People for Education Online Community

I am trying to find something written in the Education legislation or other documentation regarding a school board's "requirement" to consult with stakeholders on importation issues or impending change. The only written reference I can find is in the draft document of the Governance Review that is currently underway in the Province.

Is anyone able to point me in the right direction?

Share

Reply to This

Replies to This Discussion

Not sure how far you wish to delve into this subject matter but, respectfully allow one to submit if transparency and accountability is what you are looking for in the Education System at the Board/School level you are in for a surprise. This statement is not made to be negative, and or confrontational, it is simply a statement of fact as a former School Council Member, who resigned out of dissappointment and frustration.

By the way, the Report of the Governance Review Committee to the Minister of Education of Ontario "School Board Governance, A Focus on Achievement" dated April 2009 is availabe on the Ministry website.

As to your question, allow me to suggest some light reading as follows:
1. Education Act R.S.O. 1990, Chapter E.2 (consolidated period Jan 1, 2009 to the e-Laws currency date), PART VI, BOARDS, PART XI, SUPERVISORY OFFICERS, and PART IX, FINANCE, DIVISION D:Supervision of Board`s Financial Affairs.
2. ONTARIO REGULATION 612/00, made under the Education Act, made October 25, 2000.
3. ONTARIO REGULATION 613/00, made under the Education Act, made October 16, 2000, Amending Reg. 298 of R.R.O. (Operation of Schools-General).
4. You will also, need to obtain a copy of your respective Board`s Policies and Regulations, which should be available on the Board website.
5.Bill 123, Transparency in Public Matters Act.
5. School Councils, A guide for Members, Revised 2002, on Ministry website.
6. Report of the Legislative Review Committee, Section 257.107(1) Education Act.
7. Bill 104, Fewer School Boards Act, 1997.
8. Bill 160, Education Quality Improvement Act 1997.

However, to fully appreciate and understand the current Education System in Ontario one must start at the Royal Commission Reports as follows:
1. The Road Ahead-Report No 1., A Report on Learning Time, Class Size and Staffing, August 1997.
2. The Road Ahead-Report No 2., The Role of School Boards and Trustees, December 1997.
3. The Road Ahead-Report No 3., The Role of School Councils, November 1998.
4. The Road Ahead-Report No 4., Improving Schools Through Greater Accountability, April 2000 and finally,
5. The Road Ahead-Report No 5., Improving Student Achivement, December 2000.

Apologies, if this seems like an daunting task but, to fully appreciate the buracracy of the current centrist controlled information enviroment you will need a deflecting shield of information to manouver through the respective stakeholder walls.

Many parents and community members who desparately want to contribute to the diversity, equality, equity, transparancy, and accountability needed in the system-which goes directly to the governance issue, are quite simply too frustrated to even try. Most do not even know what "Advisory Role" means, and to many it is all about "Fundraising" being pushed by Boards.

If you have ever attended a staff meeting involving the Teachers, Vice-Principals, and Board dealing with structure and procedurial policy to be put into place the normal reaction/response is, can they make us do that! not how can we best implement this in the best interest of everyone-a very confrontational and unhealthy enviroment.

Parents and Community Members need to find a way to push away the cobwebs from the school house doors and breath some fresh air into the system, as taxpayers the system belongs to us.

And finally, the Teachers, Vice-Principals, and Principals desparatley need our help. With the pressures of Local School Based Control Management, Principals quite simply have not time for their most critical role "Leadership" which goes directly to student learning and achivement.

Reply to This

Hi Tanya,
It would be nice it school boards were required, probably in their best interest. But in asking around the office here, we could only come up with one example. Boards are required to consult on School Closings.
There is direction in the school council guidelines that principals listen to the school council and respond by letting the council know what they have or have not decided to do. Or if they have made no decision.
Does this help? Did you have a specific thing in mind?
It would be great to hear other people's experiences too!
Gay

Reply to This

Not sure about all stakeholders, but "school councils" are well covered in the "Guide for Members". On page 4.2 there is a chart which refers to the "areas requiring consultation with school councils by boards." On page 4.3 the chart lists "possible additional areas." The actual legislation in the appendix of this guide regarding boards is in 19(1), "Consultation by boards.", page 12.4. Not sure how much clout that will have though....!

Reply to This

In Ottawa we are dealing with changes being implemented through the Transportation Consortium. We were able to get proposed changes delayed a year pending additional consultation and working groups to bring about more equitable changes between the Public and Catholic Boards, and options more appropriate for those being affected.

In the process of our "campaign" to have the changes delayed we worked together with all affected Public and Catholic School Councils in the area. The Public Board (my board) has since specifically directed the consortium to consult and work with my group of school councils from the affected public schools to come up with new and better options. The Catholic Board has specifically directed the consortium NOT to consult with its school councils. This leaves the process very unbalanced. As both Boards are affected but one is refusing to participate in fixing the problem.

