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Quebec Anglophones Who Stayed … and Those Who Left A Comparison of Key Characteristics, 1971 to 2001 William Floch Manager, Official Languages Research.

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Presentation on theme: "Quebec Anglophones Who Stayed … and Those Who Left A Comparison of Key Characteristics, 1971 to 2001 William Floch Manager, Official Languages Research."— Presentation transcript:

1 Quebec Anglophones Who Stayed … and Those Who Left A Comparison of Key Characteristics, 1971 to 2001 William Floch Manager, Official Languages Research Department of Canadian Heritage March 1, 2008, Montreal

2 Population Under Consideration Population being studied consists of those persons born in Quebec having English as their mother tongue. This population is then divided into two groups: Those who continue to live in Quebec at the time of a given census taking Those who have moved from Quebec to another Canadian province or territory Sample does not include those born in Canada who may now be living outside Canada Multiple responses are distributed equally among declared languages

3 Retention Rate Canada’s Official-Language Minority Communities by Province, Population 15+ 2001 Note: retention rate is the percentage of those born in a particular province who still live in that province. 50%

4 Retention Rate Canada’s Official-Language Majority Populations by Province, (15+), 2001 Note: retention rate is the percentage of those born in a particular province who still live in that province. 96%

5 Retention Rates - MMI

6 Retention Rates – Linguistic Communities – 1971-2001

7 Retention Rates – by Language Group and Age Group, 2001

8 Those who stayed / those who left, 1971-2001 Quebec Anglophones English Mother Tongue, Born in Quebec

9 Highest Level of Schooling For Anglophones Born in Quebec, by Province of Residence, 1971-2001

10 Anglophones Born in Quebec, by Current Province of Residence, by Highest Level of Schooling, 1971

11 Anglophones Born in Quebec, by Current Province of Residence, by Highest Level of Schooling, 2001

12 Official Languages Groups in Canada Retention Rate by Highest Level of Schooling, 2001

13 Anglophones born in Quebec By Labour Force Activity and Province of Residence, 1971-2001

14 Anglophones Born in Quebec, by Current Province of Residence, by Labour Force Activity, 1971

15 Anglophones Born in Quebec, by Current Province of Residence, by Labour Force Activity, 1981

16 Anglophones Born in Quebec, by Current Province of Residence, by Labour Force Activity, 1991

17 Anglophones Born in Quebec, by Current Province of Residence, by Labour Force Activity, 2001

18 Retention Rate of Those with Doctoral Degrees Canada’s Official-Language Minority Communities by Province, 2001 Note: retention rate is the percentage of those born in a particular province who still live in that province.

19 Quebec Anglophone and Francophone Youth, Expected Destinations 7.5% 39.3% 22.0% 41.1% 40.9% 5.4% 19.5% 7.1% 10.1% 7.1% the same region a different region in another province out of the country DNK/Refusal 0.0% 20.0% 40.0% 60.0% 80.0% 100.0% Anglophone Youth Francophone Youth Expected Destination - Migrants Comparison of Anglophone and Francophone Youth Source: Canadian Heritage based on data from Crop/Missisquoi Institute, 2000. "N" refers to the number of youth (18-29). Of youth who expect to move in the next 5 years: -80% of Francophones think it will be to another place within Quebec, compared to 30% of Anglophones - 60% of Anglophones think it will be outside Quebec, compared to 13% of Francophones


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