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Kelvin High School, a high school in the South District. The Winnipeg School Division is a school division in Winnipeg, Manitoba. [2] [3] With 78 schools, it is the largest of six public school divisions in Winnipeg, as well as the largest and oldest school division in Manitoba. [3] [4] [5] [6]
The King's School [9] Lake St. Martin School (Winnipeg Campus) – First Nations school; Linden Christian School [10] Mennonite Brethren Collegiate Institute (MBCI) Ohr HaTorah Day School; Our Lady of Victory School [11] Paradise Montessori School [4]: 61 Prairie Central Adventist Academy [12] Shawenim Abinooji School [4]: 62
There are 26 schools in the division: 15 elementary, six middle, and four high schools. Six of these schools offer French immersion. Most of its schools are in Winnipeg, however one is located in Headingley and the other in Brooklands. [2] [3]
Holy Ghost School [16] Winnipeg: Hosanna Christian School [12]: 61 Winnipeg: I. L. Peretz Folk School: Winnipeg: Immanuel Christian School: Winnipeg: The King's School [17] Winnipeg: Lake St. Martin School (Winnipeg Campus) Winnipeg: First Nations school Linden Christian School [18] Winnipeg: Mennonite Brethren Collegiate Institute (MBCI ...
Gordon Bell High School is a public junior and senior high school in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.It is located in the inner city of Winnipeg. The school is bordered by the Trans-Canada Highway on Broadway to the south, Portage Avenue to the north, and Maryland Street to the east, which then Portage Avenue and Broadway connect to the west.
Centre scolaire Léo-Rémillard (CSLR) is a French-language high school situated in the southeastern part of Winnipeg, Manitoba, in Canada. It currently offers grade 9 to grade 12. This school was built in honor of the writer Léo Rémillard, and it is part of the Division Scolaire Franco-Manitobaine
Day school tuition is $24,960 for kindergarten to grade 5 students and $25,590 for grade 6 to grade 12 students. Boarding school tuition is $26,262 for Manitoba residents, $57,200 for other Canadian residents, and $72,500 for international students. [9] [10] The school has financial aid for those who are unable to pay the full tuition.
In 1869 Winnipeg was a straggling frontier village in the Red River Settlement. On May 1 of that year, at the request of Archbishop Alexandre-Antonin Taché, two Grey Nuns opened the first Catholic school in Winnipeg, St. Mary’s Academy, to serve the English-speaking Catholics on the west side of the Red River across from St. Boniface.