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New K-6 social studies curriculum pilot begins in September

Hundreds of schools across Alberta, includingthe province's fourlargest school boards in Edmonton and Calgary, have agreed to pilot a new kindergarten to Grade 6 social studies curriculumthis school year.

429 schools join selective trial run of revamped Alberta educational program

A man with dark hair and dark facial hair wearing a dark-coloured suit, white shirt, and blue tie stands behind a podium that reads
Education Minister Demetrios Nicolaides introduces the latest draft of Alberta's new elementary social studies curriculum at Belgravia School in Edmonton on March 14, 2024. (Janet French/CBC)

Hundreds of schools across Alberta, including some inthe province's four largest public and Catholic school boards in Calgary and Edmonton, have agreed to pilot a new kindergarten to Grade 6 social studies curriculum this school year.

More than 1,700 teachers at 429 schools in Alberta are set to participate in the K-6 pilot in September,the province says.

Education Minister Demetrios Nicolaidestold CBC Newshe is happy with the numberof educators who have opted in to test parts of the new social studies educational program.

"The piloting is an incrediblyimportant part of refining the curriculum and making it ready for prime time. So having a broad sample of students and school boards from across the province will just help to ensure that it's as strong as it possibly can be,"Nicolaidessaid.

Under the pilot, teachers are able to pick and choose which grades, units, modulesand learning outcomes they want to pilot in their classrooms.While some schools are requiring fullteacher participation, others are giving educators a choice.

"Giving them that flexibility to be able to deal with certain parts of the curriculum as they see fit or are more comfortable with," he said.

NDP education critic Amanda Chapman told CBC News in a statement it's good to seesome school boards are piloting the curriculum,but there is still a ways to go in its development.

"This government hasn't really earned the trust of teachers, staffor parents when it comes to their actions on this issue. The UCP hasn't clearly explained how they'll gather feedback from teachers or what they'll do with that feedback. Until we get more concrete answers from the government, I think it's fair to remain skeptical.

The new K-6 social studies curriculum includes lessons on Indigenoustreaties, but not residential schools.Nicolaidessaid lessonson residential schools are planned for later grades. That curriculum remains to be developed.

The Truth and Reconciliation Commission's calls to action said Canadian schools should be teaching all students about treaty agreements and begin lessons on residential schools in kindergarten.

Of the62 school authorities that joined the pilot, one is First Nations.

The NDP critic said the limited Indigenous content was concerning.

"One of the biggest concerns is the lack of meaningful Indigenous content in the curriculum, especially since it doesn't reflect the TRC's calls to action in education. Sowe're not entirely confident that schools will be able to fully pilot that part of the curriculum, and that is very unfortunate," she said.

The Calgary Board of Educationtold CBC News in a statement it will pilot the newcurriculum in kindergarten through Grade 3; however, it has opted nottoparticipate in grades 4-6.

The CBE said 66 teachers have expressed interest in participating in the K-3 pilot in21 of itsschools. Thatnumber couldchange depending on teaching assignments and student enrolment.

"We chose to pilot K-3 social studies this year (2024-25) as it will be implemented next year (2025-26). Grade 4-6 is not being implemented until 2026-27," the CBE said in a statement.

The Edmonton Catholic School Division said40 teachers from 32 of its schools are participating in the pilot. AtEdmonton Public Schools, 65 teachers will take part.

The Calgary Catholic School District told CBC News it supports piloting the draft K6 social studies curriculum to ensure its teachers can share valuable feedback.

Teachers know best

Sarah Hamilton, assistant professor of education at Mount Royal University, told CBC News it's a step forward to seethe largenumber of schools that volunteered for the pilot, compared with draft curriculafrom previous years.

"Certainly we know the first time that they tried to do this, those big boards [in Calgary and Edmonton] didn't, they had said no," Hamilton said.

She added it's important for the province to focus on getting feedback from a diverse set of schools.

"It's really good to have a mix in there to be honest, I would like to hear that there was more than just one First Nations school that was part of this," Hamiltonsaid.

Hamilton emphasizes the importance of listening to teachers if they provide concerning feedback.

"Teachers know best," she said. "When they're sitting in front of their class, [they know] if thingsare going smoothly or not, if they're working or not, because they're in there every day with their studentsand nobody knows theirlearning better than them."

The point of the pilot is to collect feedback from educators and tweak things accordingly, so it's ready for the 2025-26 school year, when it will be mandatory curriculum,Nicolaidessaid.

With files from Jo Horwood and Janet French