Good morning, and thank you for inviting Canadian Parents for French to participate in the Standing Committee on Official Languages.
I have been an active advocate for French second-language education throughout my professional career, and now as CPF's sitting president I'm honoured to stand here before this distinguished panel to give a voice to the many students hoping to commence or continue French education in their post-secondary academic careers.
CPF will provide this committee with an objective, non-partisan perspective on the realm of post-secondary French second-language education in Canada. Our research initiatives of particular relevance to this brief are surveys of over 500 undergraduates who provided retrospective information about their secondary and post-secondary FSL experiences; FSL teacher shortage and guidance counsellor surveys; and an inventory of post-secondary opportunities and supports for anglophone students to study in their second official language.
CPF currently sits on a steering committee for a joint post-secondary initiative led by the Office of the Commissioner of Official Languages and the Association of Universities and Colleges of Canada.
What is the situation, from our view? Over 70% of students in Canada are enrolled in post-secondary programs, but despite the fact that young people are more supportive of linguistic duality and bilingualism than older generations, and despite the fact that they recognize the academic and employment benefits of official-language bilingualism, secondary and post-secondary French second-language programs are characterized by low enrolment and retention.
To resolve this situation, we feel it is necessary for the Government of Canada to put in place measures to increase the proportion of students who complete high school core French and French immersion programs, to increase the number of opportunities to continue studying in French at the post-secondary level.
We advance a number of notions and suggestions for enhancing recruitment and retention in high school French second-language programs. First is to ensure equitable access to core and immersion programs--and the operative word here is equitable. The increasingly multicultural Canadian population, and in particular the growing immigrant population, provide opportunities for the government to implement strategies that capitalize on the strong support for and acceptance of multilingualism that is characteristic of this population. Currently, no federal or provincial policies explicitly ensure allophone students access to French second-language education. Such gaps in policy have led to the possible exclusion of allophone students from French second-language studies and language planning.
Federal government policies and practices should ensure that English second-language graduates are expected and encouraged to enrol in French second-language programs; ensure that multiple entry points to French second-language immersion programs are established and maintained to accommodate the FSL goals of English second-language graduates without prior French experience; and revise official-language acquisition planning to include allophone students.
Extending French immersion programming to students with a wide range of academic abilities is important. High school French immersion programming is essentially delivered primarily via advanced-level courses geared to university-bound students, despite the fact that general-level students will enter service sector jobs in greater numbers. While only 13% of Canadians hold university degrees, a full 30% hold post-secondary diplomas or certificates granted by community colleges.
Students of lesser academic ability and those requiring remedial or special education supports are often counselled out of immersion programs because few school districts provide special education support services for immersion students. This is particularly unfortunate because we know that research shows us, tells us, that these students are not further handicapped in immersion programs. They do as well in immersion as they do in the English stream, and if they choose immersion, they have the added employment advantage of bilingualism.
With this backdrop, the Government of Canada, in our view, should extend immersion programming to general-level programs and courses in secondary schools; ensure that early French immersion programming, which is unique in its suitability for the widest range of student abilities, is maintained, supported, and expanded in all jurisdictions; fund longitudinal research studies to identify the types of learning disabilities, if any, that would make students poor candidates for immersion programs; and finally, ensure that education specialist support services are available to students in French immersion.
In terms of providing factual information about the benefits of bilingualism and French second-language education, in our work and in the studies that we have commissioned, we find that students and parents often lack sufficient information to make informed decisions about French second-language education. Many assume that French immersion in elementary school is enough to master the language, while others remain convinced that high school students cannot achieve the level of French proficiency required to work or to continue French second-language studies at the post-secondary level.
The federal government should, in our view, establish national comparable standards of French proficiency outcomes for graduates from various elementary and secondary French second-language programs to assist parents and students in making informed program choices and to ensure that high school graduates are aware of their French abilities; develop and fund effective promotional materials to encourage youth in Canada to turn their support for bilingualism into action; ensure that guidance counsellors and teachers are informed of post-secondary opportunities and supports; fund promotional campaigns informing students of post-secondary opportunities and emphasizing the academic and employment benefits of bilingualism at a time when, in our view, there is a great need, as there will be in the foreseeable future; and finally, fund the research and development of an inventory describing the number and nature of bilingual job opportunities in Canada to encourage greater enrolment in elementary, secondary, and post-secondary French second-language programs and to assist students, guidance counsellors, and post-secondary institutions to locate appropriate job opportunities for students entering the workforce.
