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Department Of Education
Content Comparison of Curriculum from the West, Ontario, Quebec and the Atlantic Department Of Education June 6th, 2008 Prepared By: Mandy Banfield, Allison Gurnham, Gary Hunter, and Wes LeBlanc
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Measurement, Data Management, and Probability
Ontario is the only province that introduces the concept of “rate” with temperature change over time. Nova Scotia discusses tessellations in grade 5 and Quebec in cycle 3. Ontario does not discuss them but does mention designs with transformations in grade 7. The WNCP calls for tessllations to be done in grade 5 but this is not included in the Alberta document. Only Alberta uses money terms throughout measurement. This slide is for grades primary to three.
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Measurement, Data Management, and Probability
Nova Scotia, Ontario and Alberta cover The Pythagorean Theorem in grade 8. There is no mention of The Pythagorean Theorem in Quebec in grades 7-9.
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Number Sense and Patterns and Relationships
Outcomes specifically related to counting are finished in grade 5 in Alberta and Ontario, in grade 4 in Quebec, and in grade 2 in Nova Scotia. Division and multiplication are introduced in Nova Scotia, Quebec, and Ontario in grade 2 but not until grade 4 in Alberta. Much more detail as to what is to be counted in Ontario and Alberta than in Quebec and Nova Scotia.
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Number Sense and Patterns and Relationships
In Quebec students are introduced to powers, multiplication and division of fractions, and divisibility rules during grades 4-6 but not in other provinces.
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Number Sense and Patterns and Relationships
Rates and ratios are not done in Quebec and Ontario in these grades 4-6 but are done in Nova Scotia and Alberta. Finding patterns in tables and beginning to solve single step equations are not mentioned during grades 4-6 in Quebec but are in other provinces.
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Number Sense and Patterns and Relationships
Understanding irrational numbers, interrelating subsets of real numbers, and comparing and ordering real numbers are grade 7 to 9 outcomes in Nova Scotia but not in other provinces. Nova Scotia has outcomes relating to matrices in grades 7 to 9 but other provinces do not.
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Number Sense and Patterns and Relationships
Ontario derives the power of the power rule in grades 7 to 9 but other provinces do not. Polynomials, linear relation graphs, patterns from tables, and tables of values are not mentioned in the Quebec curriculum by the end of grade 9.
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Layout of Curriculum Documents
The Alberta document is divided into four strands; Number, Patterns and Relations, Shape and Space, and Statistics and Probability. The documents lists each outcome, and there is a supplementary document with examples for each outcomes.
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Layout of Curriculum Documents
The grades 1-8 curriculum in Ontario is divided into Number Sense and Numeration, Measurement, Geometry and Spatial Sense, Patterning and Algebra, and Data Management and Probability. In grade 9 it is divided into Number Sense and Algebra, Linear Relations, Analytic Geometry, and Measurement and Geometry.
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Layout of Curriculum Documents
The Ontario outcomes often include teaching strategies and examples directly in the outcomes. There is no supporting document to the outcomes.
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Layout of Curriculum Documents
The Quebec document is structured using three cycles instead of grades, cycle one is grades P-2, cycle two is 3-4, and cycle 3 is grades 5-6. The document is divided into five strands; Arithmetic, Geometry, Measurement, Statistics, and Probability. The Junior high document is not divided by strands, but focuses on three competencies.
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