There are other reasons I love Canadian television. I've learned a lot about Canada! This is Emily Yeung is a show that is about 5-7 minutes in length that shows a 7 year old interviewing and learning about different careers and topics. We've seen her make chocolate croissants, become a blue man in the blue man group, visit Cirque du Soleil (Canadian, of course!), learn about water safety and learn about trick jump roping. How cool is it to have a confident, poised child show other children interesting things?
They also read and teach poetry. It is on a show called 4 Square, which may be local to Toronto, but we've learned some cool poems. This is also a 5-7 minute show-between-show. We've also learned that Toronto has a poet laureate. Awesome!
Bad things about Canadian children's television? A lot of Caillou. He has not moved past 4, unfortunately, and still has that annoying voice (he is also Canadian). And, Barney. Seriously, did we need to export him? NO. Past students will know my feelings about this character and his show.
One other thing: there are French stations, so while we haven't explored them yet, I do know popular kid shows, like Wonder Pets, are in French. Also pretty awesome!
Education in Canada
This could be a much longer, separate post. Briefly, a few comments:
- They have a surplus of teachers. So if I wanted to work here, I would have to apply and be interviewed by a panel of administrators to be a supply, or substitute teacher. Maybe, after a few years, a job would open up and I would be able to get it. This is even in hard to staff areas, like inner city schools. This is a generalization, and I don't have all of the facts, but generally speaking, this means that there is no D.C. situation where we are hiring 500-750 brand new teachers every year to teach the neediest kids.
- Maternity leave is one year, ladies. One year. And then you get your classroom back (or school, if you are an administrator).
- They assign in-services based on test scores. Testing is completed in grades 3, 6, and 9. If your school is in the middle, for example, you go to one set of trainings, versus another school, who may be at the bottom or top.
- Test scores are reported in a really cool way, where first they report how they students feel about their abilities (I can solve challenging math problems, for example) and the demographics from the school, and then the scores from the tests. (I linked to a school above as an example, but not our school.)
- Every child learns French, either in Francophone schools (native speakers from Quebec parents), immersion, or core French in grades 4-8.
- Catholic schools are funded in Toronto. Weird, right?
POP QUIZ
When is Canada Day?
Answer in our next post. No googling!
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