In terms of enhancing enrolment and program quality by ensuring an adequate supply of qualified French second-language teachers, we know that shortages of teachers with appropriate pedagogical, French language, and discipline or subject qualifications continue to plague French second-language programs across the country. Government and post-secondary institutions should continue current promotional efforts to recruit and retain qualified French second-language teachers in order to maintain and increase the availability of high school French second-language programs, including core French, integrated French, late French immersion, early French immersion, and any of the variants.
In terms of developing and implementing a national strategy to increase the number of post-secondary institutions offering opportunities for students to study in their second official language, we offer the comments that follow.
Canada is one of the few highly industrialized countries without a national strategy for post-secondary education. Indeed, we are currently unable to determine post-secondary enrolment rates for French immersion graduates within Canada, and reports of the testing done by the international program for international student assessment, or PISA, do not distinguish immersion student outcomes from those of English and French first-language programs.
We strongly encourage the Government of Canada to act on findings and adopt recommendations from a joint post-secondary initiative by the Office of the Commissioner of Official Languages and the Association of Universities and Colleges of Canada, in order to develop and implement a strategy to provide more post-secondary opportunities for students in Canada to study in their second official language.
Such a strategy should do the following: encourage and support the development of a coalition of post-secondary institutions tasked with coordinating pan-Canadian efforts; gather French second-language educational data at the elementary, secondary, and post-secondary levels to inform national and post-secondary language planning; establish more university courses and programs taught in French beyond French language and literature courses, courses that would provide appropriate supports for anglophone students studying in their second language; encourage and assist francophone community colleges to recruit and support students studying French as their second official language; develop and implement policies to allow anglophone community colleges to offer programs taught in French; implement lifelong French second-language learning opportunities that include second-language acquisition, maintenance, and enhancement.
Language training should be available at little or no cost.
In terms of recruiting and retaining students by enhancing the relevance and appeal of French-language courses and programs for anglophone students, we suggest the provision of a wide range of courses and programs related to students' diverse fields of study, not just language and literature options. We also suggest adopting immersion pedagogical methods and building on the research that we know is associated with French second-language teaching and learning, which are associated with higher proficiency levels than the more traditional foreign-language approach. Those of us involved in French second-language teaching and learning know that the use of the “foreign” connotes a certain approach to language teaching and learning, one that might be based on grammar and translation.
We would suggest accommodating the wide range of French-language proficiency levels presented by core and immersion graduates. We would suggest the provision of academic and social supports to anglophone students studying in their second official language, as identified by a CPF survey of over 500 undergraduates that I referenced earlier.
Examples of such supports are subject-based language tutorials and organized opportunities for students to interact with native French-speaking Canadians. We would also suggest very strongly the implementation of the common European framework of reference for languages to ensure national proficiency standards and to provide marketable second-language accreditation for post-secondary graduates seeking employment.
With respect to French second-language teacher recruitment and retention, we offer the following suggestions: develop and implement pan-Canadian standards for teacher education and teacher qualifications; encourage and assist the Council of Ministers of Education to implement pan-Canadian teacher mobility agreements, similar to the one recently developed by Alberta and British Columbia; and finally, conduct promotional campaigns to encourage high school graduates to consider French second-language teaching careers.
In conclusion, by ensuring equitable access to French second-language programs for all students in Canada; by enhancing enrolment and retention in high school French second-language programs; by reassuring parents, students, and teachers of the second-language abilities of FSL graduates; and by establishing more post-secondary opportunities for French second-language graduates to study in French, the Government of Canada, in our view, will be well placed to enhance support for linguistic duality and to meet both public service and labour force demands for bilingual staff.
Thank you for affording Canadian Parents for French the opportunity to contribute to your deliberations today.
Thank you. Merci.