Class Size is not the No. 1 issue in education on the Prairies

New school trustees were elected in Alberta recently, and several of them have identified class size as a major public concern. But they and their colleagues in Manitoba and Saskatchewan […]
Published on November 8, 2013

New school trustees were elected in Alberta recently, and several of them have identified class size as a major public concern.

But they and their colleagues in Manitoba and Saskatchewan should be looking at the larger picture.

If school boards would focus on how to direct funds appropriately, the issue of class size would take care of itself.

All across the region, resources are flowing into schools that are now half-empty.

If funding followed each student directly, higher enrolments would automatically mean larger budgets, and lower enrolments would mean lower budgets.

Classrooms with 40 kids or more would not exist if schools had a budget directly tied to the number of students.

Such a funding model would also mean that parents could send their children to any type of school they wish without having to pay extra for the best possible education. 

Right now, some parents are paying private school fees as well as property taxes to support public schools that their kids don’t attend.

Rethinking the way we pay for education on the prairies is long overdue.  It is the key to providing students with quality education. 

I’m Roger Currie. Join us again next week for more thoughts on the Frontier.

For more on education, visit our website www.fcpp.org.
 

Featured News

MORE NEWS

Talk Truth – Francine Champagne

Talk Truth – Francine Champagne

In this episode of Talk Truth, Allen and Corri Hunsperger sit down with Francine Champagne, a former Manitoba school trustee whose steadfast principles led her through intense political and social adversity. Francine discusses her motivations for running for school...

Micromanaging School Boards is the Wrong Approach

Micromanaging School Boards is the Wrong Approach

Remember Bill 64? Introduced in 2021 by the former Progressive Conservative government, Bill 64 proposed to abolish locally elected school boards. The NDP led the charge against this bill. Current education minister Nello Altomare, then serving as his party’s...