The parents on the Catholic School Councils are a little stunned that they have been shut out of a process that they fought to have implemented because their Board has taken this very frustrating position.

This is where this question on consultation comes from. We are looking for a springboard for the Catholic School Councils to use to change their Board's position on allowing them the opportunity to participate in the consultation process.

Thank you for your comments - they are helpful.
Tanya

Reply to This

Hi Tanya,
Looks like "busing and transportation of students" is under the "possible areas". Hope it works out.

Reply to This

I think you have to be clear on what you mean by "board"

Each board should have its own governance and operations policies dealing with process including consultations where applicable.

As an elected trustee, you'd be pretty stupid not to canvass your school community because it is to those people who a trustee is accountable. Trustees are also usually the liaison between school and home. In order to best represent their constituents trustees need to have access to and be able to consult with their community. I know of a trustee, a couple actually who make a point of meeting just with the parents of school councils...without admin. in place. They've done this so parents with concerns wouldn't be intimidated by what usually happens at regional or PIC meetings with is a top-heavy presence of board stafff compared with parents.

I see board staff perhaps not having to consult with parents or councils, but, here again aren't board admin. in place to better advise trustees, streamline things, and do the grunt work? Still it has to be shared.

What I'm hearing lately is that some trustees are afraid to move because they aren't really sure if they can even go into the schools or not anymore.

I think smart principals and a welcoming board would make sure to include parents in their consultations. Telling the parents the truth once they're there is another important point.

Reply to This

Reply to This

RSS

Video Interviews!

TVO recorded great interviews / discussions at our conference!

Watch them now, or share them at your next school council meeting!!!!

Presentations and notes from all sessions are being posted to our main website, as we receive them.

Interviews with:
Minister of Education
Annie Kidder
Charles Pascal (Early Learning)
Testing the Pros and the Cons (Panel Discussion)


Schools are closing...

More school boards across the province are exploring the option of closing schools in the face of enrolment declines and budget pressures.

172 schools are slated or recommended to close in Ontario between 2009 and 2012, and a further 163 reviews are in progress.

→ Read our 2009 School Closings Report.

→ Read the detailed inventory of schools closing in each board
.

→ Read the press release.

Latest Activity

verna ferencik is now a member of People for Education Online Community
14 hours ago
Parents often have questions about special education. Here's a place where we can ask questions, share ideas and information and help one another...
on Tuesday
Our school is small, at 281 elementary students. It is Early French Immersion, which is not uncommon in Ottawa. I believe there are enough elementary-aged children within walking distance to fill the school twice. However, with the public/catholic s…
December 21
December 21
Waheed Ali Lakho updated their profile photo
December 21
Briony before rushing to ideas I always like to take a deep breath and outline the goal and then priority for Parent Engagement/Involvement. Without that you will just try different things but perhaps achieve few results. Our PIC believes in giving…
December 21
Hi Briony, There are also some great examples of what other people have done in our Parent Engagement Manual. Hopefully you'll get lots of responses from parents here in our online community who have tried a bunch of different things. It's also i…
December 18
December 18
Cathy Maguire-Urban and Vivek joined People for Education Online Community
December 17
Help us to design a broader vision for education in the 21st century!
December 17
Hi Briony, It is always hard to know how to start from zero when it comes to parent involvement. When I went to my first high school council meeting, the staff outnumbered the parents! There were only two of us, and the other mum showed up because h…
December 17
Thank you for sharing these photos and this project with us. It is wonderful to see those beautiful children learning together in a community school. Congratulations to the organizers of this initiative. To be able to offer this opportunity to 300 s…
December 17
2 members updated their profile photos
December 17
Briony updated their profile
December 16
Briony added a discussion
I am the PIAC rep for Ward 10 of the TDSB. PIAC is trying to offer more concentrated and targeted School council and parent engagement support this year and to that end we sent out a questionnaire asking schools what the state of things are at prese…
December 16
Beth: About the article in the Globe... unfortunately links to that newspaper only work for about 7 days, and then you must pay for the articles :( It's different from the Star which allows you to view them for free as long as you have the link addr…
December 16
Anna Spiteri, Johnny and Taria joined People for Education Online Community
December 16
Great article, Deborah (Playing the Game). I skimmed through and will read it again. Thanks! Looks like some good insight and food for thought from down under......!
December 16
Your link worked - yay Deb! It looks really good - I will read it this weekend :) The next newsletter writing deadline is March 1st, which seems to work well with your research deadlines. All the best with your next steps in January!
December 16
December 15

Badge

Loading…

© 2009   Created by People for Education on Ning.   Create a Ning Network!

Badges  |  Report an Issue  |  Privacy  |  Terms of Service