Jim Iker is president of the B.C. Teachers Federation.

Jim Iker is president of the B.C. Teachers Federation.

B.C. Teachers Federation is working on many initiatives

We are actually leading the way in protecting and enhancing education in our province, says union president Jim Iker.

Editor: Contrary to Tom Fletcher’s assertion (BC Views, The Times, Feb. 5) that B.C. teachers and the B.C. Teachers Federation are not “adapting,” we are actually leading the way in protecting and enhancing education in our province.

The BCTF is actively involved in B.C.’s task force on assessment, the graduation requirements review, and the curriculum redesign teams. Our two vice-presidents and I have been meeting with senior ministry of education staff on these initiatives as well.

As a union of professionals, we work hard to enhance our practice in support of teaching and learning. The BCTF has 32 provincial specialist associations — ranging from science, social studies, and art to technology and trades education — that put on exceptional professional development conferences, write reports, and lead important teacher inquiry projects.

Recently, the BCTF has partnered with UBC and the B.C. Superintendents Association to create a province-wide mentoring program that will formalize an integrated system of support for developing and retaining teachers in B.C.. We also funded, created, and launched a new online platform called TeachBC that enables teachers from across B.C. to share their research and teaching resources.

There are a lot of excellent things happening in B.C. schools and teachers are front and centre making it all happen. However, we cannot forget that any government strategy, initiative, direction, plan, etc., needs funding. Unfortunately, we’re still waiting for this government to fund the basics like improving class size and composition. A change in government attitude towards funding is the first adaptation B.C. students need.

Jim Iker,

BCTF President

Langley Times