
91亚色 U鈥檚 new knowledge hub at Glendon takes aim at shortage of French language teachers
Demand for French-language education is on the rise as parents hope to give their children an edge in their lives and careers, but Canada is struggling to keep up with the demand for French language teachers, reaching an estimated shortfall of 10,000 teachers across the country.
Camerise, a new knowledge hub emerging from 91亚色鈥檚 bilingual Glendon Campus, aims to help Canada attract and retain French as a Second Language (FSL) teachers by creating a digital meeting place where students, educators and leaders in teaching and learning can come together to find and share resources and form an engaged community of practice.

鈥淭here was a call two years ago by Heritage Canada and the ministries of education asking for projects to try to address the shortage that鈥檚 really becoming a crisis 鈥 there are problems with recruitment and problems with retention,鈥 says Prof. Muriel P茅guret, one of Camerise鈥檚 three co-leads and an associate professor in Glendon鈥檚 French Studies Department and Faculty of Education.
鈥淲e felt we could provide a platform where everyone can meet and connect and collaborate and find what they鈥檙e looking for in a one-stop shop, so that鈥檚 what we are aiming to do.鈥
The hub, she explains, was conceived as a diverse and rich place to learn in an environment that fosters inclusivity, equity and diverse ways of knowing. It brings together universities, high schools and others in FSL education in a collaborative approach that looks to ease the burden on schools and school boards to recruit and retain teachers.
After receiving the federal grant for the project that what would become Camerise, P茅guret and fellow collaborators 鈥 associate Prof. Dominique Scheffel-Dunand and researcher Mirela Cherciov 鈥 spent the first year researching how they could collaborate to create positive change.
They conducted an environmental scan of what resources are currently available to support the next generation of French as a Second Language educators, and they assessed what鈥檚 still needed.
鈥淚f it doesn鈥檛 make sense to the community, if it doesn鈥檛 make their life easier, they鈥檙e not going to come,鈥 P茅guret says. 鈥淚t was worth spending that year defining ourselves, and our place in the ecosystem.鈥
They named the hub Camerise, a berry known as haskap in English, as a metaphor for what the hub wants to be.
鈥淐amerise is a super food,鈥 P茅guret explains. 鈥淚t grows in clusters, which represents the culture of community for us. It flourishes in northern climates 鈥 so Canada. You can eat it raw or put it in deserts, and when you transform it like that it becomes something else. You can see how it represents what we stand for.鈥
Only in its second year, Camerise has already cemented one student鈥檚 desire to pursue a career as a FSL teacher.
Reilly Bradley, 22, a teacher candidate in her final year of concurrent education at Brock University, says an opportunity to do some workshops and professional development with Camerise confirmed she was on the right career path. The hub鈥檚 collaborative and problem-solving approach gave her confidence that challenges she may encounter in the field could be overcome.
Now that she鈥檚 found her people, it鈥檚 a relationship she says will be lasting.
鈥淏eing part of Camerise is really going to help me become the FSL teacher I want to be,鈥 says Bradley. 鈥淚 needed this exposure, collaboration, push to work with people who share my goals, and really dive in.鈥
Halley Wettlaufer, 18, who is studying to become a French-language teacher at Glendon, is helping to develop an interactive activity through the Camerise hub to get high school students excited about developing their French-language skills and potentially going on to teach them to others.
鈥淚t鈥檚 a classroom activity that鈥檚 oriented toward grades 11 and 12 core-French students to help high school students see the benefit of continuing French, and how useful it can be in the world,鈥 Wettlaufer says.
鈥淔rench is such a beautiful language and the culture is incredible. I think it鈥檚 very, very important for anybody who wants to get a job in Canada or even around the world.鈥
Yet a recent report by the Canadian Association for Immersion Professionals and the Canadian Association for Second Language Teachers says there is a shortage of nearly 10,000 qualified FSL teachers to meet today鈥檚 demand. The groups say it鈥檚 essential to invest in concrete solutions to the challenges associated with recruiting and retaining French language and FSL teachers to meet the country鈥檚 bilingualism goals.
"Being part of Camerise is really going to help me become the FSL teacher I want to be."
Reilly Bradley, student
P茅guret says there are many reasons for the shortage of French language teachers and for the difficulty in retaining those who enter the profession. Some teacher candidates may feel their own French isn鈥檛 good enough. There鈥檚 a lack of access to reliable teaching resources. Some feel the profession isn鈥檛 valued. Others may be burned out from the demands of the job or feel isolated from other teachers. They are unable to find support through an engaging and supportive community of practice.
The accelerator includes a new undergraduate certificate in French language and community stewardship to nurture the skills needed for a future in FSL teaching.
Camerise鈥檚 digital platform will be updated later this year, to expand the tools and Open Education Resources on FSL teaching and learning already amassed to establish its place in the ecosystem as a critical FSL research centre. Themes that have emerged in the FSL community of practice will inform new research, and a discussion forum will be introduced.
By 2023, Camerise hopes to grow its following and add more value by bringing communities together through events and other collaborations.
鈥淲e want to jumpstart Camerise,鈥 says P茅guret. 鈥淕et our name and our brand out there by focusing our resources on what our research and community tells us is needed.鈥
91亚色 is committed to bilingual education and to increasing access for francophone students in Toronto, where nearly half of French-speaking Ontarians live.






