Quebec teachers should be evaluated every two years, new plan says after Bedford saga
MONTREAL — Quebec teachers should be evaluated every two years, according to new recommendations that stem from a controversy at a Montreal elementary school in which teachers allegedly used physical and psychological violence on students and staff.
The government should also consider mandating the use of French in schools wherever students are present, and banning all religious activities in schools, including after hours, says a plan released Friday by two independent advisers appointed by the province.
The recommendations come in the wake of a government report released last October that revealed a group of teachers, many of North African descent, had imposed autocratic rule at Bedford school.
Teachers had yelled at and humiliated students, the report found. Some didn’t believe in learning disabilities and attributed students’ difficulties to laziness. Subjects like science and sex education were either ignored or barely taught, and girls were prevented from playing soccer. Eleven teachers have since been suspended from the school and are under investigation.

