"How can
student recruitment and retention be improved in Francophone schools?"
Notes for an address
by the Honourable Stéphane Dion
President of the Privy Council and
Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs
Speech delivered to members of
the Association canadienne d’éducation
de langue française (ACELF)
Toronto, Ontario
October 4, 2003
Check against delivery
Members of the Association canadienne d’éducation
de langue française, it is my great
pleasure to have been invited by you to discuss two subjects which are very
important to me: education and the French language.
After the Prime Minister of Canada, the Right Honourable Jean Chrétien,
asked me, on April 25, 2001, to develop an action plan to revitalize the federal
official languages policy, I stated very quickly that my priority would be
education. I emphasized it to the point that some began to fear the Action Plan
would focus only on education.
As you know, the $751-million, five-year Action Plan for Official Languages,
announced by the Prime Minister on March 12, 2003, is based on education but
goes beyond. Entitled "The Next Act: New Momentum for Canada’s Linguistic
Duality," it provides for a whole series of measures that will help
official-language communities in their development and will give them better
access to public services in their language, particularly in the fields of
health, early childhood development, and justice. The Action Plan is also
intended to make the federal public service exemplary in three areas: delivery
of federal services to Canadians in both official languages, participation of
English- and French-speaking Canadians in the federal administration, and use of
both languages in the workplace. Finally, the Plan includes an accountability
and coordination framework that will be an ongoing reminder to ministers and
their officials of the priority accorded to linguistic duality. This
accountability framework is designed notably to ensure that the Government of
Canada is more attuned to organizations such as yours.
Of course, today you have asked me to speak about the education component of
the Plan. But we need to keep in mind that this is, in fact, a part of a plan,
and that each of the measures in that plan, be they for health services, the
public service or any other field, will help to achieve our objectives in
education. French has no future if it is spoken only in the classroom. We need
to enhance the vitality of the Francophone community, its cultural and economic
development. The more children play with their friends in French, are cared for
in French, and see their parents work in French, the more they will be motivated
to study in French. It is all connected.
In his invitation, your president, Mr. Gérald Boudreau, suggested that my
presentation focus on a specific objective of the Action Plan which pertains to
the retention of students in French schools. According to the 2001 Census, the
proportion of eligible students enrolled in Francophone schools was 68%. The
objective in our Plan is to bring that proportion up to 80% in ten years’
time. I am going to tell you how I think we can meet that objective. Naturally,
the first condition for success is the full commitment of people like you,
teachers, parents and school principals, who know better than anyone what needs
to be done to attract our youth to French schools.
1. The challenges facing us
In 1986, the proportion of eligible students in Francophone schools was 56%.
In 2001, it was 68%. So we have achieved an increase of 12 percentage points in
15 years. Our objective is to raise that percentage by another ten points in ten
years, to reach the much sought 80% threshold.
This objective, realistic but difficult to attain, will require the
collaboration of all. I would first like to mention the main difficulty facing
us: the weak knowledge of French these children have. The vast majority of them
come from families where one parent does not have French as a mother tongue and
often does not speak the language.
The situation is further complicated in that the objective consists not only
of attracting those children to our French schools, but of retaining them – as
well as those already enrolled since many give up along the way. According to a
study by Angéline Martel, Professor of sociolinguistics and language teaching
at the Télé-université,1
there are three key stages in particular where students are at risk of leaving
French school: initially between Grade 1 and Grade 2, when parents change their
minds after giving French school a try for one or two years; then between Grade
8 and Grade 9, at the transition to high school; and finally between Grade
11 and Grade 12, when young people or their parents see post-secondary
studies or entry into the labour force fast approaching.
To staunch the haemorrhaging, we need schools that not only welcome students
who require special help in French, but schools that are high performers,
ensuring each and every student a quality of education at least equivalent to
that of the majority. In other words, to increase the quantity, we must also
enhance the quality, and help both those who do not know how to walk and those
who are ready to run marathons. This is quite a challenge, especially if we take
into account that recent standardized testing has shown that Francophone
minority students are weaker than the Canadian average in reading and writing.
