As students head back to school this week, a new online homework website and after-school tutoring pilot project will provide more opportunities for them to succeed in the classroom.
With thousands of students heading back to school this week, Manitoba Public Insurance and CAA Manitoba are reminding motorists about the return of reduced speed limits when traveling through school zones.
The province has announced an investment of over $1.27 billion in public schools funding to help provide students with a quality education.
The Manitoba government is taking important steps to help children succeed by introducing a new bill that would introduce smaller classes for kindergarten to Grade 3 students.
Together with parents, teachers and education leaders, Education and Advanced Learning Minister James Allum unveiled Closing the Achievement Gap: Success for Every Student, an action plan focused on improving academic achievement for all Manitoba students.
In the first three years of Manitoba’s smaller classes initiative, the province, in partnership with school divisions, has now hired over 100 new teachers this year, bringing the total of teachers hired for to 315.
Students in Steinbach have started the school year with a new grade 9 to 12 high school expansion, and an addition and renovation to skills-training space at the existing high school.
It’s that time of year again, thousands of students are heading back to school. This fall brings a new rule for motorists, reduced speed limits when traveling through school zones.
Post-secondary students can now access hundreds of online courses in a single location with the help of a new website called eCampus Manitoba.
The province is supporting students in the Division scolaire franco-manitobaine (DSFM) through a shared vision that will offer more skills training and trades opportunities in French for students.