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Joseph M. Demko School is a dual-track elementary-junior high school in the new Jensen lakes neighborhood in St. Albert, Alberta, Canada. The school is a member of St. Albert Public Schools, its parent school district. The school is named after Joseph Demko, a former teacher and superintendent of the district.
The Protestant School Board became public in 2012 and was renamed to St. Albert Public School District No. 5565 after being asked to do so by the Alberta Government, making it the primary board for St. Albert. The district is also called St. Albert Public Schools locally. The move meant that more funds could be allocated to the district. [6] [10]
Leo Nickerson was the first and for some time only school in St. Albert to have a PTA, or Parent Teacher Association. [6] The group was formed in 1967, and replaced the Home and School Association, an organization of parents from various schools in St. Albert that was formed in 1964.
Sir Alexander Mackenzie School was the first school built by its parent school board, then known as Protestant Separate School District No. 6, and was the first Protestant school in St. Albert. Both the district and the school were created in order to accommodate a growing population of Protestant students in St. Albert.
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École Secondaire Paul Kane High School (PKHS) is a dual track high school in St. Albert, Alberta, Canada and is a part of St. Albert Public Schools. [1] Opened in 1963, Paul Kane was the first Protestant high school in St. Albert. The school was named after Paul Kane, a painter known for his paintings of western Canadian First Nations people ...
Elmer S. Gish School (formally known as Elmer S. Gish Elementary/Junior High School), [2] part of St. Albert Public Schools, is an Elementary-Junior High school located in St. Albert, Alberta, Canada. [3] The school has been in operation since 1981 and was named after a St. Albert educator.
It is a member of St. Albert Public Schools and was the second Protestant high school in St. Albert. Bellerose school opened in 1988, alleviating strain from Paul Kane High School, which at the time was overpopulated. [2] Bellerose school was named after the Bellerose family, who came to the region in 1849 and built St. Albert's first school ...