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Long wait list for Whitehorse French immersion

The number of children on the wait list to attend early French immersion at Whitehorse Elementary School is enough to fill an entire extra class. Canadian Parents for French are hoping the Yukon government will expand the program.

23 children are on the wait list, enough for a second kindergarten class at Whitehorse Elementary

'We dont need to study it anymore. We know that we need more housing stock' says Kristina Craig, executive director of the Yukon Anti-Poverty Coalition. (Mike Rudyk/CBC)

Some Yukon parents are hoping the department of education will create more spaces for early French immersion.

The number of children on the wait list to start kindergarten atcole Whitehorse Elementary is enough to fill an entire extra classsays Kristina Craig, president of the Whitehorse chapter of Canadian Parents for French. Thegroup promotes French-second-language learning for young people.

Whitehorse Elementary School offers an early French immersion program starting in kindergarten and a late French immersion program starting in Grade 6. (Mike Rudyk/CBC)
"We know that 23 kids is actually one more kindergarten. It's not, you know,four or five it'sa whole class," she says.

Early French immersion runs from kindergarten to Grade 7 at Whitehorse Elementary and from Grades 8 to 12 at F.H. Collins Secondary School.A late Frenchimmersion program starts at Whitehorse Elementaryin Grade 6.

For the first time, alottery was used this year to determine which children can attend the program in the fall of 2015, instead of a first-come-first-serve system.

"I think that it's obvious that parents would like French-second-language learning in an early Frenchimmersion way," says Craig. "Thewait listshave shown that over time."

Craig says there were 19 students on the wait list last year and may have been await listin previous years.

Shesays Canadian Parents for French has met with the government and will meet again soon to discuss the issue.

"We know that they're working on itbecause we've met with them because this has been a concern. And we're really hoping that in the fall of 2015they'll add that class."

Staff at Whitehorse Elementary distribute bannock during a cultural day. (CBC)
Craig says there can be a lot of anxiety for parents with children on the wait list.She says most of the parents are anglophones who would like their children to study in French.