Connect with us

Education

Red Deer Catholic Board members oust fellow Trustee for sharing social media post

Published

2 minute read

News release from Red Deer Catholic Regional Schools

Trustee LaGrange Disqualified as Red Deer Catholic Regional Schools Trustee for Violating Sanctions

This (Tuesday) morning, the Red Deer Catholic Regional Schools (RDCRS) Board of Trustees made the decision to disqualify Trustee Monique LaGrange from remaining as a trustee of the Board due to LaGrange violating sanctions issued on September 26, 2023 and further violations of Board Policy and the Education Act. This decision was made following careful consideration and deliberation, with a commitment to maintaining RDCRSā€™ foundational statements of supporting inclusive learning communities that foster care and compassion for students, families and staff. As a result of the disqualification, as per Section 90 of the Education Act, LaGrange resigned from her position this morning. Effective today, Mrs. LaGrange is no longer a member of the Red Deer Catholic Regional Schools Board of Trustees.

The motion reads:

BE IT RESOLVED that further to the November 13 and 14, 2023, in camera discussions, and after having carefully considered all the points raised therein, and in accordance with Board Policy and the Education Act, Trustee LaGrange has violated sanctions issued on September 26, 2023, and had further violated Board Policy and the Education Act. As a result, Trustee LaGrange is hereby disqualified under section 87(1)(c) of the Education Act and Board Policy from remaining as a school board trustee. The Board will issue detailed reasons in support of this Board motion on or before November 24, 2023.

Board Chair Murray Hollman, issued the following statement:

“As the Chair of the RDCRS Board of Trustees, I affirm our unwavering dedication to fostering a safe, secure, caring, respectful and inclusive learning environment for our students, staff and community members. Regrettably, as a result of Trustee LaGrange’s violation of the sanctions placed on her on September 26, 2023, as well as her additional violations of Board Policy and the Education Act, the Board made the challenging decision to disqualify Trustee LaGrange.ā€

The RDCRS Board of Trustees will continue to work diligently to advance our educational objectives and maintain the trust and support of our community.

Todayville is a digital media and technology company. We profile unique stories and events in our community. Register and promote your community event for free.

Follow Author

2025 Federal Election

RCMP memo warns of Chinese interference on Canadian university campuses to affect election

Published on

From LifeSiteNews

By Anthony Murdoch

The Royal Canadian Mounted Police singled out China as the only nation of interest, noting that the ‘threat posed by the Peopleā€™s Republic and its powerful security and intelligence apparatus’ remains a ‘concern.’

An internal briefing note from Canadaā€™s top police force warned that agents of the Communist Chinese Party (CCP) are targeting Canadian universities to intimidate them and in some instances challenge them on their ā€œpolitical positions.ā€

The December 3, 2024, memo titledĀ On-Campus Foreign Interference from the Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) did not mention specific universities by name but noted that foreign interference was sophisticated and came solely from China.

The memo stated that as Canadaā€™s academic institutions rely on ā€œopen, creative and collaborative environmentsā€ to foster independent debate, some ā€œforeign intelligence services and government officials including the Peopleā€™s Republic of China can exploit this culture of openness to monitor and coerce students, faculty and other university officials.ā€

ā€œOn university campuses foreign states may seek to exert undue influence, covertly and through proxies, by harassing dissidents and suppressing academic freedoms and free speech that are not aligned with their political interests,ā€ the RCMP noted in the memo.

The memo noted that foreign agentsā€™ influence in ā€œpublic debate at academic institutionsā€ may lead to them sponsoring ā€œspecific events to shape discussion rather than engage in free debate and dialogue.ā€

ā€œThey may also directly or indirectly attempt to disrupt public events or other on-campus activities they perceive as challenging their political positions and spread disinformation, undermining confidence in academic discourse and expertise,ā€ the memo observed.

Notably, the memo singled out China, and thus the CCP, as the only nation of interest, noting that the ā€œthreat posed by the Peopleā€™s Republic and its powerful security and intelligence apparatus including malign activities targeting our democratic institutions, communities and economic prosperityā€ remains a ā€œconcern.ā€

Some of the activities that foreign agents engaged included the recruitment of CCP sympathizers and ā€œin some instances,ā€ noted the memo, saw students be ā€œpressured to participate in activities that are covertly organized by a foreign power.ā€

ā€œUniversities can also be used as venues for ā€˜talent spottingā€™ and intelligence collection in specific circumstances,ā€ the memo stated.

According to hearings from a 2021 House of Commons Special Committee on Canada-China Relations, there were numerous documented incidents of CCP intimidation.

For example, a Tibetan Canadian, Chemi Lhamo, testified she got death threats after she ran for student council president at the University of Torontoā€™s Scarborough campus.

