La Baie brings the outdoors inside in its bright, sunny classrooms. (Radio-Canada)

Just how curious are Saguenensabout the project?

Au Millnaire had an open house earlier this month, and between 1,500 and 2,000 people turned out.

Educators like Virginie Hallahan-Piloteare thrilled with the level of interest.

"They loved everything. It was big eyes and big smiles on their faces," said the principal of Notre-Dame elementary school in the nearby community of Laterrire.

Hallahan-Pilote shares parents' enthusiasm when she talks about the school's quirky features.

The school has a kitchen, a greenhouseand a general store where students will be able tosell what they grow to the public.

The tables in the classrooms are made of slabs of polished wood. (Radio-Canada)

The tables and desks in some classrooms are made of polished slabs of wood, their rough bark edges exposed.

Murals fill entire classroom walls: one is a vivid depiction of a covered bridge; another, the streetscape of Times Square in New York City.

This mural of New York City is the backdrop to an urban-themed classroom. (Radio-Canada)

Plants and trees grow in the sunny classrooms.

Interactive whiteboards, Lego robots and virtual reality gear await tech-savvy little learners.

First-grader Charles-Antoine Renaud was impressed when he walkedthrough the school.
'Everything was magnificent,' said first-grader Charles-Antoine Renaud after touring the school. (Radio-Canada)

"I liked it all. Everything was magnificent," he said.

The Au Millnaire project is part of Mdric-Gravel elementary school in Labaie, although it is housed in what used to be Georges-Vanier school, which closed eight years ago.

Until this latest transformation, the site was used for adult education courses.

Administrators say they want to create a space that seems more like a home than a school.

"We want children to think different[ly]," said Hallahan-Pilote. "To open their minds and be creative and to search for solutions in their environment."

This classroom has a rural theme. (Radio-Canada)

Seeking anglophones

Au Millnaire is just eight kilometresaway from Canadian Forces Base Bagotville, and the French-language school board is hoping it may attract students from military families who are also eligible for schooling in the English-language system.

Between 1,500 and 2,000 people showed up to Au Millnaire's open house. An English-speaking administrator was on hand, as the board is hoping to persuade parents whose children have English-school eligibility to take part in the trilingual project. (Radio-Canada)
One of the reasons Hallahan-Pilote participated in the open house was to ensure someone who spoke English could take questions from English-speakingparents whose children now attend Riverside Regional Elementary School in Jonquire.

Au Millnaireprovides anglophone families with "a nice option, for them to go nearby," she said.

3 languages under 1 roof

Quebec's Charterof theFrench Language, known as Bill 101,requires all obligatory courses, such as math andphysical education, to be taught in French in the French-languageschool system.

The Rives du Saguenay school board said it will do that, but it plans to make use of time outside the classroom to expose the children to English or Spanish.

Teachers, who will be required to speak either English or Spanish in addition to French, are expected to use their second language when addressing childrenin daycare, in the hallways, during readings in the libraryor while the children participate in special activities, such as when they work in the greenhouse or the kitchen.

Hallahan-Pilote thinks the model is unique in the province.

"All of the instruction will be in French, but every project can be in English and Spanish," she said.

"We believe that we need to adjust our schools and our teaching to the reality of the young people today with technologies and language learning."

"We have an obligation to teach them openness to the world and different cultures, so it was very easy to sell this project to everybody," she said.

The project's boosters says it will teach all main subjects in French, but opportunities to learn English and Spanish will be sprinkled into the school day. (Radio-Canada)

Teachers union uneasy

However, the president of the Saguenay teachers union, Aline Beaudoin, is worried about the implications for her members and uneasy about whether the plan conforms to the language charter.

Beaudoin said she will be paying close attention to the use of languages in the school, saying the Au Millnaire project is pushing the envelope.

"That is touching the very limits of the Charter of the French language," she said."It will certainly be something to watch."

Beaudoin is also concerned about the amount of extra work teachers will need to put into developing new projects.

As well, she questions the use of precious resources.
Even the hallways at Au Millnaire are stimulating. (Radio-Canada)

The school board says it does not cost more to equip the Au Millnaire project than a regular classroom. However,Beaudoin says, the new desks and whiteboards are equipment that's not endingup in the schools that already exist.

She also worries thatthe school board will likely drawfrom its limited training budget to hone teachers' skills in technology and languages.

"That budget from educational services, could it have been used to help students with difficulties?" she asked.

Lucky few

The Au Millnaire project is only accepting 165 students in pre-kindergarten through to grade six.

Candidates will have to be generally successful and to show an interest in different languages and cultures. Oncethey make that cut, students will then be chosen at random in a lottery.

The screening system worries Beaudoin, who does not want to see the best students in the system pulled out of regular classrooms at other schools.

As for the lottery draw, thatmakes some parents nervous, like Marianne Par, who has three children.

"I am definitely worried about having one chosen, and not another one. Then we would have to decide, do we keep one [in Au Millnaire] and keep the other two in an ordinary school?" she said.

Prospective parents at Au Millnaire school listen to a presentation about the school's goals and objectives. Marianne Par (left) worries what will happen if only one of her three children get in. (Radio-Canada)

The school board's general director, Chantale Cyr, sees the demand as an opportunity.

"Unfortunately, there are only 165 spaces in order to respect the prescribed ratios. It makes me want to create another one. Another place in the school board."Cyr said.

"This type of project has to be contagious."

The director general of the Rives du Saguenay school board, Chantale Cyr, said she hopes Au Millnaire project will become a model for other schools at her board. (Radio-Canada)

With files from Meghann Dionne, Frdric Tremblay and Julia Page