2024-03-25 19:29:40
QUEBEC CITY — Twice in recent weeks, the Ministry of Education has appealed to the network for caution regarding the solar eclipse of April 8.
The ministry recommends keeping schools open on that day, as long as “conditions” are put in place to ensure the safety of students and staff.
In particular, it will be necessary to “avoid holding outdoor activities (…) from 2:11 p.m. to 4:45 p.m.,” we indicate in the documents obtained Monday by The Canadian Press.
Schools will also have to provide “an offer of childcare or supervision services to students” during the entire period of the eclipse, i.e. until 4:45 p.m.
This might lead, for example, to changes to the school transportation schedule, according to the ministry.
He therefore advises “to prevent a minor student from leaving school during the eclipse, unless he or she is accompanied by a parent or duly authorized adult.”
“If the conditions for maintaining regular activities cannot be ensured,” schools can choose to move an educational day already planned in the school calendar to April 8.
These instructions, seen as constraints, have pushed several schools to review their decision to remain open all day, the daily “La Presse” reported on Monday.
The management of this event is also denounced by the astronomer Pierre Chastenay and the general director of the Association for the Teaching of Science and Technology in Quebec, Camille Turcotte.
Quebec “seems to oscillate between delay and excessive caution, compromising the golden opportunity to make it a true celebration of science,” they lamented in an open letter sent to the “Journal de Montréal.”
A solar eclipse is a very rare astronomical phenomenon during which the Moon is placed between the Earth and the Sun and completely hides the latter for a short period.
Without adequate protection measures, observing a solar eclipse can have harmful effects on health, including loss of vision.
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