Title: Education Jurisdiction
1Education Jurisdiction
- What it Means to Communities
Presentation created by FNESC for First Nations
communities and schools.
Fall 2006
2UPDATE July 5, 2006 Landmark Jurisdiction
Agreement Signed
3- On July 5th, 2006, representatives of First
Nations and the federal and provincial
governments signed a set of framework agreements
recognizing the right of First Nations
communities to make decisions about the education
of their learners. - The celebration of this achievement was held at
Xweme'lch'stn School in North Vancouver.
4- The Jurisdiction Agreement sets out the
responsibilities of Canada, BC and FNESC and the
steps they will take so that First Nations will
be able to exercise jurisdiction over K-12
on-reserve education. - Signers
- Jim Prentice, Minister of Indian Affairs and
Northern Development - Gordon Campbell, Premier of British Columbia
- Nathan Matthew, Chief Negotiator, FNESC
- The signed agreements are available at
www.fnesc.bc.ca/jurisdiction. Click on Latest
News (on the right hand side).
5Education Jurisdiction
- What is it?
- Legal power and authority to govern and control
K-12 education on reserve - Community authority is recognized by federal and
provincial governments - It includes lawmaking powers
- This is Phase 1. Later phases could include
Early Childhood and Post-Secondary. - A First Nations choice to participate in the
jurisdiction process is completely optional
6Education JurisdictionOur Vision
- Culture
- Language
- History
- Our Values
- Our Methods
These aspects of our vision will be clearly and
positively held within our jurisdiction over
education.
7 We will have jurisdiction over all aspects of
K-12 education on reserve, including
- Curriculum
- Teacher certification, standards and competencies
- School certification and school standards
- How our schools operate
-
8Education JurisdictionWe will express our
jurisdiction by control over
- Class size
- School calendar
- Testing and assessments
- Learning philosophy
- Teaching methods
- Education goals
9Education JurisdictionEmpowers
- Our local government
- Our parents
- Our children
- Our schools
- Our Elders, community experts
10Education JurisdictionBenefits our Children
- We will have the opportunity to
- Set appropriate and relevant curriculum and
teacher standards - Use more flexible teaching methods
- Create culturally relevant learning environments
- Teach language, culture, community values
- Academically prepare students for post-secondary
education through higher standards
11Education JurisdictionFlexible and Respectful
- Community and needs based
- Learner oriented, not system oriented
- Respects culture and people
12Education JurisdictionAbove and Beyond
- High standards
- Build on provincial standards for core courses
- Create own approach to other courses, i.e.
English 12 based on Aboriginal Literature - Grant our own graduation certificates as well as
have access to the Dogwood - First Nations languages may now be recognized as
a language credit
We can succeed without having to change who we
are.
13Education JurisdictionDevelopmental
- Fits within treaty, self-government, self
determination negotiations - First step in jurisdiction later phases will
include early childhood education and
post-secondary education - Develops expertise within the community
Jurisdiction over K-12 on-reserve education will
build capacity for further areas.
14Education JurisdictionAppropriate Funding
- All students attending the First Nations school
will be funded Aboriginal and non-Aboriginal
students living on or off-reserve - One-time developmental funding establishing the
CEA, legal and financial advice, community
consultation, etc. - Funding will be available for implementation
costs such as governance, legal and insurance
costs
15Education JurisdictionWhat Changes?
- Our right to make decisions in education will be
formally recognized - Will control curriculum, school and teacher
standards - We can graduate our own children
- We have our own system of K-12 education
- Sections 114-122 of the Indian Act will no longer
apply
16Education JurisdictionHow Will it Work?
- Jurisdiction rests with Participating First
Nation (PFN) - FN passes law to set vision and guidelines for
education system - Law may also create a Community Education
Authority (CEA) - CEA operates the education system
- CEA can take many forms (single community, single
school, multiple communities, multiple schools,
etc.) - FN/CEA delegates some responsibilities to a
regional First Nations Education Authority (FNEA)
17Education JurisdictionHow Will it Work?
- First Nations Education Authority (FNEA)
- Is a legal entity but not another bureaucracy
- Is made up of representatives from each First
Nation participating in jurisdiction - Exercises areas of jurisdiction common to all
communities - Teacher Certification
- School Certification
- Curriculum and examination standards
18Education JurisdictionHow Will it Work?
- FNEA will receive administrative services from
First Nations Education Steering Committee
(FNESC) like the First Nations Schools
Association (FNSA) does - First Nations and schools will still receive
support from FNESC and FNSA - There will be training and other support for
Participating First Nations
19First Nations / Schools
20Education JurisdictionNext Steps
- The FNEA will be up and running by 2008.
- Federal and provincial enabling legislation could
be passed as early as January 2007. Canada and
First Nations can initial Canada-FN Agreements
once legislation is passed. - After initialing, the First Nation has up to
three years to develop capacity and systems, and
to ratify and sign their Agreement - When ready, First Nations ratify and sign the
Agreements.
21For more information
- Read about Jurisdiction online at
www.fnesc.ca/jurisdiction - Contact the office of the First Nations Education
Steering Committee (FNESC) toll-free at
1-877-422-3672 or email jurisdiction_at_fnesc.ca