Tories plan to make road map for public school reform
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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 14/04/2021 (1610 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.
Parents will have an opportunity to weigh in on how the province can improve local voice and engagement amid sweeping reforms to the K-12 public school system.
Education Minister Cliff Cullen announced Tuesday plans to create a road map for implementing reforms with the public’s input via regional town halls, workshops with parent advisory councils and school leaders, and new advisory groups on everything from curriculum to inclusive education.
The province is creating a parental engagement task force, which will be composed of MLAs and parents, as well as school and community leaders, to lead 15 virtual town halls and workshops.

Cullen said he also plans to undertake a “teacher listening tour.”
“A lot of the recommendations in the K-12 review were, I would say, goals. There was no road map in terms of how we achieve those goals,” Cullen said.
“This really is about engaging with Manitobans now to determine what that road map looks like.”
One month ago, the province released the final report of the K-12 commission, a list of lessons learned amid the COVID-19 pandemic, and both an action plan and the Education Modernization Act (Bill 64) to address the above two.
The education department indicated public consultations would be held from April to June to pinpoint next steps. The department has collected feedback through an online survey, met with 30 stakeholder groups, and heard from 320 people who work in the education system and are interested in participating in the engagement process.
Bill 64 proposes to replace Manitoba’s 37 English school boards with a provincial education authority made up of government appointees. The new centralized board is expected to oversee hundreds of public schools, each with its own new school community council, within 15 new regions.
Cullen has touted the new school councils, which will be composed of volunteer parents, as part of a model that will empower caregivers.
One local council executive from each of the new regions will serve on an advisory council to the minister and at least two of these representatives will be appointed to the centralized board — the only entity with real decision-making power.
On Tuesday, the minister said the task force leading the upcoming forums will submit recommendations on the roles and responsibilities of school councils, in addition to resources required to support them and address potential roadblocks to participation.
The province is also going to pilot these councils in a few schools to explore “best practices.”
“I’m happy to hear that (Cullen) will be listening to teachers,” said Nathan Martindale, vice-president of the Manitoba Teachers’ Society, about the minister’s announcement about a teacher tour. “I’m sure our members will take him up on that and certainly voice their concerns.”
The NDP education critic isn’t as optimistic the consultations will yield much change, given Bill 64 “doesn’t even reflect 10 per cent of what’s in the education review.”
“This clearly is just another dodge-and-deflect strategy that won’t result in any real changes coming from this government,” said Nello Altomare.
The province plans to publish its road map in September.
maggie.macintosh@freepress.mb.ca
Twitter: @macintoshmaggie

Maggie Macintosh
Education reporter
Maggie Macintosh reports on education for the Free Press. Originally from Hamilton, Ont., she first reported for the Free Press in 2017. Read more about Maggie.
Funding for the Free Press education reporter comes from the Government of Canada through the Local Journalism Initiative.
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