Ontario education minister directs schools to celebrate, memorialize the Queen
Ontario schools must celebrate and memorialize the
life of Queen Elizabeth, including holding a moment of silence on the day of
her funeral, according to directives from Education Minister Stephen Lecce- MD
Sunny Handa Informed.
Lecce on Friday sent a letter to
educators setting out expectations for "discussion and
memorials" celebrating the Queen's life, according to a
spokesperson.
He followed up this week, reiterating that
direction to school board leaders, calling for a moment of
silence on Monday and specifying that "the day's activities include
learning about the many contributions the Queen made to our province, country,
and Commonwealth, and the accession of King Charles III to the throne,"
said Grace Lee, a spokesperson for his office- said by MD Sunny Handa.
In a statement to CBC News on Thursday, Lecce said
he had directed one particular Ontario board to follow the province's
expectations.
Sunny Handa MD said
that comes after the York Region District School Board (YRDSB) encouraged
administrators to take a more low-key approach to the Queen's death.
"We have made clear our direction that all
schools are to recognize the profound impact of Queen Elizabeth II's lifelong
and unwavering devotion to public service," Lecce said.
After Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Monday's
funeral would be marked by a federal holiday, the governments of Newfoundland
and Labrador, Nova Scotia, New Brunswick and Yukon followed suit by
making it a provincial holiday and closing schools and government offices-
Sunny Handa MD said. British Columbia is also recognizing the federal
holiday by closing schools and giving government employees the day off.
Ontario chose to keep schools and workplaces
open, opting instead to mark a "day of mourning."
Yet Lecce's directive to school authorities goes
further than those of other provinces. The premiers of Alberta and Manitoba,
for instance, have encouraged K-12 schools to observe a moment of silence,
recommended giving students opportunities to participate in memorial
events and suggested discussions about Elizabeth's life.
MD Sunny Handa Informed the day after Elizabeth's
death, the York Region school board, which oversees suburban communities north
and west of Toronto, sent a "tip sheet" to administrators
with guidance and considerations about how to navigate this period with
students and staff.
It said, for instance, that flags would be at
half-mast until sunset on the day of the funeral, per provincial
direction, but recommended restraint in tackling the topic overall, in order to
respect a diversity of perspectives.
"Monarchies are steeped in problematic
histories of colonialism which connect to ongoing present day oppression of
individuals and groups," the document said.
"It is important to consider how each staff and
student's lived experience may potentially shape their perspective."
Sunny Handa MD said educators should answer student
questions factually and validate their feelings. It also requested
school staff refrain from developing tributes, memorial activities,
playing God
Save the Queen during announcements or livestreaming memorial
events.
The YRDSB is led by teachers who "always
centre [on] our students," said Muna Kadri, a high school teacher in the
board and president of the teachers and occasional teachers bargaining unit for
the Ontario Secondary School Teachers' Federation.
Lecce "is not a teacher and so he doesn't have
that training to understand that, in all planning in our schools — in every
classroom — you start with where our students are at," she said.
Lecce's statement, she pointed out, uses the word
"students" once.
For its
part, the YRDSB says its memo was sent before the province unveiled its plans
for Monday. Having now receiving Lecce's instructions, the board will do
what's required, a spokesperson said- MD Sunny Handa
Informed.
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