I think what the school boards are challenging is the element that does not allow teachers to make multiple copies for class. I think that's what they're challenging. We're not a part of that process.
What we're saying here is that it makes sense to us; it makes sense in the teaching situation to have a copy per child. So if you're going to make education part of fair dealing, then understand the reality of the classroom and extend the fair dealing provision to the act of making multiple copies per student.
I'm not talking about making multiple copies of a full text per student. That's not fair. That's free, and fair dealing doesn't mean free dealing. If you need textbooks, you pay for them. You should not copy textbooks. That's not fair dealing.
That said, if I want a page from a textbook and that's classified as fair dealing, then the act should give me the leeway to say that I can copy 20 or 30 copies for students without asking them individually to go copy it themselves, which would be probably classified as okay.