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Muslim school is top in Ottawa
19
Mar
2013

Muslim school is top in Ottawa

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Published in News

Abraar School has been ranked the best performing elementary school in the city.

The private Islamic school in Ottawa's west side was rated the best performing school for reading, writing and math scores by the Fraser Institute, a public policy think-tank. Abraar scored 9.4 points out 10, putting it in the top 50 schools among over 2,700 schools in Ontario. The provincial average was 6.0.

“We are very excited,” Mohammed Saleem, principal of the Abraar School, told the Ottawa Citizen.

The Fraser Institute's 2013 report reviewed 2714 elementary schools; public, private, Catholic and Francophone in Ontario. The report uses data generated by the annual Education Quality Accountability Office (EQAO) tests administered by the Ontario Ministry of Education for students in Grade 3 and Grade 6.

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This is the first time that Abraar -- which offers Quranic studies, Arabic and Islamic history, alongside the Ontario Ministry of Education Curriculum -- has featured at the top of the list.

According to Dr. Saleem, the school's religious and cultural environment has had a major role in its students' success.

“We have a dedicated team of teachers who really understand the students,” Dr. Saleem told the Ottawa Citizen. “They have a culturally relevant pedagogy that enables them to reach our students.”

Asma Aghliw who has been a Grade 1 teacher at Abraar since 2003, agrees. She says that her students do very well academically because of “the fact that they feel they belong here.”

Over the years the school has gone from strength to strength, gaining respect and recognition not just within the Muslim community, but also drawing the attention of the wider community. Last year, Abraar had a student population of a little over 200 students. This number has since grown to 350 pupils.

With a growing waiting list of students, Abraar is seeking to expand the school's square footage, says Dr. Saleem.  The Muslim Association of Canada (MAC), which operates Abraar, has made a bid on a property at 70 Fieldrow Street in Nepean, which used to be a Montessori school.

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Dr. Saleem says that the school will add two classrooms for each current grade level and at least a Grade 9 classroom by the fall. The elementary school will be located on the new property, and the current site will become a secondary school.

Even as it expands, the school is determined to keep its top spot. Dr. Saleem says there's no room for complacency.

“As a matter of fact, (The Fraser Institute ranking) will motivate (students) to try so much harder,” he said. “They look at this ranking as a challenge, and they will have to rise up to this challenge.”

But as the Ottawa Muslim community celebrates Abraar's achievements, the report is also cause for concern. Many of the schools ranked in the bottom ten in the city, such as Pinecrest Public School, Charles H. Hulse Public School, and Queen Mary Public School also have significantly large Muslim populations. Pinecrest Public School, which is just down the road from Abraar School, has been ranked as one of the lowest achieving schools in the city for years.

As not all of Ottawa's Muslims can afford to put their children in a private school, community engagement is needed to address the challenges facing public schools in order to ensure that all our children are getting a quality education that will prepare them for the future.  

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This article was produced exclusively for Muslim Link and should not be copied without prior permission from the site. For permission, please write to info@muslimlink.ca.

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My name is Noman Bajwa. I have been involved in the journalistic profession, on and off, since 1987. I graduated from Penn State University with a Bachelor's degree in English Literature and received a Master’s degree in Journalism from Temple University in Philadelphia. I was a reporter for several newspapers in Southeastern Pennsylvania, including the Philadelphia Inquirer, for fifteen years. I served in the position of Civil Rights Coordinator for CAIR's national office in Washington, DC from 2005 to 2007. I have been a contributor to the Muslim Link since its inception in 2004.