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After living over 11 years in this province with school councils and governments of all stripes propping up their speeches with the usual parent platitudes, it's a real shame that parents need to chase down and impress upon a minister the importance out actually walking-the-walk when it comes to outreaching parents.
I've always felt that elected school council representatives are on par with elected trustees AND elected MPPs and should be treated as such. Additionally school councils need to see themselves as the equals in the system they are and learn to play the political games as statutory representatives.
People for Education has learned to play the political game, and very successfully I might ad. Educating parents in the province to do the same would be an effective goal.
I also believe that school council parents need to develop good relationships with their local media and get media training should they wish to grow their community profile. Often, and in case messages like the call for consultation don't get out via school newsletters or normal outreach the local media are happy to spread the word for parents.
You've pretty much nailed it Mike. When, under the NDP the idea of school councils was suggested and an Ontario Parent Council developed there was all sorts of optimism and excitement from parents who couldn't wait to take their places as working partners in the education system.
So many parents got turned off back then because the resistance to school councils was tremendous.....even from some parent groups, who have since changed their minds about how councils can move their messages and contribute to their research and advocacy. Parents who were community leaders, business owners and professionals in their own right caught on very early in the game that the system would do as little as possible to comply with even the simplest regulations.
The term "advisory" to describe school councils was actually weeded out of the definition on the advice of one Ontario Parent Council so that those parents who wished to do more and make that difference could do so. I recall hearing of wonderful councils that were welcomed into the learning partnership with open arms, nurtured and trusted to be on principal hiring committees.
Too many went the other way though, or opted out of the partnership entirely through an unwillingness by some principals and boards to see the value in what parents bring to the table.
There are some parents, who are genuinely interested in education and who could manage things better than some administrators but who continue to be relegated to fundraising or in the case of community reps. on school councils quit because there's nothing for them to contribute to.
I totally agree with you Mike about an underlying seething or discontentment with what's going on in the classroom these days....it's even coming from those brave individual teachers who dare talk to parents outside of school time who shed light on issues that concern them but which we never hear of.
All I know is that in the 16 years that I was experiencing the education system along with my kids I never needed the carrot of money (funding) to get me involved or engaged. That kind of a relationship between school and home, can't be bought. As a matter of fact, under the former NDP and Tory governments school councils then also had access to money to help them meet the needs of things like copying etc. The problem then though was that there were school and board administrations who did not tell the councils that money was available to them. I believe it was as much as $500.
It disappoints me that parents need to be bought by their own tax money to be involved, when at the same time we're closing schools and budgets are being harder and harder to balance.
The reason I became involved in advocacy work for parents both in and outside the system was not how my kids were treated or because of a serious lack in their education, but it was more about how badly the system dealt with parents who for the most part enter the system with their kids willing and able to contribute but who become apathetic at some point. That point for me came at around the Grade 5 level of both my kids.
I have no kids in the system any longer but I was interested in and employed within the public system before I had kids and am interested still.
I can say with some certainty that the education my older child received was a very different one than the one my youngest received at the same school. There's three years difference. One came out confident and prepared for post-secondary, the other....not so much.
Ok another nice day and I'm going to stop posting for a while because I think I post too often and believe it or not we're putting up Christmas lights outside today - hey better than freezing my butt off"
Thanks for allowing the discussion and this avenue to exchange viewpoints.
Hi Mary - the money that used to be available to councils was found in a board's portion of the Foundation Grant. Councils could, through their principal ask the board for money if they wished. Most boards used that money for a mass training event of some sort for the entire board. As with most things different boards handled the requests and the money differently...if at all. Too many parents on councils never knew that money was available so never asked for it.
I'm pretty sure that at of late school councils definitely have money allocated to them. That you are a council member and don't know is a concern for me. If you sift through some of the discussion here, or if someone more knowledgeable on the money available to councils could answer Mary's question?

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