Close X
Wednesday, November 27, 2024
ADVT 
National

Alberta to pilot new social studies curriculum in the fall after facing blowback

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 29 Apr, 2024 11:58 AM
  • Alberta to pilot new social studies curriculum in the fall after facing blowback

Education Minister Demetrios Nicolaides says the draft has significantly evolved.

"Not everyone may be happy with the new curriculum, and that's understandable. Albertans are diverse, and that means we have diverse views," Nicolaides told reporters Friday.

"What I believe, though, is most important is that we take politics out of the classroom."

Nicolaides said the draft better emphasizes critical thinking, is more culturally inclusive, and shifts some topics to more appropriate age levels.

For example, students are set to learn about taxes in Grade 5 rather than in Grade 2.

Although the latest version adds First Nations, Métis and Inuit content in grades 1, 2 and 3, the government continues to resist a recommendation from the Truth and Reconciliation Commission that instruction on residential schools and treaties begin in kindergarten.

School authorities have until May 15 to decide whether they will pilot the curriculum in the fall.

Nicolaides said feedback from teachers during classroom testing could lead to minor tweaks before the curriculum becomes mandatory in all classrooms in the fall of 2025.

The Alberta Teachers' Association said teachers' recommendations are not reflected in the new draft, the content load is unrealistic, and some concepts remain developmentally inappropriate and inaccurate.

It’s calling for a time out.

“What’s the rush?" teachers association president Jason Schilling said in a statement, adding that the fall rollout could overwhelm schools that are already overcrowded and understaffed.

Schilling noted that over the past three years, elementary schools have piloted and implemented new curriculum in four subject areas across seven grades.

"The problems currently being faced by teachers having to implement a flawed math curriculum demonstrate the risk of proceeding prematurely to implement new curriculum content and design," said Schilling.

The United Conservative Party government tried three years ago to update decades-old curriculum for kindergarten to Grade 6 subjects.

It was condemned by many education experts for being age-inappropriate, not culturally inclusive, and too focused on the rote memorization of facts.

As a result, the province promised to go back to the drawing board on social studies and restart consultations.

A second social studies draft was released last month, but members of the curriculum development specialist group that gave the government feedback wrote in an open letter that their advice was "largely ignored," and the process needed yet another a restart.

Nicolaides said Friday he recently met with the group.

"Some of their commentary and some of their feedback was absolutely taken into consideration," he said.

MORE National ARTICLES

Canadian man killed providing aid in Gaza was a military veteran with a young son

Canadian man killed providing aid in Gaza was a military veteran with a young son
A Canadian man killed along with six other aid workers in the Gaza Strip on Monday is a military veteran from Quebec who leaves behind a partner and a one-year-old son. Jacob Flickinger, 33, was one of seven people in a convoy of World Central Kitchen vehicles when it was hit by an Israeli airstrike in what Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has described as a tragic mistake.

Canadian man killed providing aid in Gaza was a military veteran with a young son

Speed limiting devices to become mandatory on heavy B.C. commercial trucks

Speed limiting devices to become mandatory on heavy B.C. commercial trucks
The British Columbia Transportation Ministry says commercial trucks above a certain weight will soon be required to be fitted with technology to limit how fast they travel on provincial roadways.  The ministry says the "speed-limiter devices" will be mandatory on April 5 for commercial trucks weighing more than 11,793 kilograms and if they were built after 1994. 

Speed limiting devices to become mandatory on heavy B.C. commercial trucks

Banff bus fire strands U.K. students on ski trip; no injuries

Banff bus fire strands U.K. students on ski trip; no injuries
Two dozen youth visiting from the United Kingdom were shuttled to safety after their tour bus caught fire on a scenic highway in Banff National Park.  At about 5 p.m. yesterday, R-C-M-P in Lake Louise were called to the fire on the Icefields Parkway.  

Banff bus fire strands U.K. students on ski trip; no injuries

Solo skier dies in avalanche in eastern B.C. Rockies

Solo skier dies in avalanche in eastern B.C. Rockies
A solo skier has been found dead days after an avalanche in eastern British Columbia.  Avalanche Canada says the snow slide happened Friday on Cathedral Mountain in Yoho National Park.

Solo skier dies in avalanche in eastern B.C. Rockies

No tsunami danger to B.C. after earthquake in Taiwan, officials say

No tsunami danger to B.C. after earthquake in Taiwan, officials say
There appears to be no tsunami threat to the Pacific coastal areas of North America following a strong earthquake in Taiwan. The U.S. National Tsunami Warning Center says no tsunami is expected in B.C., Alaska, California, Oregon or Washington state.

No tsunami danger to B.C. after earthquake in Taiwan, officials say

B.C. to ban some 'personal use' evictions, stop rent increases over new children

B.C. to ban some 'personal use' evictions, stop rent increases over new children
The British Columbia government is changing rental laws to stop bad-faith evictions, protect families who have had a child and help landlords with problematic tenants.  Premier David Eby said the government is seeing more landlords invoke the "personal use" rule, which allows them or their family to move into a unit, as an excuse to evict long-term tenants paying lower rents.

B.C. to ban some 'personal use' evictions, stop rent increases over new children