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NESBITT COMMUNITY BRIEF Présentation de la communauté Nesbitt
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WELCOME WORDS Mots de bienvenue
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Historical A community takes shape A school is born Created out of a need Expanded due to meet a demand Exists because of strong belonging
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Facilities & Location Large green area Bright and spacious 2 Gyms Cafeteria with hot meals Large library
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Facilities & location Centrally located Accessible by public transport
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Community “…Community schools are those schools who attract most of their clientele from within their distinct boundaries.” EMSB Director General Robert Stocker, EMSB Meeting, April 11 Yet, Mr. Stocker acknowledged that the EMSB does not have a definition, or a specific policy defining what constitutes a “community school.”
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Community The word "community" is derived from the Old French ‘communité’ which is derived from the Latin ‘communitas’ (cum = “with/together” + muns = ‘gift’). This is a broad term for fellowship or organized society.
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Geographic communities: Communities of location 105 students live in Rosemont 50% Nesbitt students live in its’ distinct boundary, 5-10% more than other EMSB schools but NO EMSB school can be considered a ‘community school’ based on geographic location
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Communities of culture: communities of shared beliefs, values, needs, identities At Nesbitt, we are not just ONE community, we are many COMMUNITIES: 48 different countries Some 35% of Nesbitt family members are born outside of Canada multiple cultural, linguistic, religious backgrounds integrated special needs program means a diverse student population
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Community organizations: informal and formal networks of association Extracurricular clubs and groups Volunteers L’École Sans Frontières Loisirs St. Marc Greater community of Montreal Political community
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Madame Louise Harel Chef de l'opposition officielle Ville de Montréal
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Communities of interest: Communities that claim a sense of belonging! Parents who have chosen Nesbitt have done so as the school where their children will be expressing and developing a sense of COMMUNITY
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Video Boulerice
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DECLINE IN ENROLMENT
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ENROLMENT Nesbitt's Population has been artificially propped up
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ENROLMENT
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Injecting the Nesbitt Population to other schools will not ensure sustainability Gerald McShane had its all-time high enrolment in 2007-2008 of 398 due to the injection of children from Banting. Gerald McShane was not able to maintain and its population dropped to 276 in 2010-2011. Edward Murphy also saw its population increase that same year 2007-2008, high of 313, then fell to 239 in 2010-2011.
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PROGRAMS AND ACCESS French Immersion and Billingual Programs are not the same Annexing Boudaries limits access to program of choice Transportation Policy Kindergarten students residing more than 0.6 km and elementary students residing more than 1.4 km from the school closest to their residence offering the program of their choice are eligible for busing.
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Vidéo Beaudoin
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PROGRAMS AND ACCESS The Void
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Bilingual, Bilingual and More Bilingual Schools
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Access to French Immersion, No More!
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Where Have all the English Schools Gone?
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Media 20 media report Support in both French in English Grassroots movement seeking justice The movement lives on
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Conséquences de la fermeture de Nesbitt: Désaveux de l’appui de la communauté francophone “Ghettoisation” des communautés
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Pourquoi deux présentations? Présentation du GB Présentation de la communauté Les deux travaillent pour le même objectif : Sauver Nesbitt
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Conclusion Thank you
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