WEYBURN – Enrolment numbers in the Â鶹ÊÓƵeast Cornerstone School Division were expected to rise, and they did, perhaps a little more than what was anticipated.
That was the word coming from Cornerstone’s Director of Education Keith Keating, who discussed the increase with board members during their board meeting on Oct. 11.
The full time equivalent (FTE) enrolment, not including Pre-Kindergarten programs, now rests at 7,722.5, he said, or in reality, 8,305 individual students in school classroom seats or engaged in home schooling.
In the last school year, the FTE number was 7,581.75. That translates to an overall increase of approximately 141 students in the public school division’s 36 facilities and home bases for this academic year.
The official attendance figures are recorded on Sept. 30 each school year and those numbers are used for the triggering of provincial funding through grant programs.
Home-schooled students this year have increased from 147 FTE last year to 164.5 this school year.
The largest schools in the division in terms of student numbers continue to be the Weyburn Comprehensive School, that caters to students from Grades 7 to 12, and the Estevan Comprehensive School that registers students from Grades 9 to 12.
The Weyburn Comp enrolment number is 951 this year compared with 897 in the last school year, while the Estevan Comp School enrolment trended upward from 752 FTE to 796.
The smallest schools recorded in terms of enrolment numbers are Manor School with 50 students on board compared with 50.5 last year, and Wapella School with 51 enrolled this year compared with 46.5 in the last school year.
Legacy Park Elementarychool is the largest elementary school in the division, since it now embraces all elementary grades in the city of Weyburn’s public school system, and welcomes 555.8 FTE students this year compared with 520.5 in the previous school year.
Director of Education Keating, in providing the numbers, pointed out that transfers within the system were reduced to 302 this year, noting this has been a steady decline “following the COVID crisis.”
During the meeting, board members voted unanimously not to place any of the division’s 36 schools under a review process within the province’s Viable Schools mandate.
The next public meeting for the board will take place November 22, where it is expected they will receive details from the official auditors who were working on the division’s financial statements at the same time as their October 11 session was being held. The November session will also include the annual organizational meeting that includes committee representations for the remainder of the school year.