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12月5日

GG agrees to suspend Parliament until January

Decision gives Tories reprieve, thwarts imminent attempt to topple government

Last Updated: Thursday, December 4, 2008 | 2:55 PM ET Comments5852Recommend1741CBC News

Prime Minister Stephen Harper arrives at Rideau Hall to speak with the Governor General in Ottawa on Thursday. (Adrian Wyld/Canadian Press)Gov. Gen. Michaëlle Jean has granted a request from Prime Minister Stephen Harper to suspend Parliament until late next month, a move that avoids a confidence vote set for Monday that could have toppled his minority government.

 

"Following my advice, the Governor General has agreed to prorogue Parliament," Harper said outside Rideau Hall after a 2½-hour meeting with Jean.

http://www.cbc.ca/canada/story/2008/12/04/harper-jean.html

'Peer effect' lowering marks of aboriginals: study

EDUCATION

Natives perform poorly when they make up a major part of school population

JOE FRIESEN

December 4, 2008

Aboriginal students tend to perform poorly in schools where they make up a large portion of the population, according to new research.

This phenomenon, known as a negative peer effect, accounts for nearly half the difference in academic performance between aboriginal and non-aboriginal students in the 366 British Columbia public schools surveyed. It's also nearly three times as influential as socioeconomic factors, according to John Richards, professor of public policy at Simon Fraser University.

"School boards should be cautious about concentrating aboriginal students in one or a few schools. In general, concentration has lowered academic outcomes across the province for aboriginal students," Prof. Richards and his co-authors, Jennifer Hove and Kemi Afolabi, write in the study, which was released yesterday by the C.D. Howe Institute.

"It's somewhat politically controversial to say it," Prof. Richards said in an interview, "but peer effects do matter."

A concentration of students from an economically disadvantaged ethnic group can create a school subculture of low academic expectations, where students develop the sense that education is meant for other people, he said. It's the kind of data that prompted calls for the busing of black students to suburban white schools in the United States, but Prof. Richards doesn't think such a radical step is necessary. To combat concentration, he said parents should be given some flexibility when it comes to choosing a school for their child, possibly by expanding school catchment areas.

Overall, the five-year study of Grade 4 and Grade 7 students in the public-school system found a significant gap in achievement between aboriginal and non-aboriginal pupils. On average, just 64 per cent of aboriginal students met or exceeded expectations on standardized tests, compared to 78 per cent of non-aboriginal students.

But there is cause for optimism, Prof. Richards said. Many school districts performed better than expected, and those boards provide an example that the rest of Canada can learn from. If all school districts performed as well as the best in B.C., two-thirds of the aboriginal education gap could be eliminated, he said.

"Some of these school districts are performing way better than you would expect based on the social conditions and the in-class dynamics," Prof. Richards said.

"Among the school districts that have done well, such as Okanagan or Kamloops, one of the features is that the aboriginal leadership is intimately interested in education. Clarence Louie [chief of the Osoyoos Indian Band] is from the Okanagan area. Nathan Matthew [chief of the North Thompson Indian Band] is from the Kamloops area. These are chiefs that have made their career in some part on the importance of education."

Senior administrators in these school districts also tend to place a high value on aboriginal education, and keep good statistics on performance.

The school districts that score poorly don't pay attention to their test results and don't try to integrate aboriginal elements into their teaching, he said.

Prof. Richards said the rest of Canada needs to overcome its profound opposition to publishing educational statistics, which are a valuable, if imperfect, tool for assessing progress.

"Everybody who's interested in aboriginal education knows this is a grim reality, with some bright spots, and we've got a real challenge here," he said. "But we need some real numbers."

http://www.theglobeandmail.com/servlet/story/LAC.20081204.NATIVES04/TPStory/National

 

CANADA: Native Rights Concerns Cloud 2010 Games

by Jon Elmer

A coalition of indigenous elders, social justice activists and community organisers is voicing opposition to the upcoming Winter Olympics, promising to continue their protests up to and throughout the 2010 games.

Taking advantage of a three-day media briefing hosted by the official Olympic body in late November, the Vancouver Organising Committee (VANOC), activists and native representatives invited the local and visiting international media to an office in the heart of the what is commonly known as Canada's poorest neighbourhood, the Downtown Eastside, to hear "the other side of the Olympic story".

http://www.pacificfreepress.com/news/1/3396-canada-rights-concerns-cloud-2010-games.html

Government of Canada Launches Two New Programs to Improve First Nation Education

PRESS RELEASE

Last update: 1:04 p.m. EST Dec. 2, 2008

OTTAWA, ONTARIO, Dec 02, 2008 (MARKET WIRE via COMTEX) -- The Honourable Chuck Strahl, Minister of Indian Affairs and Northern Development and Federal Interlocutor for MA-A?1/2tis and Non-Status Indians today announced the launch of two new programs that will help First Nation students succeed academically.

"I am pleased to announce the launch of the Education Partnerships Program and the First Nation Student Success Program," said Minister Strahl. "These two new proposal-based programs represent an important step in making long-term, collaborative improvements in First Nations education."

http://www.marketwatch.com/news/story/Government-Canada-Launches-Two-New/story.aspx?guid={29364859-688F-4F67-9B2E-9DD0550939F5}

Board commits to aboriginal principles

Prince George Free Press


By Arthur Williams - Prince George Free Press
The Prince George School District approved a statement of intent, Tuesday, setting out the board of education’s commitments to aboriginal eduction.

Creating a statement of intent on aboriginal education was one of the recommendations of the Aboriginal Education Task Force which reported to the board of education earlier this year.

http://www.bclocalnews.com/bc_north/pgfreepress/news/35197899.html