47
   

The Canada Thread

 
 
tsarstepan
 
  1  
Reply Wed 7 Jun, 2023 11:58 am
Thanks Canada. So generous.
https://imgur.com/M3sip5q.jpg
NYC cancels outdoor school activities, issues mask warning amid unhealthy air in NY, NJ
tsarstepan
 
  1  
Reply Wed 7 Jun, 2023 11:59 am
bump
0 Replies
 
Mame
 
  1  
Reply Wed 7 Jun, 2023 02:48 pm
@tsarstepan,
tsarstepan wrote:

Thanks Canada. So generous.


Two years ago we Albertans were smothered all summer from smoke from Alberta, BC, Saskatchewan, California and Oregon.

And I just saw a youtube of the Mayor of Halifax shaming people in Nova Scotia for lighting a bonfire, if you can believe that stupidity.
izzythepush
 
  1  
Reply Thu 8 Jun, 2023 12:09 am
@Mame,
These fires are a direct consequence of global warming, and we all know who the biggest climate change deniers are.

Joeblow
 
  2  
Reply Thu 8 Jun, 2023 03:34 am
@tsarstepan,
It's pretty awful here. I've never seen the like of it in these parts. You can track the smoke projections on firesmoke.ca, just use your fingers to expand the map in your area.
Mame
 
  2  
Reply Thu 8 Jun, 2023 06:32 am
@izzythepush,
It was so hot and so smoky and nobody's gardens did well. My friend's garlic crop in Eastern BC was a complete washout, with garlic bulbs the size of a loony.

In May we had over two weeks of 10+ ratings of air quality. Four is recommended.
tsarstepan
 
  1  
Reply Thu 8 Jun, 2023 08:01 am
@Mame,
Mame wrote:

with garlic bulbs the size of a loony.

Which Loony Tune are we talking about? Speedy Gonzales? Bugs Bunny? Foghorn Leghorn? Wink
0 Replies
 
tsarstepan
 
  1  
Reply Thu 8 Jun, 2023 08:05 am
@Joeblow,
Joeblow wrote:

It's pretty awful here. I've never seen the like of it in these parts. You can track the smoke projections on firesmoke.ca, just use your fingers to expand the map in your area.

Thanks for the link.

I've opened up another thread on this topic. I don't want to pollute this thread too much with this downer of a climate event.
0 Replies
 
hingehead
 
  1  
Reply Thu 8 Jun, 2023 05:57 pm
I have a work colleague whose husband is over there with the Oz firey contingent. Apparently a couple of hundred South African fireys have just arrived and were singing beautifully at the airport. Apparently the locals are asking why the Australians didn't sing Wink
margo
 
  2  
Reply Sat 10 Jun, 2023 10:17 pm
@hingehead,
hingehead wrote:

Apparently the locals are asking why the Australians didn't sing Wink


Obviously, the Australians hadn't made the connection between group singing and effective fire fighting!
izzythepush
 
  1  
Reply Sun 11 Jun, 2023 03:22 am
@margo,
I thought it was because they only knew the words to "Four and Twenty Virgins."
0 Replies
 
hingehead
 
  3  
Reply Sun 11 Jun, 2023 08:59 pm
The Toronto Recursive History Project

http://lh3.googleusercontent.com/bN1IgnYpyw6fHB6YAcQDUEmWwXMA5O8DpduMSBZP3JI9iVFnW3MunXNhNMIlG26i5MWFhs7CzI61nF0OqQ9Rz8mRke7PEQ=s1024
Mame
 
  1  
Reply Sun 11 Jun, 2023 09:22 pm
Nick Taylor made Canadian history today Smile Yay for him - a Cdn finally won the RBC Cdn Open in 69 years and he did it in the sudden-death playoff on the 4th hole with a 72' putt (notice no metric here).
0 Replies
 
tsarstepan
 
  2  
Reply Mon 12 Jun, 2023 07:45 am
@hingehead,

http://lh3.googleusercontent.com/bN1IgnYpyw6fHB6YAcQDUEmWwXMA5O8DpduMSBZP3JI9iVFnW3MunXNhNMIlG26i5MWFhs7CzI61nF0OqQ9Rz8mRke7PEQ=s1024
Plaqueception!
0 Replies
 
hightor
 
  1  
Reply Fri 23 Jun, 2023 06:37 am
Cursive writing to be reintroduced in Ontario schools this fall

https://toronto.ctvnews.ca/content/dam/cp24/en/images/2023/6/22/cursive-writing-1-6452052-1687461510904.jpeg
A student practices writing in cursive at St. Mark’s Lutheran School in Hacienda Heights, Calif., Thursday, Oct. 18, 2012. Cursive is making a comeback. Relegated in 2006 to an optional piece of learning in Ontario elementary schools, it is set to return as a mandatory part of the curriculum starting in September.

