Oakville Beaver, 30 May 2012, p. 13

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

Catholic board wants input on elementary uniform code By Kim Arnott SPECIAL TO THE BEAVER Should students at Halton's Catholic elementary schools be required to wear a uniform? As the Catholic school board reviews its school uniform policy, the board recently held a public consultation meeting at St. Peter Catholic Elementary School in Milton that drew about 80 people. Parents were asked whether a board-wide uniform policy would be an improvement over the current process, which allows individual elementary schools to vote on whether or not to require uniforms. All Catholic high school students have long been required to wear uniforms. The meeting featured a highly divided crowd. While opponents suggested elementary school uniforms are expensive, unnecessary and inconvenient in a board that has undergone many boundary changes, a number of supporters tied the uniform to the board's sense of Catholicity. "If you're at a Catholic school, it makes you look like a Catholic student," said one woman. Another parent suggested uniforms make students more identifiable and raises expectations they will be better behaved, even off school property. "If you're putting your child in a faith-based school, you're looking for structure and discipline, in addition to faith," he added. Arguments like these have been underway across the region since 2010, when the board established a policy allowing elementary schools to adopt a uniform if at least 67 per cent of parents voted for one. Since then, 29 of the board's 41 elementary schools have held a vote, with only four schools adopting the uniform. However, at 14 of the voting schools, more than half the parents voted in favour of the uniform. "You made it a really high benchmark to get the uniform," noted one woman, who questioned whether the 67 per cent acceptance requirement could be reconsidered. Prior to the current policy, 75 per cent of parents had to be in agreement, noted board chair Alice Anne LeMay, who said the board wanted to ensure a "substantial majority" of parents backed any change. Across the system, parents appear to be highly divided on elementary school uniforms. When voting results from all schools are combined, just over half of parents voted in favour of a uniform, while just under half voted against. At the recent meeting, some parents suggested a board-wide uniform policy would be less divisive for school communities than voting, which one woman called "very emotional." A board-wide policy was also described as being more consistent for students as they move between schools in the system. While opinion in the room was clearly divided on the value of uniforms, most parents appeared to agree they don't like being forced to purchase uniforms from a single supplier. Board policy currently requires families to purchase embroidered uniforms from supplier R.J. McCarthy. Many parents suggested it would be cheaper to outfit students if they could purchase clothing from a range of suppliers, including department stores, and then affix appropriate crests. "It's not that I don't like McCarthy or don't want to buy from McCarthy," said one woman. "It's just the cost." While neighbouring Hamilton and Toronto Catholic boards both have elementary school uniforms, they both allow parents to purchase items from multiple suppliers, including department stores. Trustee Anthony Danko, who is heading the ad hoc board committee reviewing the uniform policy, told the Milton meeting that trustees are looking to hear from parents about the issue. "As part of this review, we want to gather more information and come to a place where we might put this question to rest one way or another." Families have an opportunity to comment on the issue until June 5. Follow the link on the front page of the board's website at www.hcdsb.org. 13 · Wednesday, May 30, 2012 OAKVILLE BEAVER · www.insideHALTON.com We can cover your existing damaged surface - no need to tear out. FREE Estimates! (905) 481 0654 Ontario Rubber Installations www.orisurfacing.com · POOL DECKS · PATIOS · PORCHES · WALKWAYS · PLAY AREAS · GARAGE FLOORS · ETC. FREE Pressure Washer! With purchase, limited quantities HalTech Regional Innovation Centre is currently offering Entrepreneur's Toolkit Workshops which are a collection of experiential, hands-on group workshops that will aid technology entrepreneurs in specific areas of business growth. In a small group setting, technology entrepreneurs work with peers and advisors to think through and design essential components of their business. The B2B Sales Process Part 1 ­The Sales Call Practice managing individual sales opportunities in order to turn leads into prospects. Deliverable: Techniques to book, prepare for, and conduct a sales call. Part 2 ­Understanding Negotiations Practice managing individual sales opportunities in order to turn prospects into closed transactions. Deliverable: Techniques to negotiate with customers and close a deal. Part 3 ­The Sales Funnel Define the stages of the sales cycle for your customers and map out your sales pipeline. Deliverable: A spreadsheet with sales-funnel data for a prospective customer. June 5 8:30 am - 1:00 pm June 12 8:30 am - 1:00 pm June 19 8:30 am - 1:00 pm Register online at http://haltech.eventbrite.ca. Workshops to be held at the Oakville Campus of Sheridan College. For more information contact 905-845-9430 ext. 2761 or email info@haltech.ca. Workshops supported by Ontario Network of Excellence (ONE). HalTech is a proud member of www.haltech.ca

Powered by / Alimenté par VITA Toolkit
Privacy Policy