February 1, 2001
A revised Education Act
is to be tabled in the Legislative Assembly during
its upcoming spring session. To help you understand the many issues
affecting Nunavut's school system, Nunatsiaq News is producing a special
series of articles called 'The crisis in Nunavut's schools."
The crisis in Nunavut schools
Why are teachers so
angry?
PATRICIA
DSOUZA
Diane Dennison teaches
kindergarten in the English stream at Nakasuk School in Iqaluit. Though Christmas
break has not yet ended and there are still a couple of days to go before classes
begin, Dennisons voice on the phone is weary.
One of her fellow teachers
left at the end of the term, and the school hasnt found a replacement.
When school starts, the Inuit kindergarten class wont have a teacher,
so Dennison has agreed to take the students into her classroom.
I imagine her at the front
of a roomful of rowdy tots. I ask if I can come in to observe even help.
But Dennison is reluctant. She doesnt have time, she says. And its
not just time she lacks: "I dont think I can seat all the kids."
Theres a crisis in
Nunavut schools, and its hurting Inuit children. In addition to growing
class sizes, the Inuktitut curriculum is incomplete and programs are not standardized
throughout communities students in the same grade in different hamlets
are at different levels, which makes transferring to a new school in a different
community almost impossible.
The drop-out rate is soaring,
attendance levels are suffering and growing numbers of children affected by
fetal-alcohol syndrome are finding little help available.
Many students in the territory
are taught Inuktitut from kindergarten to Grade 3, then thrown into the English
stream with little or no knowledge of English. In my discussions with teachers
in Iqaluit, the word "illiteracy" dropped from their mouths like a
lead ball.
"Theyre put
into a situation where they cannot be automatic winners because they dont
have the language skills," said one teacher who asked not to be identified.
"Its an impossible task and at the end of the day, I think, Am
I really serving any of them? "
A numbers game
Overcrowding isnt
a new issue, says Lou Budgell, president of the Nunavut Federation of Teachers.
"Overcrowded classrooms didnt come with April 1, 1999."
But the numbers paint a
clear picture, he explains. Budgell pulls out a large binder at the federations
office in Iqaluit and opens it to a page listing ratios of students to teachers
throughout the territory.
Its a sliding ratio,
he says, using the example of two Nunavut schools with student populations of
214. The K-9 school has 10 teachers, giving it a ratio of 21.4 students to each
teacher. The 10-12 school has 11.5 teachers, which gives it a slightly better
figure of 18.6 students to every teacher.
The numbers show a need
for more teachers in the lower grades. But the revised Education Act drafted
by the department of education and being tabled in the legislative assembly
later this month makes no reference to student-teacher ratios.
Ratios determine the number
of teachers a school needs. "Its hard to say what else is needed
unless you know how many teachers youll have," Budgell says.
Time to grow
The story is not hopeless.
There are small miracles occurring within the system every day. With only 50
years of formal teaching, Inuit education in the region now known as Nunavut
has come a long way. But it still has a long way to go, and its absurd
to think that only three years after division, Nunavut can create an entirely
new and functioning system.
The existing curriculum
and program structure has been borrowed from the Northwest Territories. But
according to Peter Kilabuk, the territorys minister of education, it has
been the governments goal to create a Nunavut-specific system since the
territory was created. Even research papers and meeting agendas from the mid-
to late-1990s show the consistency of thought on this issue.
While a basic Inuktitut
guideline was created by Inuit educators for Inuit students, it has failed largely
because it has not been supported by teaching materials. But producing Inuktitut
teaching materials has proven to be a mammoth undertaking.
"With seven or eight
dialects and three orthographies, how do you produce materials in sufficient
quantities to allow boys and girls to become thoroughly and completely literate?"
asks Noel McDermott, an instructor with the Nunavut Teacher Education Program
at Nunavut Arctic College in Iqaluit.
McDermott asks his class
of future Inuktitut teachers if they know how many copies of the latest installment
of the Harry Potter series have been sold internationally.
The students throw out
some numbers, but none of the guesses come close. Even McDermott doesnt
know the answer for sure, he later tells me, but he cites the latest figure
hes seen: 100,000. The students are blown away, and understandably so.
He asks me if I know how
many Inuktitut books there are in print. He pauses, then shouts the answer:
220. "One would have to be a fool to imagine that 220 books will produce
literate children," he says.
"Where is the Inuktitut
Harry Potter?" he asks. "Well, were not even at Chicken Licken
yet."
Next week: Surviving the
system
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