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Province announces changes to Alberta’s controversial school curriculum

Click to play video: 'Alberta to try again with contentious K-6 social studies curriculum'
Alberta to try again with contentious K-6 social studies curriculum
WATCH: The Alberta government is taking a second try at its controversial kindergarten to Grade 6 social studies curriculum. It was supposed to be introduced next fall. Now, the government is going back to the drawing board. Breanna Karstens-Smith explains why and what subjects are still changing next school year. – Dec 13, 2021

The president of the Alberta Teachers’ Association says he’s pleased with the government’s decision to delay full implementation of its proposed curriculum for kindergarten to Grade 6 after fierce opposition from some teachers and students.

But Jason Schilling says there are still many unanswered questions about the government’s decision to teach in the upcoming school year some revamped subjects — including math and physical education and wellness — while revising others.

“We’re getting to the end of this year and the new school year will come up very quickly and we can’t keep waiting,” Schilling said Monday.

“I don’t know when more information is to come. You can’t plan for education for students that way. It’s just not acceptable.”

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Education Minister Adriana LaGrange announced earlier in the day that the province will be “staggering subjects starting this fall.”

“Until now, we had plans to implement all subjects next fall, September of 2022, but we have heard loud and clear from teachers that this was simply not possible,” she said.

Click to play video: 'How is Alberta’s draft K-6 curriculum being tested?'
How is Alberta’s draft K-6 curriculum being tested?

Physical education and wellness studies will now include financial literacy, which was previously part of the draft social studies curriculum.

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Students are also to learn revised science concepts that include details on how climate change can be explained by natural and human causes, and that clean energy production has the potential to reduce greenhouse gas emissions.

“We’ve also made changes to help students develop an appreciation for dinosaurs and understand their significance in Alberta’s history,” LaGrange said.

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LaGrange said the K-6 curriculum for social studies, French immersion and francophone language arts, science and fine arts will be delayed, because feedback indicated “some Albertans feel the draft content has students learning too much, too soon and too quickly.”

The United Conservative government will seek advice from education and curriculum experts early in the new year to further revise those subjects, LaGrange said. She will provide details on the committee’s makeup at a later date, she added.

For now, the province has developed a new blueprint that shifts the order in which history will be taught in social studies courses, LaGrange said. There will be more lessons on ancient civilizations, but that material will be moved to Grade 5 from Grade 2.

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The Alberta Teachers’ Association noted in a report last fall that hundreds of teacher surveys suggested the curriculum was skewed toward Eurocentric history and referred to First Nations, Inuit and Metis only in the past tense. Teachers also said it failed to include lessons on critical thinking skills and lacked accurate Indigenous perspectives.

Schilling said delaying the new social studies curriculum is positive, but his group has “yet to have a meeting scheduled where we can sit down and talk about our concerns” with the minister.

The government had planned to pilot Grade 7 to 10 lessons in classrooms next school year, but LaGrange noted that won’t be happening until the kindergarten to Grade 6 curriculum is confirmed.

The government has said 7,800 students in 17 schools and school divisions are piloting the K-6 curriculum, but did not answer questions about which ones.

Click to play video: 'How is Alberta’s draft K-6 curriculum being tested?'
How is Alberta’s draft K-6 curriculum being tested?

Sarah Hoffman, education critic for the Opposition NDP, said the government “should not have taken this long to admit its mistake.”

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“School boards have refused to pilot the draft curriculum … and the very teachers who were consulted on the draft say that their feedback was ignored.”

“They won’t even tell us what schools are piloting the curriculum or the subjects that are being piloted.”

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