Ontario students stage provincewide walkout to protest education changes - Action News
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Toronto

Ontario students stage provincewide walkout to protest education changes

Students at one downtown Toronto high school chanted "Doug Ford has got to go" as they walked out of class on Thursday, joining students at hundreds of Ontario schools who oppose changes to the province's education system.

Education minister says government won't 'be distracted from making the necessary reforms Ontario needs'

Students chanted 'Doug Ford has got to go' as they staged a walkout at Bloor Collegiate in Toronto on Thursday. Students across the province walked out of classes to demonstrate against the provincial government's changes to the education system. (Lisa Xing/CBC)

Students at one downtown Toronto high school chanted "Doug Ford has got to go" as they walked out of class on Thursday, joining students at hundreds ofOntario schools who oppose changes to the province's education system.

The walkout at Bloor Collegiate Institute was among hundreds by both elementary and high school students organized on social media, mainly Instagram, with the hashtag #StudentsSayNo.

In London, Ont., dozens of students from H.B. Beal Secondary School lined the sidewalks for a protest, before marching to city hall to continue the demonstration.

Students also marched out of Mississauga Erindale Secondary School, just west of Toronto, carrying signs, many critical ofFord.There were also walkouts in other cities, including Ottawa, Windsor, Thunder Bay and Hamilton.

At Queen's Park, OntarioPremier Doug Ford criticized the walkouts, saying the students were being used as pawns by "union bosses telling the teachers and the students what to do."

Viral social media post led to walkout

A viral post by Natalie Moore, a Grade 12 student at ListowelDistrict Secondary School in Listowel, Ont., started the movement, and itquickly snowballed as her friends around Ontario shared it in their own Instagram stories.

Moore saidshe was deeply troubled by the Progressive Conservative government's decision to increase average required class sizes in intermediate and high school gradesin the province.

"Iemailed my MPP, and when I didn't hear back from him, I really wanted to do something," Moore told CBCRadio's Metro Morning on Thursday.

"I felt like students weren't aware, or they wouldn't do the research into the cuts. They might hear about them, but I didn't know how much detail they would know."

Amina Vance, a Grade 12 student at Western Technical-Commercial School in Toronto, helped Moore organize the protest. She said bigger class sizes which school boards have warned could result in job losses for teachers, and decreases inthe kinds of courses offered at individual schoolswill be devastating, particularly for students with special needs or other challenges.

"We are astounded they would do this to us,especially to marginalized students, who are already struggling in our school system," she said on Metro Morning.

"We are showing them that students are informed, that students are angry, and that students are ready to make a difference."

You can listen to the whole interview with Moore and Vance below:

During question period at the Ontario legislature on Thursday, Ford said the walkout should have been stopped.

"Our teachers have a responsibility to the parents, to the students, to make sure they stay in the classrooms and teach the students," he continued.

"It's absolutely shameful they're using our students for a bunch of pawns," Ford added.

A student posted this image of a protest sign on Twitter. (@kayluahs/Twitter)

Schools preparing for protest

Individual schools and boards in the Toronto area sent letters home to parents saying that administrators were aware of the planned walkout and that they wouldwork to ensure student safety, while noting that the protests are not school-sanctioned events.

"As a school board, we encourage students to be well-informed about issues in our society, to think critically, and to express themselves respectfully and responsibly in articulating views they may have," wrote the Toronto District School Board, the largest in the province.

The protest action comes weeks after Ontario's Progressive Conservative government announced considerable education reforms. The changes include increased class sizes for intermediate and secondary grades, as well as new math and sex-edcurricula and mandatory e-learning modules.

The average class size requirement for Grades 9 to 12 willbe adjusted to 28, up from the current average of 22, while the average class size for Grades 4 to 8 will increase to 24.5, up slightly from 23.84.

The decision to increase some class sizes has drawn sharp criticism from some educators, as well as from unions and someparents.

Ontario Education Minister Lisa Thompson ignited controversy when she said in an interview last month that bigger classes will make students more resilient and more prepared for the workforce.

Moore saidshe believes Thompson's comments "are an excuse to cut funding and balance the budget.

"That shouldn't come at the cost of our world-class education system."

Thompson characterizedthe walkouts as "political stunts" and blamed teachers' unions for "not discouraging" them.

"On a day when we reached out to begin good-faith consultations with Ontario's teachers, we instead are seeing Ontario teachers' unions condoning a student walkout at schools across the province," she said Thursday in a statement.

"Our government will not be distracted from making the necessary reforms Ontario needs."

For her part, Vance saidlarger class sizes will mean that the students who need help the most simply won't get it.

"I see in my school every day, teachers are front-line on the mental health crisis. And teachers are dealing with those crises, student crises, every single day."