With Quebec short more than 5,000 teachers, education minister hoping for 'one adult' per class - Action News
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Montreal

With Quebec short more than 5,000 teachers, education minister hoping for 'one adult' per class

Education Minister Bernard Drainville says there will be unfilled positions this year and "a lot of unqualified teachers."

Bernard Drainville says this person would ideally have a bachelor's degree, but it's not a requirement

Bernard Drainville, Coalition Avenir Qubec candidate in Lvis, awaits election results in the Capitole in Quebec City on Oct. 3, 2022.
Education Minister Bernard Drainville says there will be unfilled positions this year and "a lot of unqualified teachers." (Ivanoh Demers/Radio-Canada)

Quebec Education Minister Bernard Drainville says there will be "a lot of unqualified teachers this year" due to a severe shortage of educators across the province.

According to a survey conducted by the Fdration qubcoise des directions d'tablissement d'enseignement (FQDE), 5,000 full-time and part-time teaching positions have yet to be filled about three times as many as last year.

The number doesn't include positions in schools on the island of Montreal.

With the start of the school year fast approaching, some 1,440 special education technicians, 1,608 daycare educatorsand 912speech therapists and other types of special educators are also missing from the education system.

"Of course, there will be unfilled positions," saidDrainvilleduring a news scrum Wednesday in Quebec City.

He saidhe'shoping for at least one adultin each classroom at the start of the school year.

"The first priority is to have a legally qualified teacher in the class, that's No. 1.If we are not able to have a legally qualified teacher, then we have to acceptan unqualified teacher ... and in certain cases ... we hope to have one adult," he said.

He saidthe adult would ideally have a bachelor'sdegree, but it's not a requirement.

As of Friday,Montreal's main French school service centre, theCentre de services scolaire de Montral(CSSDM), said 500 full-time and part-time positions were vacant.

'You can't just wing being a teacher'

FQDEpresident Nicolas Prvost says the situation heading into the new school year is far from ideal for students.

"Is it normal to see people without a bachelor's degree teaching in schools? We can't accept that. Our students are entitled to optimal service by having qualified people in their classrooms,"he told Radio-Canada in an interview.

"You can't just wing beinga teacher, so this will certainly have long-term repercussions. It's a worrisome start to the school year."

Jose Scalabrini, president of theFdration des syndicats de l'enseignement (FSE-CSQ), says she'snot at all surprised by the extent of the teacher shortage.

"We've been saying for years that the teaching profession has been undervalued, and that we need to negotiate quickly and intelligently to send a positive message to teachers who want to leave the profession, but that hasn't been done. Now we've hit awall," she said.

Scalabrini, whose federation represents some 87,000 teachers in school service centres and school boards, says it's imperative that the province works to revalorize the profession to encourage thosein the system to stay in the field.

"We want to improve working conditions,and that means class composition, lessening duties and, inevitably, upping compensation, which ultimately also has an influence on all that," she said.

Scalabrini says 25 per centof young teachers leave the profession within the first five years, and, in recent years, even moreexperienced teachers have been leaving at higher rates.

She's calling on the government to "seize this opportunity" to respond to teachers' demands byentering into "real negotiations with the aim of improving their working conditions."

Drainville's office did not respond to Radio-Canada's request for comment.

In January 2022, the Quebec government said it wanted to recruit andtrain 8,000 teachers over the next five years to counter the labour shortage in education an objective it intends to achieve, in part, by calling on retirees.

The government had promised a lump sum payment of $12,000 in May to teaching staff eligible for retirement if they volunteered to remain on the job full time or return to classroom.

A survey conducted by Radio-Canada in July, however, showed that fewer than a 100 people hadaccepted the offer to date.

with files from Radio-Canada's Rania Massoud