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Seven in Ten (72%) Canadians are Concerned About Access to Special Needs Education
Half (47%) Believe Special-Needs Students Are Not Being Well-Served by the Public-Education System
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Most (86%) Canadians are Concerned About Public Elementary School Children's Performance in Reading, Writing, and Math
Three-quarters (75%) Agree that Standardized Testing is a Good Way to Measure and Compare Performance of Students Against Other Provinces and Jurisdictions
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The Fickle Nature of the Mobile Canadian Teen
Recent Ipsos Mobil-ology Study Shows Canadian Teenagers More Eager to Change, Adapt than Adult Counterparts
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If Quebec Proceeds with Sovereignty Referendum and "Yes" Wins, Majority (57%) of Canadians Outside Quebec Would Negotiate Outright Breakup, Not Political or Economic Association (43%)
Majority of Quebecers (55%) and Those in Rest of Canada (67%) Say "Clear Majority" for Winning Referendum Should be No Less than 66%
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While Canadians Generally Confident They Could Recognize the Signs of a Medical Emergency, They're Less Confident with Their Skills to Help
Four in Ten (38%) Canadians Say They've Provided First Aid,
Eight in Ten (78%) Say It's Very Important to Know
How to Perform First Aid -
Two-thirds (68%) of Canadians are Concerned about Labour Unrest Related to the Elementary Public-School System; Majority (71%) Agree Teachers Should Not Have the Right to Strike
Canadians Support Arts, Special Needs and Language-Based Schools,
But Not Faith, Gender or Race-Based Schools -
Canadians Give Overall State of Public Elementary School System Mediocre Marks
Six in Ten (58%) Believe Private-School Education is Better than Public School Education; Two-thirds (63%) Would Send Their Children to Private School if Money was no Concern
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Canadians Name Hogwarts School of Witchcraft and Wizardry (41%) as Top Fictional School to Attend
George Clooney (26% of Women) and Jennifer Aniston (18% of Men) Are Most-Desired Dates for a High-School Reunion