Close X
Friday, November 15, 2024
ADVT 
National

Muslim Parents Pull Children Out Of Toronto School's 'Un-islamic' Mandatory Music Class

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 09 Sep, 2016 11:35 AM
    TORONTO — The case of a Toronto father who pulled his three young children out of music class because it was against his Muslim faith has sparked a public debate, and education experts don't seem to agree on how school boards should deal with such cases.
     
    Mohammad Nouman Dasu has been engaged in a three-year fight with the Toronto District School Board over his decision to take his children home for an hour during music class, according to the Globe and Mail, which first reported about the case earlier this week.
     
    The newspaper said the TDSB tried to accommodate the family by offering a variety of solutions, including one that would see the children learn about the history of music in Islam, but the father turned them down.
     
    A TDSB spokesman declined to discuss the case with The Canadian Press on Thursday citing privacy reasons, but he said the board "always works with parents to try to find some happy medium" while at the same time still following Ministry of Education's rules.
     
    "Unfortunately we can't offer exemptions because we are required to teach the Ontario curriculum," Ryan Bird said.
     
    Lauren Bialystok, an assistant professor in ethics and education at the University of Toronto, believes the school board did the right thing by refusing to exempt the children from music class.
     
    "An exemption gives too much power to parental management of the child's education," she said. "It does a disservice to the student in question and to that student's peers and it communicates that our diversity is such that we can't live together or learn about different things together. That's a very dangerous message."
     
     
     
    John Ippolito, an associate professor in the faculty of education at York University, said he believes schools are doing a pretty good job in accommodating a whole slew of parental concerns, but the problem should never reach a standoff.
     
    "This is a disaster, this is a situation that has to be avoided at all costs," he said.
     
    The problem, Ippolito said, lies in the question "where do you draw the line?"
     
    "That's the wrong question, that's inflammatory," he said. "The kind of questions we should be asking is 'how do we move this conversation forward?'"
     
    Ippolito believes the solution to these problems, which he said pop up all the time, rests in the relationships between educators and parents. He's been researching those dynamics over the past 15 years. 
     
    "One thing I've come across in my research is this myth that some minority parents are never going to change — that's baloney, that's not true," he said.
     
    At a school in Markham, Ont., Ippolito brought ethnic minority parents, teachers and administrators together over food once a month to discuss issues as part of a research project.
     
    The parents and educators began the year sitting on opposite ends of the table, he said.
     
     
     
    "It highlighted to me that the relationship between minority parents and teachers is profoundly dysfunctional," he said.
     
    Over the year, he said, the parents and teachers got closer physically and philosophically.
     
    "In our experience, if that's sustained over a number of years things begin to change and a different culture takes shape within the school," Ippolito said.
     
    "Parents are less hesitant to go in and talk to teachers and administrators. And educators become more literate in how to deal with parents, especially cultural minorities. It's not rocket science, but it has a profound impact on student academic achievement and student socialization in the school."

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Admitted Killer Gets Bail After Seven Years Pending New Murder Trial

    Admitted Killer Gets Bail After Seven Years Pending New Murder Trial
    An aboriginal man who admitted to fatally shooting a person in the back on a street outside a child's birthday party has won bail after almost seven years in custody.

    Admitted Killer Gets Bail After Seven Years Pending New Murder Trial

    Mississauga, Ont., Doctor Charged With Defrauding OHIP, OPP Say

    Mississauga, Ont., Doctor Charged With Defrauding OHIP, OPP Say
    ORILLIA, Ont. — Provincial police say a Mississauga, Ont., doctor has been charged with fraud.

    Mississauga, Ont., Doctor Charged With Defrauding OHIP, OPP Say

    Toronto's Ryerson University Seeks Guinness World Record For Bubble Gum Blowing

    Toronto's Ryerson University Seeks Guinness World Record For Bubble Gum Blowing
    A Toronto university says its students, faculty and staff have unofficially broken the Guinness World Record for the most people blowing a chewing gum bubble simultaneously.

    Toronto's Ryerson University Seeks Guinness World Record For Bubble Gum Blowing

    B.C.'s Health Minister Terry Lake Won't Seek Re-election In May 2017

    KAMLOOPS, B.C. — British Columbia's health minister says he won't be running in the next provincial election.

    B.C.'s Health Minister Terry Lake Won't Seek Re-election In May 2017

    Central Alberta Hospital Locked Down After Man Utters Threats; Suspect Arrested

    Central Alberta Hospital Locked Down After Man Utters Threats; Suspect Arrested
    A copy of the report has also been sent to the Prime Minister's Office.

    Central Alberta Hospital Locked Down After Man Utters Threats; Suspect Arrested

    Central Alberta Hospital Locked Down After Man Utters Threats; Suspect Arrested

    Central Alberta Hospital Locked Down After Man Utters Threats; Suspect Arrested
    RED DEER, Alta. — A man is in custody after a hospital in central Alberta was locked down following threats to staff.

    Central Alberta Hospital Locked Down After Man Utters Threats; Suspect Arrested