Low ranking highlights Nunavut's struggle with school attendance

Study puts territory behind Palestine and Malaysia for expected years of schooling

Image | School playground - Nakasuk school Iqaluit

Caption: A study ranked Nunavut behind more than 100 other jurisdictions around the world for the number of expected years spent in school. (Sima Sahar Zerehi/CBC)

Education officials in Nunavut say they are looking for solutions after a study ranked the territory below many jurisdictions in the world, when it comes to schooling.
Ottawa-based non-profit research group, the Centre for the Study of Living Standards, used data on life expectancy, income and education to compare Canadian provinces and territories to the rest of the world.
On education, Nunavut ranked near the bottom for the number of expected years spent in school, coming 107th out of 188 — and behind places such as Palestine and Malaysia.
The ranking is sobering, said Kelli Gillard, the chair of the Nunavut's coalition of district education authorities.
​"Attendance is one thing that we struggle with a great deal in Nunavut, and the coalition is working towards finding some answers," said Gillard.
"We're going to be doing some research here in the next year, talking to parents and kids about why they're struggling to graduate, why we're having these dropouts," she said.
The Nunavut Education Department is also reviewing the territory's Education Act with another round of consultations scheduled later this month.