Every morning, 3-year-old Keerthika Gnaneshan visits the , located on the southeast side of this city, where she plays games, sings songs, and participates in other activities that build her reading and numeracy skills.
She comes with her mother, Sri Lanka native Sithra Gnaneshan, who says she knows it is critical for her children to learn English. Gnaneshan also took her older daughter, who now attends Crescent Town, to the same literacy program a few years ago.
The school serves an economically disadvantaged and diverse population of students who speak more than 50 different languages. The Gnaneshan family鈥檚 first language is Tamil.
鈥淭hey have to learn everything in English in school, and to communicate,鈥 the mother says. 鈥淭hey know the mother tongue [but] they can鈥檛 do it here. ... It鈥檚 the main thing for them, the language.鈥
The center, which encourages parents to use those activities with their children at home, is characteristic of how Canada works with immigrant students and their families. The country is one of the few where immigrant students have access to at least the same or greater resources at school as do native students.
Canada鈥檚 immigration policies encourage educated professionals to come to the country. And, because Canada admits immigrants to fill specific economic needs, the noted in a 2011 report, they generally aren鈥檛 seen as a threat. For them to thrive means Canada thrives. The country, historically a blend of English- and French-speaking cultures, has opened its doors to new arrivals from other backgrounds.
Terry Cui, 13, immigrated to Canada with his parents as a child from Chengdu, China. He attends the high-performing in Toronto. Many of his classmates are Chinese immigrants or the sons or daughters of immigrants.
Read about efforts to help foreign-born students and children learning new languages in this Quality Counts 2012 article: 鈥淓ducating Immigrant Students a Challenge in U.S., Elsewhere鈥
Terry speaks Mandarin at home, and he says his English skills have steadily improved over the years, thanks to increasing doses of English-language training he received, and through conversation with classmates and teachers. Today, he speaks in English with confidence and clarity.
Terry said his parents didn鈥檛 have the same opportunities he did. He鈥檚 in the school math club, on the volleyball team, and plays with a school rock band. He wants to attend the University of Toronto, or McGill University, in Montreal, and become a cardiovascular surgeon. He says his parents encourage his ambitions.
鈥淭hey say anything is fine as long as I鈥檓 successful,鈥 Terry says. 鈥淭hey say that back in their day, they couldn鈥檛 do anything like that.鈥