New Brunswick

French pilot program needs 'improvement,' says minister

Four schools, Miramichi Rural School, Campobello Island Consolidated School, Riverside Consolidated School and Doaktown Elementary School, will teach some courses in French for a minimum of 15 minutes a day.

Program will be offered in 4 schools starting in September

At Fredericton's Montgomery Street Elementary School, Minister of Education and Early Childhood Development Brian Kenny, held a news conference where he talked about a French pilot program. (Kirk Pennell/CBC)

The effectiveness of a daily spurt of French instruction will be tested in a new pilot project in four anglophone schools.

But Education Minister Brian Kenny says the government already knows the program needs work.

Miramichi Rural School, Campobello Island Consolidated School, Riverside Consolidated School and Doaktown Elementary School will provide French instruction for a minimum of 15 minutes a day starting in September.

The curriculum areas that will be taught include "literacy, numeracy, art, music and culture," according to a Department of Education and Early Childhood Development press release.

At a news conference to re-announce the program, Kenny said it was only a pilot and still needs to be improved.

"We've got to improve on that, but we want to have the buy-ins from the communities to start it off and to be able to have that in place," Kenny said at Montgomery Street Elementary School in Fredericton..

Kenny said the pilot will be taught by regular teachers who have a background in French.

Neena Smith, a French immersion teacher at Montgomery Street, wouldn't comment on whether 15 minutes of instruction would be enough to give students any significant education in French.

Help elsewhere for immersion

"They're obviously just going to build on the basics of literacy and go on from there," said Smith.

"I don't feel comfortable saying how it may work."

The government also announced it has hired 15 French immersion "leads," who will work with teachers in the immersion classes.

The leads will be spread among the districts with Anglophone North getting two, Anglophone South getting three, and Anglophone West and East getting five each.

The Brian Gallant government announced the return of a Grade 1 entry point for French immersion in 2016.

Sixty-eight schools will offer the new program, with seven offering French immersion for the first time.