Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
The board is Canada's largest school board and governs 110 secondary schools, as well as five adult education schools. The TDSB was founded in 1954 as the Metropolitan Toronto School Board which would later merge with six anglophone boards: the Board of Education for the City of York, the East York Board of Education, the North York Board of ...
Main page; Contents; Current events; Random article; About Wikipedia; Contact us; Pages for logged out editors learn more
The Toronto Public School Board continued to govern the city's elementary schools until 1904 when, following a city referendum, it was merged with the Collegiate Institute Board, which oversaw the city's secondary schools, and the Technical School Board, which oversaw the Toronto Technical School, to form the Toronto Board of Education.
The school was named as the TDSB secondary school showing the greatest rate of improvement in the 2011–2012 Fraser Institute Report. The school is now (as of the 2014–2015 ranking) ranked at 16th place out of the 627 secondary schools in the province. [5] Over the previous five years, the school had ranked at approximately 78th place. [6]
This page was last edited on 31 October 2020, at 18:56 (UTC).; Text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License; additional terms may apply.
Michael Power - St. Joseph High School (colloquially known as Michael Power, MPSJ or Power) is a Catholic secondary school in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.The school was founded as an amalgamation of two independent schools in the neighbourhood, Michael Power High School (an all-male school secondary school founded by the Basilian Fathers in 1957 initially known as St. Francis High School, later ...
Central Etobicoke High School (or Central Etobicoke, CEHS, formerly Westway High School) is a secondary school in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It is located at 10 Denfield Street, bordered by Widdicombe Hill Blvd to the South and Clement Rd to the North, in the Richview neighbourhood of the former suburb of Etobicoke . [ 1 ]
In 1998 the TBE merged into the Toronto District School Board (TDSB). At that point, 155 College Street became solely used as the board headquarters of the TDSB. [1] The building was subsequently sold to the University of Toronto and the TDSB moved its headquarters to 5050 Yonge Street, formerly the headquarters of the North York Board of ...