Withdrawing children from the classroom May 4-8 might force the Liberal government to address concerns about the controversial curriculum that will be implemented in September, said Omar Kasmieh, co-organizer of Parents and Students on Strike.
鈥淲e want the Ministry (of Education) to know that this is not a small issue. This is a major concern,鈥 Kasmieh said. 鈥淚t is really important for the ministry to look at these concerns.鈥
The parent group, a coalition of Catholics and non-Catholics, believes the Liberals are ignoring concerns being expressed across the province and that the revised curriculum disregards the cultural diversity of schools. Kasmieh, a non-Catholic, agreed to speak for the group because other parents fear going public might cause difficult schoolyard situations for their children.
鈥淭he curriculum really overlooks the fact that Canada is a multicultural society,鈥 Kasmieh said. 鈥淭here are a lot of sensitivities (in the new curriculum) and each culture really addresses these topics from different perspectives.
鈥淲e think that implementing things in the education curriculum that blends everyone and tries to make everyone think the same way and act the same way is not the way to go. This is what is really concerning all the parents.鈥
The revised curriculum will introduce elementary school children to concepts such as oral and anal sex, homosexuality and non-traditional families at an earlier age than they are currently being taught. Kasmieh agrees these topics are relevant in modern society but objects to teaching them to young children and to the amount of classroom time that will be allocated to them.
鈥淎 lot of parents have issues around the age when this information is being introduced,鈥 he said. 鈥(Also) we feel that the school really doesn鈥檛 have the time and the assets to address these issues at an individual basis. In schools, you鈥檝e got 20, 25 kids in each class and I really don鈥檛 think teachers will have enough time to address these issues.鈥
Kasmieh, a parent of two young girls, founded the group with three other parents while discussing ways to respond to the new curriculum. Their cause is promoted on a Facebook page called Parents and Students on Strike, with the slogan 鈥淥ne Week, No School.鈥 鈥圓t The Register鱿鱼视频app press time, the page had more than 4,400 鈥渓ikes.鈥
Parents are asked to download a letter to be submitted to their child鱿鱼视频app teacher, principal and trustee that explains why the child is being taken out of school for one week. It says the sex-ed curriculum 鈥渃ontains information that we consider age inappropriate鈥 and that it does not align 鈥渨ith the principles and beliefs of our family.鈥
The letter also says that parents 鈥渆xpect the schools to support parents鈥 choice and communicate our concerns to the school board and the ministry.鈥
Representatives from the Toronto and Dufferin-Peel Catholic boards said they were unaware of any plans to withdraw students from classrooms.
鈥淲e have not received any information that this is being contemplated by our parents at our board,鈥 said Toronto Catholic鱿鱼视频app John Yan in an e-mail.
Campaign Life Coalition is showing its support by promoting the group鱿鱼视频app actions despite having no role in the organization.
鈥淚f enough parents participate this will be an effective way to send a strong message,鈥 said Jack Fonseca, a Campaign Life spokesperson.
Kasmieh said pulling kids from classrooms is a last resort and that their real hope is to motivate the government to reopen the consultation processes.
鈥淟et鱿鱼视频app be clear here, the goal is really not to pull the kids out of school,鈥 he said. 鈥淚t is really worth it for the ministry to really stop and consider this.鈥