Indeed, the Organization for Economic Co-operation and Development’s (OECD)
Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA) study found that, in
reading, Francophone students from all provinces outside Quebec generally
performed below the Canadian average, compared with their Quebec counterparts
and the Anglophone majority in their province. In the sciences, scores were
significantly higher in the English system in Nova Scotia, New Brunswick,
Ontario and Manitoba.
Enhancing the attraction and quality of our schools will not be easy in a
context marked by a shortage of qualified teachers, insufficient high-quality
teaching resources, as well as the absence of economies of scale owing to the
small number of students, especially at the high-school level, and their
geographic dispersion. In particular, the growing shortage of qualified teachers
is becoming a major issue for the future of minority-language education.
According to the Canadian Teachers’ Federation, schools located in Francophone
communities outside Quebec are those most likely to be affected by the teacher
shortage in Canada over the coming years: at least 44% of school districts are
already experiencing a shortage of qualified applicants for teaching positions
in the current academic year.
2. What to do?
Facing these difficulties, the Action Plan will deploy initiatives on five
fronts.
First, we need to develop the means to intervene even before
school-age. In effect, measures are required which entail early intervention
with eligible preschool children and their parents. Research indicates the vital
importance of the first five years in the life of a child and has focussed
attention on programs which support early childhood development. Francophone
communities have called for more assistance for parents with children at the
preschool level, because from the moment a child is born, parents must think
about the choice of the language of instruction. As indicated by the Commission
nationale des parents francophones in its national early childhood
development support plan, "it is important to interest parents very
early in the Francophone system, since the birth of a child, particularly the
first, marks a moment of long-term determining choices with regard to family
life. For those in minority communities, it represents the window of opportunity
for providing active support and services in French."2
We also need information campaigns and local recruitment as well as support
measures for parents.
Second, and this is an essential element, we need to make our schools
more accessible. When the English school is right next door and the French
school entails a long, tiring bus ride, many parents and students opt for the
English school.
Third, we need to enhance the quality of our schools. We need
attractive and modern programming and extracurricular activities, adapt teaching
methods and tools, sufficient numbers of qualified teachers, specialized
educational services to meet the specific challenges of minority-language
education, and innovative solutions for the challenges of secondary schools. It
will be particularly important to enhance support for teaching with remedial
instruction for students, initiatives for language upgrading, etc.
Fourth, it is important for our educational institutions to be not
only places of learning, but also places for cultural activities and community
gatherings. In 2002, there were 19 Centres scolaires et communautaires
serving approximately 4,500 students. These school community centres are a
crucial focal point for communities, particularly those with small Francophone
populations which generally have limited access to French-language services.
Numerous studies have pointed to the effectiveness of community development
strategies that have been built around the role of the school. As Angéline
Martel has noted: "The school serves as a community centre, and viewing
it in this way encourages the parents of the target population to give it their
support. It must be sustained by a feeling of belonging to the community and a
desire to contribute to it in return. Future community development strategies
must not neglect the role of the school but follow the example of the
school-community centres that have already given new life to a number of
minority communities throughout the country."3
It goes without saying that, in developing this inclusive and
community-oriented character, a school must also welcome Anglophones who have a
taste for French4. An inclusive school
environment must at the very least be extended to Anglophone parents of children
with rights by virtue of Section 23 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and
Freedoms.
Fifth, we need to significantly increase the number of young people
from minority Francophone communities who pursue post-secondary studies in their
mother tongue by consolidating and expanding Francophone post-secondary programs
and institutions; developing and expanding distance education; creating
satellite training sites in the minority language at majority-language colleges
and universities; and creating incentives to pursue post-secondary studies in
French (grants to promote mobility, etc.). Students and parents are more likely
to choose the minority school system or stay in the Francophone system if they
can pursue their post-secondary studies in French. Thus, according to a study
released by the Office of the Commissioner of Official Languages in January
1999, more parents in Sudbury have chosen to enroll their children in a
French-language school since Collège Boréal opened.
