Close X
Thursday, November 7, 2024
ADVT 
National

Pilot project leads to improvements in education at First Nations schools: Martin

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 24 Feb, 2015 11:53 AM

    TORONTO — Former prime minister Paul Martin says a pilot project at two First Nations elementary schools in Ontario has led to dramatic improvements in reading and writing.

    Martin says he was taken aback by the impressive results of the four-year literacy program at Walpole Island and Kettle and Stony Point First Nations.

    The results show students were well behind provincial reading and writing standards when the study began in 2009, but exceeded those standards in some cases by 2014.

    Martin says this is a positive example that other reserves around the country can emulate and hopes that the federal government will invest in similar programs.

    He says this shows there is nothing holding First Nation children back if given the proper resources and teaching.

    Since leaving politics in 2008, Martin has dedicated his time and efforts to improving education for aboriginal children in elementary and secondary schools.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Metro Vancouver Transit Officer And Former Partner Charged With Assault

    Metro Vancouver Transit Officer And Former Partner Charged With Assault
    VANCOUVER — A transit police officer and his former partner have been charged with assault after a confrontation at a SkyTrain station in Vancouver.

    Metro Vancouver Transit Officer And Former Partner Charged With Assault

    New Trucking Commissioner Tasked With Keeping Trucks Rolling At B.C. Port As Companies Protest

    New Trucking Commissioner Tasked With Keeping Trucks Rolling At B.C. Port As Companies Protest
    Andy Smith's appointment comes a week after Port Metro Vancouver announced changes to its licensing system, which shut out some companies that once hauled cargo.

    New Trucking Commissioner Tasked With Keeping Trucks Rolling At B.C. Port As Companies Protest

    Coroner Identifies Man Killed In RCMP-involved Shooting In Castlegar, B.C.

    Coroner Identifies Man Killed In RCMP-involved Shooting In Castlegar, B.C.
    Thirty-nine-year-old Waylon Edey of Yahk was killed following an encounter with RCMP officers near a bridge on Highway 3.

    Coroner Identifies Man Killed In RCMP-involved Shooting In Castlegar, B.C.

    Quebec union boss 'Rambo', guilty of intimidation, given conditional discharge

    Quebec union boss 'Rambo', guilty of intimidation, given conditional discharge
    MONTREAL — A high-ranking Quebec union boss who was found guilty of intimidating a contractor has been granted a conditional discharge.

    Quebec union boss 'Rambo', guilty of intimidation, given conditional discharge

    Younger People More At Risk For Problem Gambling, Target Of New B.C. Action

    Younger People More At Risk For Problem Gambling, Target Of New B.C. Action
    VANCOUVER — A new study suggests problem gambling has decreased in British Columbia but that younger people are at higher risk of becoming addicted to gaming.

    Younger People More At Risk For Problem Gambling, Target Of New B.C. Action

    Prince George Man Fights Off Group Of Masked Home Invaders

    Prince George Man Fights Off Group Of Masked Home Invaders
    PRINCE GEORGE, B.C. — Mounties say they've recovered an axe from a Prince George, B.C., home after a group of people wearing masks broke in and assaulted a resident.

    Prince George Man Fights Off Group Of Masked Home Invaders