Quote:
Cursive is making a comeback.

Relegated in 2006 to an optional piece of learning in Ontario elementary schools, cursive writing is set to return as a mandatory part of the curriculum starting in September.

Education Minister Stephen Lecce said it is about more than just teaching students how to sign their own name.

"The research has been very clear that cursive writing is a critical life skill in helping young people to express more substantively, to think more critically, and ultimately, to express more authentically," he said in an interview.

"That's what we're trying to do, to create a very talented generation of young people who have mastered the fundamental skills, like reading, writing, and math, that are the foundations of any successful productive life in the country."

Ontario's new language curriculum, set to be in place for the new school year, introduces a host of changes, including a renewed focus on phonics. Many of the curriculum additions can be traced back to a report last year from the Ontario Human Rights Commission, which said the province's public education system was failing students with reading disabilities and others by not using evidence-based approaches.

"If we want to boost reading instruction, we have to embrace some of those time-tested strategies that have worked for generations," Lecce said.

"A return to phonics and, for example, cursive writing is another example where the government is leaning into the evidence and following the voice of many parents who wanted us to really embrace those practices that for generations have worked."

The curriculum reintroduces cursive writing as an expectation starting in Grade 3. That's welcome news for language education experts.

"I think it is long overdue," said Shelley Stagg Peterson, a curriculum, teaching and learning professor at the University of Toronto's Ontario Institute for Studies in Education.

"Cursive should never have been taken out of the curriculum."

There isn't a lot of research specifically on cursive writing, Peterson said, but the work that has been done shows that it not only teaches students the skill of writing that script in and of itself, but it helps to reinforce overall literacy.

"The more that young writers, beginning writers, are using their hands, they're using another modality to form the letters, that kinesthetic reproduction helps them to think more about the words that they're writing," she said.

"So it actually reinforces their reading, as well as their writing."

Hetty Roessingh, a professor emerita at the University of Calgary's Werklund School of Education, said cursive is a valuable skill.

"For note taking, for being literate, for engaging with the demands of school and civil society, your hands matter and you need to be able to write," said Roessingh, who specializes in the role of handwriting with quality writing outcomes.

"The computer will not take that over."

Handwriting with a printing style, as opposed to cursive, costs more working memory each time the pencil lifts off the page, she said.

But, she said, a key to success is ensuring there are enough supports so educators can be able to teach cursive properly.

"You even need more than just to buy the resources and have it on the curriculum," Roessingh said.

"Teachers have to understand why it's been introduced and that it's important and why it's important and really buy in, and then they need the support and the resources to do the job."

The four major teachers' unions have slammed the timing of the new language curriculum, being made available for teachers to learn for September with less than two weeks before this school year ends.

The Elementary Teachers' Federation of Ontario has said the changes are vast and is calling for a minimum two-year implementation period.

"The province's expectation that educators will be ready to teach the overhauled language curriculum beginning this September is absurd," ETFO president Karen Brown wrote in a statement.

"Their rushed rollout proves just how out of touch they are with classroom and educator realities. Curriculum documents aren't recipes. You don't simply download them and follow the instructions, using a list of prescribed ingredients. Curriculum is complex."

Lecce said the government signalled changes to the language curriculum last year, after the human rights commission report was published.

"If we work together as we have for the last year ... to embrace this change and to build that capacity, I'm absolutely confident that educators will be set up for success," he said.

toronto.ctvnews
Frank Apisa
 
  1  
Reply Fri 23 Jun, 2023 08:08 am
@hightor,
hightor wrote:


Cursive writing to be reintroduced in Ontario schools this fall

https://toronto.ctvnews.ca/content/dam/cp24/en/images/2023/6/22/cursive-writing-1-6452052-1687461510904.jpeg
A student practices writing in cursive at St. Mark’s Lutheran School in Hacienda Heights, Calif., Thursday, Oct. 18, 2012. Cursive is making a comeback. Relegated in 2006 to an optional piece of learning in Ontario elementary schools, it is set to return as a mandatory part of the curriculum starting in September.

Quote:
Cursive is making a comeback.

Relegated in 2006 to an optional piece of learning in Ontario elementary schools, cursive writing is set to return as a mandatory part of the curriculum starting in September.

Education Minister Stephen Lecce said it is about more than just teaching students how to sign their own name.

"The research has been very clear that cursive writing is a critical life skill in helping young people to express more substantively, to think more critically, and ultimately, to express more authentically," he said in an interview.

"That's what we're trying to do, to create a very talented generation of young people who have mastered the fundamental skills, like reading, writing, and math, that are the foundations of any successful productive life in the country."

Ontario's new language curriculum, set to be in place for the new school year, introduces a host of changes, including a renewed focus on phonics. Many of the curriculum additions can be traced back to a report last year from the Ontario Human Rights Commission, which said the province's public education system was failing students with reading disabilities and others by not using evidence-based approaches.

