Question:
How can we as teachers effectively provide students who come from all different
kinds of backgrounds and circumstances with quality education and resources
they need to succeed outside of school?
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Thursday, 26 February 2015
Chapter 7 - Lexi Valcourt
This
chapter focused on structural and social inequalities in schooling here in
Canada. One section specifically focused on how the neighborhood, region, and
location of schools can affect the educational attainment of the students
enrolled at these schools. When students reside in areas with high
concentrations of poverty, it can “negatively impact on children’s academic achievement,
acting to keep children in cycles of poverty.” (196) I was surprised to read
that Canada has no federally funded early childhood intervention programs which
are comparable to the one in the United States, the Head Start Program. (223)
It is then, easier to see how children in low socioeconomic areas will be more
likely to be kept within that cycle of poverty. Programs like Pathways to
Education in Toronto, which operate at a provincial level, have been shown to
be effective in their interventions with at-risk youth. Pathways to Education,
which targets youth in the area known as Regent Park has been shown to be
highly effective in producing change within this improvised community. The
program reduced high school dropout rates from 56 to 12 percent and increased
the number of youth to go on to post secondary educations from 20 to 80
percent. With success like this, I am surprised we do not have nation wide
programs such as these funded at a federal level. Socioeconomic status
contributes greatly to how well a student will do in school and whether or not
they go to enroll in postsecondary education and as teachers we must work to
close the gap and provide all children with the education they deserve.
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