Toronto Africentric school “within a school?”

According to the Saturday edition of the Toronto Star, Louise Brown says that the Toronto District School Board is proposing to put “Canada’s first Africentric alternative school within a school — not a free-standing building — for a wing of sprawling Sheppard Public School near the northwest corner of Sheppard Avenue West and Keele Street” in Toronto.

Scheduled to open in September 2009 for children in Grades JK to 5, area trustee James Pasternak said the new school would bolster falling enrollment at Sheppard and add a vibrant program that would NOT be separate from all the other students attending Sheppard.

There’s this misconception of two solitudes running down the halls, but that’s incorrect — these kids (in the regular school and the Africentric wing) would be together in the schoolyard, together in the playground, together in the lunchroom,” said Pasternak.


While it looks like all the criticism has had an effect on the board’s decision making and spin, there now appears to be more questions than answers. For example:

  • Is this proposal just to avoid the political fallout of closing Sheppard Public School? 
  • Why does the proposal just include the youngest of elementary aged children — from JK to Grade 5?
  • How can children who are together with the main student body most of the time be considered an “alternative school” – as opposed to a special program?
  • And last but not least, on what basis does the board believe that the children will all get along and that there will be no problems? 

Most board trustees have obviously never been on yard supervision or they wouldn’t make that judgment. The regular Sheppard kids, for example, no matter what their cultural heritage or skin colour, will know exactly who the “Africentric” kids are and will resent them — as well as vice versa. It is human nature. 

Moreover, will all the ”Africentric” children be those deemed to be “at risk” of later failing or dropping out and/or identified as special needs with learning and behavioural problems? If so, will the necessary specialized teachers and teaching assistants be available to provide the children with the individualized attention they need to make the school within a school work? Or is this all window dressing?

In my opinion, and I hope I am wrong, all the hype over an “Africentric School” was just that – hype. The Toronto public were given the impression that the black-focused school would be a high school to help cut down on failure and drop out rates. Well, as it turns out, given this proposal, it will be no such thing.

For readers who would like some background on this topic, three of my earlier posts on this topic are here, here and here

C/P at With Good Reason.

Update: The issue is not whether to implement creative solutions to keep schools open or to give parents and students choice, it is to tell the general public what is really going on. If this is an “Africentric Program” within Sheppard Public School, then fine, the trustees should simply say so. But, saying it is both a “school within a school” while being “together,” is pure spin. If it is to be a separate “school” within another “school,” the students would be apart most of the time – getting together just for special events and projects. The purpose for this post was to propose that TDSB trustees tell the public what is really going on — not reacting to previous criticisms — and not spinning what they think the public want to hear. While I don’t live in Toronto, I would imagine what parents want to hear are the facts. Then, they can make an informed decision about where they want their children to attend.

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3 Comments

  1. Ann:

    Why not allow this to happen for all potential schools that must close in the province? Offering up choice and having schools within schools isn’t a new concept. It was done in New York City to help keep schools small and manageable.

    The move to mega-schools and mega-boards(one of the things I was dead set against that the Harris gov’t did) is killing the benefits of small schools.

  2. Sandy:

    Ann — That’s absolutely true. I agree. But, that is not the issue here. Perhaps I did not make myself clear.

    It is not going to be a “school within a school” when they are in the halls together, eat together and play together. I would be willing to bet they will also have some specialty classes together, like French.

    I am thinking of Eden High School and Lakeport Secondary School. They simply share space in a building — which is fine if it keeps schools open and gives parents and students choice. They have their own sports teams although they do play together occasionally.

    But, saying this as a “school within a school” is all about semantics and not reality. In other words, it is pure spin. If the children are doing things together, fine, but call it an “Africentric program.” It will not be a separate “school.”

    The TDSB trustees agreed to this school without allocating any funds for it. Now, they are trying to get around it by saying this school within a school stuff. They had a lot of flack that an Africentric school was going to be divisive and a flash back to segregation. So now they are making these statements to try to refute those previous criticisms.

    They should just give taxpayers the facts: Is it a program or is it a separate school?

    Either way, it’s okay but just tell us like it is.

  3. Paula:

    I undertand your objection to calling this a ’school within a school’, but semantics aside, I think the model is far superior to offering truly separate alternative schools, and I think this should be the model for all alternative ’schools’,or more accurately ‘programs’. Maybe some of you see a downside to this model, but I only see positives, such as;
    - allows for ‘alt’ program students, and ‘reg’program students to interact, and (hopefully)to sample the other program’s classes
    - decrease the risk of ‘pigeon-holing’ young students into an ‘alt’ program that may limit their exposure to other interests
    -$$$$$$$$$$$- we have declining enrolment in publicly funded schools- this could help keep neighbourhood schools open, and it should be lower cost for the alt. program

    And, to maintain my status as a Broken Record, this should also be the model for publicly funded public and catholic schools to inch slowly forward