CARDUS

Retooling Teacher Certification

Alberta Independent Schools’ Enrolment Soars

Exploring Alberta’s Independent School Landscape

Changes Coming to the Cardus Education Program

Community-Based Solutions Needed for Crowded Alberta Schools

Public funds for independent schools is a worthwhile investment in society

What Ontario Parents Pay for Independent Schooling

Families Can Pay as Little as $649 for Ontario Independent Schooling

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
  

April 25, 2023

OTTAWA, ON – With Ontario independent school enrollment rising 25% between 2006–07 and 2020–21 according to Statistics Canada, it’s important for media, politicians, and parents to get a better understanding of this important school sector. One persistent myth is that independent schools are all bastions of wealth and privilege. In its latest research brief, What Ontario Parents Pay for Independent Schooling, Cardus surveyed 21 independent school principals about independent schooling costs:

Of the 21 principals surveyed, 19 disclosed their financial models. We found:

“Parents, politicians, and the media need to look beyond the few ‘elite’ schools clustered in Toronto to get a truer idea of what independent schooling costs in Ontario,” said David Hunt, education program director at Cardus and author of the research brief. “Many schools find creative solutions to make their schools financially accessible. It’s a myth that most of Ontario’s independent schools just serve the rich.”

What Ontario Parents Pay for Independent Schooling had at least three participating schools from four of Ontario’s five regions (West, East, Central, and Toronto), as well as participation from urban, suburban, small town, and rural schools, and all program levels (elementary-only, secondary-only, combined elementary/secondary). Most respondents were from religious schools, but four “special emphasis” schools and one “top tier” school also participated.

Read the full research brief online on the Cardus website.

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MEDIA INQUIRIES
Daniel Proussalidis
Cardus – Director of Communications
613-899-5174
media@cardus.ca

What’s Missing from the School Choice Debate

“The school choice debate is not a binary ‘either/or’,” write David Hunt, education program director at Cardus, and Erik Ellefsen, a Cardus senior fellow. “Parents are increasingly choosing between a wider array of options, such as public-charter schools, open-enrollment public schools, virtual schools (of all kinds), micro schools, religious schools, and non-religious independent schools.”

Photo by Muhammad Rizwan on Unsplash

Culture War Against Saskatchewan Religious Schools Must Cease

“Mischaracterizing all religious independent schools as bastions of abuse and intolerance that don’t prepare students for post-secondary education is false,” writes David Hunt, education program director at Cardus. “Robust social science research confirms religious independent schools produce civic-minded graduates ready to contribute to society.”