Access to French-language Catholic education is the constitutional right of French-language rights-holders, though non-rights-holders can also apply. This right is guaranteed to citizens by the Canadian Charter of Rights.
The child of a Canadian citizen or landed immigrant who meets any of the following criteria qualifies for French-language education:
- whose first language learned and still understood is French; OR
- has received his or her education at the elementary level in French in Canada (excludes French immersion); OR
- has a child who has received or who is receiving his or her education at the elementary or secondary level in French (excludes French immersion) in Canada.
The Conseil scolaire catholique du Nouvel-Ontario also welcomes in its schools children:
- whose grand-parents had French as a first language and were right-holders to French-language education; OR
- born from immigration and whose parents speak neither French nor English.
As a rights-holder, if you choose not to send your child to a French-language school, the automatic right to French-language education for the next generation is lost, and access to a French-language school must subsequently be requested as a non-rights-holder.
Access to French-language Catholic education is the constitutional right of French-language rights-holders, though non-rights-holders can also apply. This right is guaranteed to citizens by the Canadian Charter of Rights.
The child of a Canadian citizen or landed immigrant who meets any of the following criteria qualifies for French-language education:
- whose first language learned and still understood is French; OR
- has received his or her education at the elementary level in French in Canada (excludes French immersion); OR
- has a child who has received or who is receiving his or her education at the elementary or secondary level in French (excludes French immersion) in Canada.
The Conseil scolaire catholique du Nouvel-Ontario also welcomes in its schools children:
- whose grand-parents had French as a first language and were right-holders to French-language education; OR
- born from immigration and whose parents speak neither French nor English.
As a rights-holder, if you choose not to send your child to a French-language school, the automatic right to French-language education for the next generation is lost, and access to a French-language school must subsequently be requested as a non-rights-holder.