Province expected to announce plans for community involvement in schools this fall - Action News
Home WebMail Friday, November 22, 2024, 08:30 AM | Calgary | -12.0°C | Regions Advertise Login | Our platform is in maintenance mode. Some URLs may not be available. |
Nova Scotia

Province expected to announce plans for community involvement in schools this fall

After decrying the dissolution of elected school boards five years ago, the Nova Scotia Progressive Conservatives say they want to increase public role in school decision-making.

Conservatives have promised to increase public input in the education system

A blurred photo shows the backs of students wearing backpacks walking up a set of stairs in a school.
The provincial government recently surveyed thousands of Nova Scotians about the education system and heard some calls for the return of elected school boards, according to a report released following a freedom of information request. (Warren Kay/CBC)

Nova Scotians asking for the return of elected school boards which were controversially dissolved five years ago should soon have ananswer.

The province'sProgressive Conservatives said during the 2021 election campaign they would modernize the school board model.But theystopped short of promising to reinstate the previous system disbanded by the Liberal government in 2018.

Since being elected, the PCs have said they plan to seek more feedback on public education and use that to inform how schools operate. So far they've spent about $80,000 to consult with Nova Scotians about how to bring more "local voice" into education policy and decision making.

Several thousand people, including parents, teachers, administrators and other school staff, participated in that consultation. The Nova Scotia NDP received some of the results through a Freedom of Information request, which the party shared with CBC News.

An undisclosed number of people surveyed said they want school boards back to advocate on their behalf, streamline communication and provide accountability.

Sections of the government briefing document under the heading Ideas for Action were redacted.The reporthas not yet been released to the public.

A government spokesperson said next steps will be shared "early this fall." They would not say whether the reinstatement of elected school boards is on the table.

The previous Liberal government did away with English language school boards in 2018, following a recommendation from education consultant Avis Glaze. Glaze said voters were apathetic about school board elections, turnout was poorand board members were too often acclaimed. Still, the decision was decried as a blow to democracy by both opposition parties of the day, which included the PCs.

Boards were replaced with regional centres for education staffed by unelected officials. School advisory councils made up of parents, teachers and local residents weresupposed to providelocal input, but in many cases those councils have struggled to take shape.

NDP MLA Suzy Hansen, who was a school board member from 2016 to 2018, said many of her constituents tell her they miss the old system.

"It was a really good mechanism to be able to get some information, to hold the government accountable and as well to kind of speak for parents and teachers and staff," Hansen said in an interview.

Mobile users: View the document
(PDF KB)
(Text KB)
CBC is not responsible for 3rd party content