Friday, May 10, 2024
May 10, 2024

School district, CUPE local partner to help fund EA certification 

Hopeful educational assistants (EAs) willing to learn on the job have a new pathway to certification, thanks to a coordinated initiative between the school district and the CUPE local. 

In a cost-sharing plan detailed at the latest Gulf Islands Board of Education meeting last Wednesday, the expense of EA training and certification will be evenly split between the applicant, the Gulf Islands School District and CUPE Local 788 — up to $2,000 reimbursement from the district and from the CUPE local, according to associate superintendent D’Arcy Deacon. 

“One of the items that continues to be a challenge is recruitment and retention for support staff, in particular educational assistants,” said Deacon. “I think we have been very successful in our recruitment strategies on a local basis to find individuals who are a great fit for the role — albeit not always qualified, but open and willing to learn and grow.” 

The program is open to all members of CUPE Local 788 — an employee of the school district — so the pathway for anyone interested who is not currently a member would be to apply for casual educational assistant work, and go through that application and interview process, said Deacon. 

“We have folks who are in this position, who range from ‘I’ve never done it, I’m not sure I want to’ to ‘I just need a couple more courses’,” said Deacon.  

Uncertified individuals are typically brought into the district categorized as Paraprofessional-3, Deacon added, at which level they aren’t eligible to hold a continuing position; full certification brings them to the Paraprofessional-4 level. 

“That comes with the stability of knowing that employment exists year over year,” said Deacon. 

Interested employees should contact Deacon at ddeacon@sd64.org or CUPE president Angela Thomas at pres788@sd64.org for more information. 

Sign up for our newsletter and stay informed

Receive news headlines every week with our free email newsletter.

Other stories you might like

Maxwell park consultation underway

Public engagement on one park’s management plan will ramp up on Salt Spring next week, and stakeholders are sharpening their focus on roads accessing...

Pot shop claim dismissed

A B.C. Supreme Court justice has dismissed a lawsuit brought against Salt Spring’s Local Trust Committee (LTC), finding it did not act unreasonably in...

Editorial: Empowered to decide

A recent B.C. Supreme Court decision that upheld the right of a local government to refuse approval of a cannabis shop is worth paying attention...

Letter: Rough road to park an asset

It was with a lot of emotion and sizable trepidation that I read the cover story of last week’s Driftwood, headlined “Rough road slows...

1 COMMENT

  1. What qualifies a person to be “certified” in this case? Is it just a “warm body” program or one that equips the student to be completely trained to work with kids with diverse needs? And how long is the program?

LEAVE A REPLY

Please enter your comment!
Please enter your name here