Livingstone, D.W.Hart, Doug2011-04-042011-04-0419810-7744-5035-5http://hdl.handle.net/1807/26544The OISE/UT Survey was conducted and published annually between 1978 and 1980, and biennially from 1980 to the 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.This third OISE Survey finds that the Ontario education system appears to have reached a turning point. Most evidently—in response to declining enrollments, a fiscal crisis, and even more fundamental factors such as growing drop-out and youth unemployment rates—major educational policy initiatives are now underway to reorganize a number of the main components of this system. The downward trend in the Ontario public’s overall satisfaction with education appears to have stabilized for the moment. Such stabilization does not appear to be the result of any public perception of improving quality of educational services, but may rather be a consequence of Ontarians having become more attentive to educational problems and more generally conscious of the difficulty of educators doing any better under existing resource and organizational constraints. The survey looks at: the public’s overall assessment of education, the relation of education to other public priorities, funding priorities within education, curricular goals, equal educational opportunities, school organization, schooling and work, and the politics of education.en-caEducationPublic policyEducation in OntarioSurveyRelation of education to other public prioritiesPublic perceptions of educationFunding prioritiesCurricular goalsEqual educational opportunitiesSchool organizationSchooling and workPolitics of educationPublic attitudes toward education in Ontario 1980: Third OISE surveyWorking Paper