Public attitudes towards education in Ontario 1994: Tenth OISE survey

Date

1995

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Ontario Institute for Studies in Education of the University of Toronto (OISE/UT)

Abstract

This tenth OISE/UT survey finds that a majority of the Ontario public supports increased funding for education, with a majority being willing to pay higher taxes for education. There is a growing division of opinion, however, in regard to which schools should be publicly funded. Almost two-thirds feel that the public has too little say in how schools are run, and 85 percent support setting up parent councils in neighbourhood schools. The majority of the public now deny that schools make it difficult for students from either working-class or visible minority backgrounds to succeed. High school streaming and destreaming remain a prominent issue. Assessment is a divided issue, with opinion sharply divided on whether high school students' final grades should mainly reflect teachers' assessments or the results of province-wide tests. A majority think the future of community college lies in providing more advanced professional/technical education rather than expanding their role as a bridge to universities. Participation in adult and continuing education courses has declined for the first time this year in the past decade, and the decline has been the sharpest in the youngest, least schooled, and unemployed. Computer literacy is higher among the young and better educated and is increasing quickly.

Description

The OISE/UT Survey has been conducted and published annually from 1978 to 1980, and biennially from 1980 to present. It is the only regular, publicly disseminated survey of public attitudes towards educational policy options in Canada. Its basic purpose is to enhance public self-awareness and informed participation in educational policy-making.

Keywords

Education, Public policy, Education in Ontario, Survey, Educational funding, Educational expenditures, Education taxes, Governance, School parent councils, Educational inequalities, Class bias, Ethnic bias, High school streaming, High school destreaming, Affirmative action hiring, Quality of education, Student assessment, National curriculum, Violence, Education and work, Workplace learning, Upgrading, Quotas for postsecondary programs, Professional training, Technical training, Community colleges, Adult education, Continuing education, Computer literacy, Information highway

Citation

DOI

ISSN

0-7744-0423-X

Creative Commons

Creative Commons URI

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