As more than half a million students get ready to return to school on Sept. 6, the following provides a snapshot of B.C.’s school system – by the numbers.
August 24, 2005
As more than half a million students get ready to return to school on Sept. 6, the following provides a snapshot of B.C.’s school system – by the numbers:
Increased Funding
- $5.06-billion education budget – a 10 per cent increase from 2000-01.
- $7,097 in estimated per student funding in 2005-06 – the highest ever.
- $460-million increase to B.C. public schools since 2000-01, including $153 million in special, one-time grants.
- $253-million funding increase for education over the next three years.
- $700 million for the 2005-08 capital plan, including an extra $217 million for 2007-08.
- $1.5 billion for a 15-year plan to upgrade schools to make them earthquake safe – 95 of the highest priority schools will be upgraded over the next three years.
Fewer Students
- 567,523 public school students estimated for 2005-06 – 30,000 fewer than in 2000-01.
- 54,963 English-as-a-second-language students estimated for 2005-06.
- 48,951 Aboriginal students estimated for 2005-06.
- 19,736 students with special needs estimated for 2005-06.
- 10,366 adult students estimated for 2005-06.
- 2,014 schools – 1,666 public and 348 independent – in 2004-05.
- 22 new schools, 25 replacements, 131 additions and 26 renovations completed since 2001.
- 8 more new schools and 39 expansions, renovations or replacement schools to be built over the next three years.
- 33,300 teachers and 3,000 administrators in public schools in 2004-05.
- 23.2 students – average elementary class size in 2004-05, up from 22.6 in 2000-01.
Record Levels of Achievement
- 79 per cent of students graduated last year – a B.C. record for the second year in a row.
- B.C. students are among the best in the world in math, reading and science, according to results from the 2003 Programme for International Student Assessment (PISA).
- B.C. students are among the best in Canada in science, according to results from the School Achievement Indicators Program in 2004. Only Alberta outperformed B.C.
- 4,665 students received scholarships in 2004 for scoring high marks on Grade 12 provincial exams.
- 90 per cent of Grade 7 students met or exceeded expectations in writing in 2003-04.
- 88 per cent of Grade 4 students met or exceeded expectations in math in 2003-04.
- 74 per cent of Grade 10 students, up four per cent from 2003-04, and 34 per cent of Grade 12 students, up three per cent from last year, say they get exercise at school most or all of the time.
- 49 per cent of Grade 10 students and 48 per cent of Grade 12 students say they are satisfied most of the time or all of the time with the program choices available to them at school – an increase of one per cent and two per cent, respectively, from 2003-04.
Investments in B.C. Schools – 2004-05
- $4.6 million to put almost 12,000 additional computers in schools, pilot laptop computer projects in 12 districts and support electronic learning in rural schools.
- $5 million to support innovative literacy programs.
- $10 million for new textbooks for classrooms.
- $10 million to help make schools centres for community services.
- $15.5 million for a comprehensive plan to make B.C. students the healthiest and most physically active in Canada.
- $11.3 million in additional funding to support more parent involvement in schools.
- 35,000 parents attended Ready, Set, Learn events at nearly 1,000 schools to learn how to prepare their three-year-olds for kindergarten.