3. The Plan also means money
So what we need to do is to view education as a continuum: family literacy,
daycare, pre-school, primary and secondary school and post-secondary education.
But, to act effectively on all these fronts, we need more money. Prior to the
Action Plan, minority-language education represented the principal commitment of
the Government of Canada’s official languages program ($152.9 million in
2000-2001) and today it is the element in the Action Plan for which the largest
new investments are being made ($209 million over five years).
But the Action Plan does not just provide more money. It foresees a new way
of using that money to strengthen the partnership among the Government of
Canada, the provinces, the education sector, parents, students and communities.
In effect, the Minister of Canadian Heritage, Sheila Copps, will not only renew
the protocol and the federal-provincial-territorial agreements under the
Official Languages in Education Program at current funding levels, she will
ensure that the agreements are accompanied by action plans that will set out
objectives and desired outcomes. The Minister will also be increasing the
budgets of two related programs, for official language monitors and summer
bursaries ($35.5 million more in all by 2007-2008).
Moreover, and above all, the Action Plan creates a new fund for
minority-language education. This fund will operate on a project basis, that is
to say that, together with ministries of education, Canadian Heritage will fund
measures accompanied by clear objectives and outlining specific results.
Naturally, a project will have more of a chance to be funded if it receives
strong community support or is strongly recommended by the education and
research communities.
Given that Ms. Copps plans to wrap up the negotiations with the provinces and
territories within a reasonable period, I strongly advise you to select the
projects most important to you and promote them to Canadian Heritage and your
education ministry. Your governments want to get it right: it is important to
them to choose the best projects. To do that, they need your help.
Conclusion
Can we really manage to have eight out of ten eligible students enrolled in
Francophone schools in ten years’ time? I believe we can, despite the
challenges that I have mentioned.
My optimism is based on the great progress we have made in recent decades.
Consider that there were no French schools in one half of the provinces in 1982,
and that, even in 1990, French-language minorities managed their own schools
only in New Brunswick (and only to a limited extent in Ontario). Today, there
are 150,000 students in 674 Francophone schools, as well as a network of 19 Francophone
colleges and universities outside Quebec.
You will also understand that, as Minister of Intergovernmental Affairs, I am
delighted with the exemplary collaboration which has characterized, for over
30 years, the relationship we have with the provincial and territorial governments
in the education field with respect to minority language.
My optimism is also driven by the experience that we have acquired over the
years. We have a better understanding of what works and what does not. We are
better positioned to make optimal investments, to choose the best projects. I am
convinced we will be able to make the breakthroughs needed on the five fronts I
have identified: preschool, school proximity, quality of teaching, the unifying
and inclusive character of our schools, and access to French-language
post-secondary education.
So, help us to help you: mobilize yourselves to choose the best projects, for
your school, your community, your province, and the cause of French in Canada.
- Angéline Martel, Rights, Schools and
Communities in Minority Contexts: 1986-2002 (Ottawa: Office of the
Commissioner of Official Languages, 2001).
- Commission nationale des parents francophones,
Plan national d’appui B
la petite enfance (unpublished:
January 2002). See also: Rodrigue Landry, "Pour une pédagogie
actualisante et communautarisante en milieu minoritaire francophone," Actes
du colloque pancanadien sur la recherche en éducation
en milieu francophone minoritaire : Bilan et prospectives
(Moncton: Centre de recherche et de développement en éducation (CRDE) de
la Faculté des sciences de l'éducation de l'Université de Moncton,
November 2000).
- Martel, Rights, Schools and Communities,
section 4, sub-section "A school at the centre of the community"
(Web version). See also: Diane Gérin-Lajoie, "Les partenariats entre l’école
et la communauté en milieu francophone minoritaire," Actes du
colloque pancanadien sur la recherche en éducation
en milieu francophone minoritaire : Bilan et prospectives
(Moncton: Centre de recherche et de développement en éducation (CRDE) de
la Faculté des sciences de l'éducation de l'Université de Moncton,
November 2000).
- Société franco-manitobaine, De génération
en génération : Agrandir l’espace francophone au Manitoba
(October 2001), p.2.
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