"If we want to boost reading instruction, we have to embrace some of those time-tested strategies that have worked for generations," Lecce said.

"A return to phonics and, for example, cursive writing is another example where the government is leaning into the evidence and following the voice of many parents who wanted us to really embrace those practices that for generations have worked."

The curriculum reintroduces cursive writing as an expectation starting in Grade 3. That's welcome news for language education experts.

"I think it is long overdue," said Shelley Stagg Peterson, a curriculum, teaching and learning professor at the University of Toronto's Ontario Institute for Studies in Education.

"Cursive should never have been taken out of the curriculum."

There isn't a lot of research specifically on cursive writing, Peterson said, but the work that has been done shows that it not only teaches students the skill of writing that script in and of itself, but it helps to reinforce overall literacy.

"The more that young writers, beginning writers, are using their hands, they're using another modality to form the letters, that kinesthetic reproduction helps them to think more about the words that they're writing," she said.

"So it actually reinforces their reading, as well as their writing."

Hetty Roessingh, a professor emerita at the University of Calgary's Werklund School of Education, said cursive is a valuable skill.

"For note taking, for being literate, for engaging with the demands of school and civil society, your hands matter and you need to be able to write," said Roessingh, who specializes in the role of handwriting with quality writing outcomes.

"The computer will not take that over."

Handwriting with a printing style, as opposed to cursive, costs more working memory each time the pencil lifts off the page, she said.

But, she said, a key to success is ensuring there are enough supports so educators can be able to teach cursive properly.

"You even need more than just to buy the resources and have it on the curriculum," Roessingh said.

"Teachers have to understand why it's been introduced and that it's important and why it's important and really buy in, and then they need the support and the resources to do the job."

The four major teachers' unions have slammed the timing of the new language curriculum, being made available for teachers to learn for September with less than two weeks before this school year ends.

The Elementary Teachers' Federation of Ontario has said the changes are vast and is calling for a minimum two-year implementation period.

"The province's expectation that educators will be ready to teach the overhauled language curriculum beginning this September is absurd," ETFO president Karen Brown wrote in a statement.

"Their rushed rollout proves just how out of touch they are with classroom and educator realities. Curriculum documents aren't recipes. You don't simply download them and follow the instructions, using a list of prescribed ingredients. Curriculum is complex."

Lecce said the government signalled changes to the language curriculum last year, after the human rights commission report was published.

"If we work together as we have for the last year ... to embrace this change and to build that capacity, I'm absolutely confident that educators will be set up for success," he said.

toronto.ctvnews


Good for Ontario.

I hope all school systems decide the same way. Doing away with cursive for the reasons most often mentioned is like giving up arithmetic for similar reasons.
Mame
 
  1  
Reply Fri 23 Jun, 2023 10:19 am
@Frank Apisa,
I've never agreed with or understood why they stopped teaching cursive. It's one of the stupidest decisions schools have made. Another is not teaching grammar. Or not correcting spelling and punctuation mistakes. Do they even teach spelling anymore? I remember a colleague telling me (years ago) that her son's homework was never spelling-corrected because they wanted to encourage kids to write. Wonderful, but if you can't read or understand it, what's the point? And how will they navigate higher learning? No university will accept a paper riddled with errors.
izzythepush
 
  2  
Reply Fri 23 Jun, 2023 12:32 pm
@Mame,
I disagree. Handwriting is a key factor in KS2 at primary schools.

It's not tested at KS3, secondary which is what I taught.

So many kids would come to the school with appalling handwriting which hadn't improved because they were forced to write in bloody cursive.

There was one feeder school in particular that was really bad.

Getting children to print legibly is far more important.
tsarstepan
 
  1  
Reply Fri 23 Jun, 2023 12:34 pm
@izzythepush,
izzythepush wrote:


Getting children to print legibly is far more important.

I will second this.
Frank Apisa
 
  1  
Reply Fri 23 Jun, 2023 01:28 pm
@Mame,
Mame wrote:

I've never agreed with or understood why they stopped teaching cursive. It's one of the stupidest decisions schools have made. Another is not teaching grammar. Or not correcting spelling and punctuation mistakes. Do they even teach spelling anymore? I remember a colleague telling me (years ago) that her son's homework was never spelling-corrected because they wanted to encourage kids to write. Wonderful, but if you can't read or understand it, what's the point? And how will they navigate higher learning? No university will accept a paper riddled with errors.


I agree 100%, Mame.

Not sure where this is going, but I'm not looking for more Hemmingway's here. Just want people to be able to express themselves in legible ways. The Internet is great, but the cost in writing skills is becoming prohibitive...fast going the way of being reasonably courteous.

Glad I am as old as I am.
 

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