Good afternoon, Mr. Chair.
Members of the committee, thank you for welcoming me once again today to talk about the minority-language education continuum.
My remarks today can be summed up in a single sentence: As long as the education continuum is not complete and access to education of equal quality, managed by and for our communities, is unavailable, the communities' vitality will remain precarious.
This education continuum is now explicitly mentioned in the Official Languages Act, but even before that progress was made, it was already clear that, until all the pieces of the puzzle—from early childhood to post-secondary education—were in place, troubling gaps would continue to emerge in primary and secondary education, even though they are protected by the charter.
Let me start at the beginning, which is early childhood.
In the first direct attack on the vitality of our communities in education, for every available space in a francophone day care centre outside Quebec, four other children remain without a space and will likely end up in an English-language day care centre. Unless their families—many of whom are exogamous, admittedly—make Herculean efforts, those four children will not start kindergarten with the same language and cultural skills as the children enrolled in francophone day care centres. So the additional burden of teaching young francophones French is being placed on the shoulders of our elementary schools, which already have a dual mandate to meet the objectives of the provincial curriculum and act as cultural carriers in a minority situation. This is an unfairly onerous task, and it is all the more difficult given that our schools are experiencing a profound shortage of qualified personnel, which will take me to the other end of the continuum in a moment.
Even though we worked hard to have the new Canada Early Learning and Child Care Act include a protection for funding dedicated to official language minority communities, it doesn't go far enough. Language clauses are absolutely necessary to ensure that the provinces invest a fair share of federal funding to serve our communities. Consultations with the communities must also be part of the negotiations of these agreements, to ensure that their priorities are taken into account. The history of funding for official language education programs has long shown us that the provinces cannot be trusted to spend the money transferred to them where it should be spent and in a way that meets the needs of the community. It would be naive, to use a euphemism, to expect them to act differently in early childhood.
Let's now move on to the fact that the education continuum is not complete in post-secondary education. This situation is obviously contributing to the staff shortage in our schools, jeopardizing the quality of education provided there. But it gets worse. Students who don't have an option to continue their post-secondary education in French near them—within a radius of about 80 kilometres, according to studies—desert French-language schools starting in seventh grade, and that phenomenon accelerates until the last years of high school in favour of majority-language schools. A 2016 study by the now-defunct Office of the French Language Services Commissioner of Ontario shows that, in some regions with a very small minority, such as southern Ontario, nearly two thirds of students enrolled in minority-language schools will have left the francophone system in favour of anglophone schools before they graduate from high school.
Why the exodus? Students—and their parents—want to make sure they have a high enough level of English to be able to attend college or university in that language. To put it more clearly, the lack of post-secondary education options in French is draining our high schools. This phenomenon is all the more alarming since we know that an individual's identity is solidified during adolescence and young adulthood. This means that we are losing these young people to English-language schools at the very time when all the identity-building work that has been done since early childhood is starting to pay off.
I recently spoke to you about the challenges specific to francophone minority post-secondary institutions and to research, so I won't dwell on that subject today, but if you have any questions, don't hesitate to ask me, of course.
In conclusion, the only hope for francophones in minority situations to survive is the completion of the education continuum. Concrete action toward that goal is long overdue. I hope my remarks have helped inform the scope of the work to be done.
Thank you, and I look forward to further discussion.