Manitoba education reform bill built on ‘false, divisive premises’: former administrators

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Thirty retired superintendents have signed an open letter against Bill 64, in the hopes of halting the province's sweeping reforms to K-12 education.

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Hey there, time traveller!
This article was published 02/05/2021 (1081 days ago), so information in it may no longer be current.

Thirty retired superintendents have signed an open letter against Bill 64, in the hopes of halting the province’s sweeping reforms to K-12 education.

The collective of former Manitoba educators, who have worked in all corners of the province, argues the Education Modernization Act will lead to the politicization of public education and harm the collaborative culture in and among schools.

The legislation, which the province unveiled March 15, alongside the education review and a plan to act on its recommendations, aims to replace English school boards with a centralized authority run by government appointees.

JOHN WOODS / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS
Minister of Education Cliff Cullen unveiled Bill 64, a massive overhaul of the Manitoba K-12 education system, on March 15 at the Manitoba legislature.
JOHN WOODS / WINNIPEG FREE PRESS Minister of Education Cliff Cullen unveiled Bill 64, a massive overhaul of the Manitoba K-12 education system, on March 15 at the Manitoba legislature.

The province claims the changes will boost student outcomes and amplify parent voices through new school councils.

“Bill 64 is based on false and divisive premises and promises — of quality (test scores vs. poverty); participation (individual parents vs. school boards); collegiality and professionalism (principals vs. teachers); and, efficiency (extreme centralization vs. local discretion),” states the superintendents’ letter, which was sent to provincial officials and education stakeholders.

Coralie Bryant, co-author and signatory, takes issue with plans to eliminate paid, elected trustee positions and hand off some of their current roles, such as budget planning, to volunteer parents. Many caregivers do not have time to engage with existing parent councils, let alone revamped ones with robust responsibilities, said the retired superintendent of Seven Oaks School Division.

“The current government does not have our permission to do this. They didn’t mention it in the election of 2019,” said Ken Klassen, a former superintendent in the Hanover School Division, adding he fears the new set up could see any government appoint partisan directors of education.

Among the group’s concerns: the removal of principals from the teachers union, how all students will be represented (particularly in Winnipeg, if the capital is home to only one region), and the impact child poverty continues to have on Manitoba’s lagging test scores.

In a prepared statement, Education Minister Cliff Cullen said the province has asked educational leaders to put their names forward for new task forces and advisory panels to shape the new system.

Cullen added: “We all share the same common goal and that is to ensure student success is the top priority, so we welcome their input on our engagement, task forces and advisory panels.”

maggie.macintosh@freepress.mb.ca

Twitter: @macintoshmaggie

Open Letter to Manitobans

Maggie Macintosh

Maggie Macintosh
Reporter

Maggie Macintosh reports on education for the Winnipeg Free Press. Funding for the Free Press education reporter comes from the Government of Canada through the Local Journalism Initiative.

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