Wednesday, July 1, 2026
ADVT 
National

Ontario Elementary Students To Get Five Hours A Week Of Math Instruction

The Canadian Press, 04 Apr, 2016 01:16 PM
    TORONTO — Students in Ontario elementary schools will soon be required to have one full hour a day of math instructions.
     
    Education Minister Liz Sandals says the province will spend $60 million to help students improve their test results in math, and some of the money will pay for professional development for teachers who specialize in the subject.
     
    The government wants each elementary school to have up to three lead teachers who have a special interest in math, so they can share their expertise with their colleagues.
     
    Each lead math teacher will be released from regular classroom duties for five days for professional development, and some of the money announced by Sandals will help pay for supply teachers to replace them.
     
    There will also be one additional professional development day on math for all teachers starting in the next school year.
     
     
    Sandals says jurisdictions that have better math scores than Ontario spend four-to-six hours a week on mathematics, so the province's new strategy will include 60-minutes a day, every day, on math.
     
    "Many Ontario schools already do devote 60 minutes a day to math, but others devote significantly less," she said. "It varies quite dramatically, and I think that's part of the issue."
     
    In standardized tests between 2009-10 to 2013-14, Ontario Grade 3 math results declined by four percentage points and Grade 6 results fell seven percentage points.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    B.C. Failing At Closing Aboriginal Education Gap: Auditor General Report

    B.C. Failing At Closing Aboriginal Education Gap: Auditor General Report
    VANCOUVER — British Columbia's auditor general says the province has failed to close the education gap for aboriginal students in public schools.

    B.C. Failing At Closing Aboriginal Education Gap: Auditor General Report

    5 Things To Know About The Controversy Over The Mandatory Long-Form Census

    5 Things To Know About The Controversy Over The Mandatory Long-Form Census
    Five things worth knowing about the tug of war over the mandatory long-form portion of Canada's census, which was cancelled in 2010 by the Conservatives and reinstated Thursday by the new Liberal government:

    5 Things To Know About The Controversy Over The Mandatory Long-Form Census

    First Job For Liberal MPs To Be Strong Voice For Constituents, PM Says

    First Job For Liberal MPs To Be Strong Voice For Constituents, PM Says
    OTTAWA — Justin Trudeau is meeting for the first time with the Liberal MPs who won election last month.

    First Job For Liberal MPs To Be Strong Voice For Constituents, PM Says

    A List Of Names Vying To Replace Stephen Harper As Interim Conservative Leader

     A list of candidates for the interim leadership of the Conservative Party:

    A List Of Names Vying To Replace Stephen Harper As Interim Conservative Leader

    Psychiatrist At Guy Turcotte Trial Says Ex-doctor Killed His Kids Out Of 'Homicidal Altruism'

    A psychiatrist testifying for the defence at Guy Turcotte's first-degree murder trial says the ex-doctor killed his kids as an act of homicidal altruism.

    Psychiatrist At Guy Turcotte Trial Says Ex-doctor Killed His Kids Out Of 'Homicidal Altruism'

    Ackman Backs Valeant Ceo After Reports Of Earlier Doubts Cause Shares To Plunge

    Ackman Backs Valeant Ceo After Reports Of Earlier Doubts Cause Shares To Plunge
    MONTREAL — Activist investor Bill Ackman says he still has faith Valeant's CEO, hours after investors apparently reacted to publication of his earlier doubts by sending the company's stock to a more than two-year low.

    Ackman Backs Valeant Ceo After Reports Of Earlier Doubts Cause Shares To Plunge