ā€œThere were comments saying the bullet that would go through me was made in China,ā€ she said, noting that ā€œCommunity members of the allied nations who are subjected to the Chinese Communist Partyā€™s colonial violence are not alien to these tactics. We have witnessed Chinaā€™s interference and influence not just in our university campuses but also in our communities.ā€

Earlier this week, LifeSiteNewsĀ reported thatĀ Canadaā€™s Security and Intelligence Threats to Elections Task Force (SITE) confirmed the CCP government was behind an online ā€œoperationā€ on WeChat to paint Prime Minister Mark Carney in a positive light.

Canadians will head to the polls in a general election on April 28.

LifeSiteNewsĀ reportedĀ last week that the Liberal Party under Carney, has thus far seen no less than three MP candidates drop out of the election race over allegations of foreign interference.

LifeSiteNews recentlyĀ reported how the Conservative Party sounded the alarm by sharing a 2016 video of Carney saying the Communist Chinese regimeā€™s ā€œperspectiveā€ on things is ā€œone of its many strengths.ā€

AsĀ reported byĀ LifeSiteNews, a new exposĆ© by investigative journalist Sam Cooper claims there is compelling evidence that Carney and former Prime Minister Justin Trudeau are strongly influenced by an ā€œelite networkā€ of foreign actors, including those with ties to China and the World Economic Forum.

Continue Reading

Education

Our Kids Are Struggling To Read. Phonics Is The Easy Fix

Published on

From the Frontier Centre for Public Policy

By Michael Zwaagstra

One Manitoba school division is proving phonics works

If students donā€™t learn how to read in school, not much else that happens there is going to matter.

This might be a harsh way of putting it, but itā€™s the truth. Being unable to read makes it nearly impossible to function in society. Reading is foundational to everything, even mathematics.

Thatā€™s why Canadians across the country should be paying attention to whatā€™s happening in Manitobaā€™s Evergreen School Division. Located in the Interlake region, including communities like Gimli, Arborg and Winnipeg Beach, Evergreen has completelyĀ overhauledĀ its approach to reading instructionā€”and the early results are promising.

Instead of continuing with costly andĀ ineffectiveĀ methods like Reading Recovery and balanced literacy, Evergreen has adopted a structured literacy approach, putting phonics back at the centre of reading instruction.

Direct and explicit phonics instruction teaches students how to sound out the letters in words. Rather than guessing words from pictures or context, children are taught to decode the language itself. Itā€™s simple, evidence-based, and long overdue.

In just one year, Evergreen schools saw measurable gains. A research firm evaluating the program found that five per cent more kindergarten to Grade 6 students were reading at grade level than the previous year. For a single year of change, thatā€™s a significant improvement.

This should not be surprising. The science behind phonics instruction has been clear for decades. In the 1960s, Dr. Jeanne Chall, director of the Harvard Reading Laboratory, conducted extensiveĀ researchĀ into reading methods and concluded that systematic phonics instruction produces the strongest results.

Today, this evidence-based method is often referred to as the ā€œscience of readingā€ because theĀ evidenceĀ overwhelmingly supports its effectiveness. While debates continue in many areas of education, this one is largely settled. Students need to be explicitly taught how to read using phonicsā€”and the earlier, the better.

Yet Evergreen stands nearly alone. Manitobaā€™s Department of Education does not mandate phonics in its public schools. In fact, it largely avoids taking a stance on the issue at all. This silence is a disservice to studentsā€”and itā€™s a missed opportunity for genuine reform.

At the recent Manitoba School Boards Association convention, Evergreen trustees succeeded in passing an emergencyĀ motionĀ calling on the association to lobby education faculties to ensure that new teachers are trained in systematic phonics instruction. Itā€™s a critical first stepā€”and one that should be replicated in every province.

Itā€™s a travesty that the most effective reading method isnā€™t even taught in many teacher education programs. If new teachers arenā€™t trained in phonics, theyā€™ll struggle to teach their students how to readā€”and the cycle of failure will continue.

Imagine what could happen if every province implemented structured literacy from the start of Grade 1. Students would become strong readers earlier, be better equipped for all other subjects, and experience greater success throughout school. Early literacy is a foundation for lifelong learning.

Evergreen School Division deserves credit for following the evidence and prioritizing real results over educational trends. But it shouldnā€™t be alone in this.

If provinces across Canada want to raise literacy rates and give every child a fair shot at academic success, they need to follow Evergreenā€™s leadā€”and they need to do it now.

All students deserve to learn how to read.

Michael ZwaagstraĀ is a public high school teacher and a senior fellow at the Frontier Centre for Public Policy.

Continue Reading

Trending

X