The Durham Catholic District School Board (DCDSB) is committed to identifying and dismantling systemic discrimination and structural inequities. A key priority in achieving this was the de-streaming of Grade 9 Academic and Applied Math courses during the 2021-2022 school year to meet the needs of all students and support future education pathway options. In August 2021, a professional activity developmental session was held for Grade 9 math teachers which included the sharing of resources that had been created by the board's math team. Resources were created and posted to a website that all Grade 9 math teachers across the system could access.
Throughout the 2021-2022 school years, staff worked with our students and families to meet their needs for re-engagement and help bridge learning and social-emotional gaps due to the pandemic. Each DCDSB principal was surveyed to determine what strategies they were using to re-engage their students, parents, guardians and caregivers. Principals were invited to meet with the board's Re-engagement lead to review attendance data and brainstorm methods to re-engage. The board surveyed parents and guardians regarding the methods that best engaged them and their children in their child’s learning journey. Results of the survey were then shared with all administrators and a re-engagement plan was developed.
In 2021-2022, DCDSB continued its commitment to build learning environments that engaged students and honoured Indigenous peoples from both a historical and contemporary context. This past year, a group of Indigenous students worked with local artists to create a mural that reflects their learning and will come to life at the board's Catholic Education Centre. The board's Indigenous Education team also continued its partnership with Academic Services and Ontario Youth Apprenticeship Program (OYAP) to implemented a student project at Good Shepherd Catholic School that involved learning on and about the land. Students learned how to boil sap from maple trees in their own schoolyard, while learning about the trades and made their own birdhouses.
Students in the Grade 11 Understanding Contemporary First Nations, Métis and Inuit Voices (NBE) course reflected on their learning and were surveyed about future learning options. Their response led to the board’s decision to run the Contemporary Indigenous Issues and Perspectives in a Global Context (NDW) course in Grade 12 which is the first and only course offered in Ontario. This course began in all DCDSB secondary schools in September 2022.
In addition, DCDSB continued to work with the student and adult Indigenous Education Circles, and Indigenous families in an effort to ‘walk the path together’. The 2021-2022 school year concluded with a celebration for DCDSB's Grade 8 and Grade 12 Indigenous students and their families, recognizing their hard work and achievement.