+1(514) 937-9445 or Toll-free (Canada & US) +1 (888) 947-9445

Public school from elem through high school in Canada

andy

Star Member
Apr 16, 2006
68
0
Houston, Texas
Dear Viewers,

Dose any body know about public school starting from elementary through high school in Canada?
Are they free for new PR or we have to pay little money? How is the quality compare to private school?
Please share, your comments is really appreciated :)
 

PMM

VIP Member
Jun 30, 2005
25,494
1,947
Hi

andy said:
Dear Viewers,

Dose any body know about public school starting from elementary through high school in Canada?
Are they free for new PR or we have to pay little money? How is the quality compare to private school?
Please share, your comments is really appreciated :)
1. Yes they are free.
2. The Fraser Institute publish a ranking of Schools in BC. See: http://www.fraserinstitute.ca/shared/readmore.asp?sNav=pb&id=832
Private school fees can range up tp $20K per year, depending on the school and minimal amounts for some religious schools.
It is something you would have to research in your province of destination.

PMM
 

andy

Star Member
Apr 16, 2006
68
0
Houston, Texas
Hi PMM is always good to hear from you.
How about the quality of public school? It is fair, good or excellent?
I plan to move to Alberta, any ideas?
 

BCbound

Star Member
Jan 4, 2005
98
1
I would say Canadian public schools rank well in comparision to any other country. The vast majority of Canadians attend public schools.
 

BCbound

Star Member
Jan 4, 2005
98
1
Should have added two things.

1. Private schools have a lower student to teacher ratio. That's good. It means that generally students tend to score a little higher than they would in a public school, simply because the teacher can spend more time with them individually.

2. Private schools cannot make a dumb kid smart. That's life. :wink:
 

andy

Star Member
Apr 16, 2006
68
0
Houston, Texas
Hi BCbound,

I appreciate it for the info, it's very useful & informative.
Well I guess public school is enough for my kids if we move to Canada.
When the public schools starts for Fall? Is it same like US, in the middle of August? Do we need to register early or can we just show up and do the paper works by the time we arrive in Canada?
 

PMM

VIP Member
Jun 30, 2005
25,494
1,947
HI

andy said:
Hi BCbound,

I appreciate it for the info, it's very useful & informative.
Well I guess public school is enough for my kids if we move to Canada.
When the public schools starts for Fall? Is it same like US, in the middle of August? Do we need to register early or can we just show up and do the paper works by the time we arrive in Canada?
Usually starts the day after Labour day. (First Tuesday in Sept) You better determine where in Alberta that you are going, For Calgary Read this: http://www.cbe.ab.ca/Programs/prog-esl-admissions.asp Check the local school boards for each city, they all will have a web site. You can't just turn up at your local school.

PMM
 

andy

Star Member
Apr 16, 2006
68
0
Houston, Texas
Thanks for your info. I haven't decided yet where I am heading but for sure is in Alberta. Is Canadian public schools using "boundary systems" like US? For example, you can only go to the public school that is in your area, you are not allowed to put your kids to where ever school you like.
Another thing is a school bus? Is it free or we have to pay little money?
Your answer is greatly appreciated.
 

PMM

VIP Member
Jun 30, 2005
25,494
1,947
Hi

andy said:
Thanks for your info. I haven't decided yet where I am heading but for sure is in Alberta. Is Canadian public schools using "boundary systems" like US? For example, you can only go to the public school that is in your area, you are not allowed to put your kids to where ever school you like.
Another thing is a school bus? Is it free or we have to pay little money?
Your answer is greatly appreciated.
Again it is the school district that sets their own policies. For example in Vancouver you can attend any public shool that you wish BUT only after all the students in that school's catchment area have been accomodated first. Only then will they accept students from outside their catchment area. There are specialty schools where this doesn't apply.

School buses usually only run in rural areas and you have to a certain distance from the school before you can use them. Again it all depends where you decide to live.

PMM
 

KarenT

Member
May 11, 2006
11
0
Peterborough, Ontario
Having just arrived in Ontario after 2 years in Fort Worth Texas, we had little time to arrange schooling so we just turned up at the local school. No problems at all. Registered them on Friday, started Monday. You should probably check it out more than we did but we had no time

The system is comparable to the US although the curriculum is obviously a little different particularly in Social Studies. My 10 and 12 year old have taken to it well. We've only been here 5 weeks so can't comment much on quality but it looks promising and the general agreement on other similar forums is that Canadian education compares well to most other countries.

We are on work visas but schooling is free, and there were no hoops to jump through!!
 

andy

Star Member
Apr 16, 2006
68
0
Houston, Texas
KarenT said:
Having just arrived in Ontario after 2 years in Fort Worth Texas, we had little time to arrange schooling so we just turned up at the local school. No problems at all. Registered them on Friday, started Monday. You should probably check it out more than we did but we had no time

The system is comparable to the US although the curriculum is obviously a little different particularly in Social Studies. My 10 and 12 year old have taken to it well. We've only been here 5 weeks so can't comment much on quality but it looks promising and the general agreement on other similar forums is that Canadian education compares well to most other countries.

We are on work visas but schooling is free, and there were no hoops to jump through!!


Hi Karen Texans :)
Thanks for your info. It is good to have you in this forum especially you have children moved from states to Canada. Would you mind share little bit about your kid’s school? You said that they go to local school, is it public or private school? I used to have a co-worker who are Canadian and he said when his son move from Louisiana’s public school to Canada, they down grade him (placed one grade lower than he suppose to be). I am happy this is not happening to your kids, but have you ever heard rumors like this?

When you moved, were you rent U-Haul or you used special agency? Please share and I appreciate it.
 

KarenT

Member
May 11, 2006
11
0
Peterborough, Ontario
The school is a rural public school. The kids were placed in the grade for there age. In Ontario you start 1st grade in the September of the calendar year you turn 6, not the academic year as in Texas. As my kids were born in January and June this made no difference but if your kids are born in September thru December they could be placed a grade higher. However, the Principal was happy to negotiate, but I said I was happy with them going to the same grade as in the US. I haven't heard of anybody being downgraded.

We moved under a company relocation policy, but we used a company called MIGroup who coordinated the move. I think they are relatively expensive but I could not fault them in anyway. The actual move was dealt with by John Gray, a company based in Montreal I think.

Feel free to ask anything else you need.

Karen
 

andy

Star Member
Apr 16, 2006
68
0
Houston, Texas
I felt more comfortable to move to Canada regarding my kids’ school after you explained that they placed the kids according to their previous grades. Thank you very much.
How about French, do they learn it in school as a second language?
 

KarenT

Member
May 11, 2006
11
0
Peterborough, Ontario
Here in Ontario they start french in Grade 4.They have 40 minutes a day. In effect my 2 have missed 1.5 and 2.5 years of French. They seem to be picking it up quickly and the teacher isn't assigning extra work. A lot of the learning comes from fun activities and the teacher talking simple french throughout the lesson. Unlike in the UK(where I went to school) where we were taught by an English Speaking teacher, many of the French teachers are native French speakers.
I think in High School the time spent on French reduces to 20 minutes.
There are also French Immersion programs where children are taught the main subjects in French. We are considering this for our little on who is only 2. How old are yours?
This is the one thing I was concerned about, but it doesn't seem to be a problem.