Synobun
Deity
- Joined
- Nov 19, 2006
- Messages
- 24,884
It isn't. Education is a provincial responsibility, and as long as the teachers put in something about Canadian history, I guess they can tick the box and call it done. It sounds to me like Synsensa had an incompetent teacher, if that's all that was offered.
More of an incompetent system, but you're right. My school was an outlier, I think. Even though I grew up an hour and a half away from Toronto, the county was highly inaccessible with a very low population. My high school, for example, serviced 8-12 towns and had less than a thousand students total. During the winter, the highway to the city would be closed a lot of the time. 90% of the people I grew up with are still there. Most people don't leave, and most of them go on to work in basic childcare or in the trades.
We didn't do algebra until grade 9. I won my school's French award by simply knowing basic grammar. English class was mostly watching movies and reading plays out loud. So on and so forth. It was not an ideal education experience.
