Ontario College of Teachers June 2024

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For College Members and Teacher Applicants: Your College and You.

Summary of June Council meeting

A meeting of Council was held online on Thursday, June 6.

Meeting highlights include receipt of a quarterly report from Registrar & CEO Linda Lacroix, OCT/EAO, as well as a financial report for the period ending March 31, 2024.

Additionally, the Hon. Stephen Lecce, the then Minister of Education, delivered an address where he discussed the latest educational initiatives aimed at better protecting students across the province. Minister Lecce thanked the College for its dedication to students.

He highlighted the success of the Sexual Abuse Prevention Program and commended the College for its development of a new Additional Qualification on Holocaust Education and Countering Antisemitism. He emphasized how this initiative will help equip educators to effectively address and prevent incidents of discrimination in the classroom.

He also highlighted the College’s work in implementing Bill 98 to ensure efficient investigative and disciplinary processes for addressing these issues and other issues of professional misconduct.

Additionally, he thanked the College for addressing the teacher shortage by cutting certification timelines by successfully reducing the number of days to under 60 for IET certifications.

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Do you want to help govern the teaching profession?

There are roles available in different areas of our governance structure, including Council, Committees and Rosters.

Governance candidates will be selected based on specified selection and eligibility criteria, and successful candidates will be reflective of the diverse geographic, linguistic, cultural, and Indigenous perspectives of Ontario.

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Focus on Teaching: A survey of Ontario Certified Teachers

As we prepare the College's 2024 Focus on Teaching survey, we have now completed consultation sessions with a range of groups representing teachers and the wider publicly funded education system. Our goal is to gain perspectives and identify data gaps from across the education sector.

Consultations were held with groups including the Ontario Teachers’ Federations and its affiliates, Principals’ Associations, School Boards Associations, Directors of Education, the Ministry of Education, and the Ministry of Colleges and Universities.

Their valuable input will inform the drafting of survey questions that will then be discussed during focus groups with individual teachers. Focus group sessions are expected to begin in July.

Membership outreach will prioritize diverse representation in the survey focus groups with the goal of providing a safe space for participant sharing. A College representative will be in contact with members who may be involved.

We are excited to include these diverse perspectives from the teaching profession in developing our 2024 survey.

“This inclusive approach in helping to build the survey is so important for finding good solutions to supply and demand issues in schools, ultimately benefiting students and their learning experiences,” said Joe Geiser, Executive Director of the Catholic Principals’ Council of Ontario.

In addition to wider participation in survey development, the College remains committed to ethical research practices. In line with this, the College has developed updated ethical guidelines to govern this year’s survey process. These guidelines have been vetted by an independent, external reviewer to ensure the interests of our respondents are maintained throughout the process.

Learn more

Myth/Fact

Myth: As an Ontario Certified Teacher (OCT), I can diverge from the curriculum without facing any repercussions.

Fact: Straying from the curriculum can have repercussions for OCTs, impacting both their professional standing and their students' education.

Members of the teaching profession recognize that their role is to facilitate learning within the framework set by the Ministry of Education and to create inclusive and supportive environments for their students.

They also recognize the importance of adhering to professional standards and boundaries with the recognition of how personal views and conduct can impact students. Teachers exercise their professional knowledge and practice by using the Ontario Curriculum to design learning activities and assess student progress.

Maintaining professionalism, respecting students' diverse backgrounds and perspectives, and upholding ethical standards are essential aspects of effective teaching practice.

Learn more

Check the status of your application online

Applicants, you can log into your online application at any time to track its progress.

Questions? Please refer to our FAQs for answers to commonly asked questions.

Our website also provides detailed information about our requirements to be certified to teach in Ontario’s publicly funded education system.

Learn more

Scholarship application deadline: June 28, 2024

Each year, the College Scholarship Program awards four $1,500 scholarships to exemplary teacher candidates enrolled in a teacher education program in Ontario.

Applications for 2024 scholarships are now open. For information, including how to apply and eligibility criteria, please visit the College website.

Financial awards are made possible through donations. If you are interested in making a donation to support the scholarship program, here’s how: Supporting the Scholarship Program.

Learn more about the recipients from 2023

OCTs, we’ve got some great new resources for your summer reading!

The Margaret Wilson Library offers a free shipping service for all OCTs! You can also borrow and download eBooks for offline reading.

How?

  1. Log into your College account on oct.ca under Members.
  2. On the left navigation pane, click Library.
  3. On the right navigation pane of the library page, under Book Lists, click on Summer Reading.

Still have questions? Visit the Margaret Wilson Library's FAQs or contact the library team by email library@oct.ca or by toll-free telephone (Canada and U.S.A.) at 1.833.966.5588

Discipline Summaries.

Discipline Committee panels conduct public hearings into allegations of professional misconduct and/or incompetence. Full panel decisions are posted to the member’s public register profile.

Roseline Marie-Christine Aline Dorcin, #430863
Revocation, costs – A Discipline Committee panel revoked the teaching certificate of Roseline Marie-Christine Aline Dorcin for failing to give adequate notice about her decision to not return to teach and fraudulently seeking sick benefits from her board when working and teaching at another school board in Montreal. Read more.

Michael Anthony Corradetti, #421924
Suspension, reprimand, conditions – A Discipline Committee panel suspended the teaching certificate of Michael Anthony Corradetti for – over the course of two academic years – repeatedly making inappropriate, offensive, and disrespectful comments to or about students, including on publicly available podcasts. Read more.

James Archibald Malyon, OCT, #458542
Reprimand, conditions – A Discipline Committee panel ordered James Archibald Malyon to be reprimanded for failing to fulfil his duty to report immediately and to the appropriate authorities an allegation that a teacher touched a student inappropriately. Read more.

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