Independent & Free Press (Georgetown, ON), 12 Dec 2013, 5 05 V1 GEO DEC12.pdf

The following text may have been generated by Optical Character Recognition, with varying degrees of accuracy. Reader beware!

•T h e IF P • H alto n H ills, Thursday, D ecem ber 12, 2013 5 GEORGETOWN GARDEN CENTRE OpenEvery Day until Xmas! 140 GUELPH ST. 905-877-8882 Happy Holidays from our family to yours! Christmas Trees • Fraser Fir • Balsam Fir • Norway Spruce • Scotch Pine Huge Selection 6 varieties including Ontario Grown! Up to 14' 4" - 10" pots Lots of colours 3for$20 Poinsettias $6. 99 ea. 6" pots 877-8990 118 Guelph St.Georgetown905877-8990 118 Guelph St.ShowRoom SYSTEMS GEORGETOWN INC. Without you it would not be possible! • FU R N A C E • FI R EP LA C E • B B Q s • A IR C O N D IT IO N IN G Business of the Month Thank you NewShowroomHours! Mon, Tues, Wed 9-6 •Thurs 9-8 • Fri 9-6 • Sat 10-3 • Tuesday, Dec 17, 5:00 - 7:00pm • Friday, Dec 20, 3:00 - 7:00pm • Monday, Dec 23, 3:00 - 7:00pm • Wednesday, Dec 18, 8:30am - Noon • Saturday, Dec 21, 8:30am - Noon • Tuesday, Dec 24, 8:30am - Noon • Thursday, Dec 19, 3:00 - 7:00pm Comprehensive Coverage Available….Comprehensive Coverage Available…. All-Risk Contractors INSURANCE Office, Contents & Buildings Liability (including completed operations) Tool, Equipment & Installation Floaters Loss or Destruction of Rental Equipment Contractor Errors & Omissions Rip & Tear Coverage Equipment Break-Down Loss of Income Commercial Auto SMALL CONTRACTOR PACKAGES Start as low as $69.53per month VISA, MASTERCARD Accepted Gary McCaslin, CAIB McCaslin Horne Insurance Brokers Inc. 348 Guelph Street, Georgetown 905-877-8738 info@mccaslinhome.com Halton's public board has selected the 24 schools in a pilot project that will see Grade 1 students learn French as a sub- ject starting next September. Two of the 24 are Halton Hills schools-- Silver Creek and George Kennedy. Students will receive 40 minutes of French instruction per week in the ini- tial phase of the program that will be re- viewed annually. Additional schools are expected to also offer French as a subject in future years. The first-year schools represent a vari- ety of programs (K-8, K-6, dual track, sin- gle-track English, large and small enrol- ments) across the four geographic areas within the Halton District School Board (HDSB) -- Oakville, Burlington, Milton and Halton Hills. Schools selected for the initial rollout consist of 12 single-track and 12 dual- track schools with both large and small enrolments. Altogether, 14 of the schools offer K- Grade 8 with 10 offering K-Grade 6. Staff initially recommended the pilot project be run in 16 schools, but trustees decided to increase it to 24 with the goal of delivering French as a core subject to all Halton public schools over the next four years. French as a subject has traditionally been taught beginning in Grade 4 in Hal- ton public schools. Starting in September, students in Grades 1-3 in the 24 schools will receive 40 minutes of French instruction each week. That increases to 120 minutes for Grade 4 students and 160 minutes in Grade 5 with students in Grades 7-8 re- ceiving 200 minutes each week. Under the plan, Grades 1-3 students will still receive the same amount of French by the time they graduate to high school, but classroom time will be spread over three additional years. Currently, students in Grades 4-8 re- ceive 200 minutes per week of French, which results in them having acquired 600 hours of French by the time they en- ter high school. Meanwhile, the board is actively seek- ing top-qualified French-speaking teach- ers, who are also well-educated in teach- ing children with diverse learning needs with Grade 1 still the entry point for French Immersion (FI) studies, in which students receive half of their language in- struction in English. "We see this as positive for whatever schools we picked," Associate Education Director Jeff Blackwell told trustees at Wednesday's school board meeting. "We know there are schools that are interest- ed, but weren't selected, but we feel we have gathered a cluster of schools that we can come back to in the spring and gather data on the impact and get feedback from the schools, the students and the parents." Principals were informed before trust- ees, Blackwell said. Oakville Trustee Ann Harvey-Hope asked for an interim report before the an- nual review. Local girl, 10, to perform at Zoo's Talent Showcase Vivian Hicks of Georgetown will be taking to the stage at the Toronto Zoo's New Year's Eve Talent Show- case. Vivian, 10, will perform two songs in the show. She landed the spot in the Showcase after receiving the sec- ond highest number of votes in an online competition featuring the five finalists for the event. Vivian's mother Alley says her daughter loves to sing and has been doing it since she was three. She's been competing since the age of 5. She said Vivian wants to say a big thank you to the community for vot- ing for her. She also wants to thank her family, friends, the newspaper, her school dance and a special thanks to Brian Bedal who told her about the contest and suggested she enter. "She is extremely excited," said Al- ley. By LISA TALLYN Staff Writer VIVIAN HICKS By BOB MITCHELL Special to the IFP Schools chosen for French pilot project

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy