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Maple Leaf accepts both domestic students and international students. Students are registered as British Columbia students, write the same Grade 10, 11 and 12 BC examinations as resident students in BC, and graduate with the same BC Ministry of Education transcripts and graduation (Dogwood) diploma as resident students in BC.
Education in British Columbia comprises public and private primary and secondary schools throughout the province. Like most other provinces in Canada, education is compulsory from ages 6–16 (grades 1–10), although the vast majority of students remain in school until they graduate from high school at the age of 18.
Many districts' names are a legacy of this pattern. In 1946, the Ministry of Education rearranged the province's 650 school districts into 74, giving each a number and a name. [1] The school districts were numbered geographically starting in the southeast corner and proceeding in a counter-clockwise pattern.
The Transition Program for Gifted Students, often called the University Transition Program (UTP), is an accelerated secondary school program for gifted students funded by the BC Ministry of Education's Provincial Resource Program with hosting, educational support and financial assistance from the University of British Columbia (UBC), and administered by the Vancouver School Board in Vancouver ...
Yukon and the Northwest Territories primarily follows the British Columbia curriculum. [2] [3] Meanwhile, Nunavut primarily follows the Alberta curriculum. [4] Therefore, exams in these territories are developed and adjudicated by the aforementioned adjacent province but are administered by the territorial educational ministry.
Continuing Education SD20 2020000 Trail 10–12, Graduated Adult 32 Not confirmed Fruitvale Elementary School 2011005 Fruitvale K–7 390 Falcon Mr. Mike Page Glenmerry Elementary School 2011015 Trail K–7 422 Grizzly Bear Mrs. Beverly Kanda J. Lloyd Crowe Secondary School: 2011012 Trail 8–12 953 Hawk Mrs. Christine Byrd
In 1999, the BCCM Examination system [3] and subsequent syllabus [4] was established and accredited by the BC Ministry of Education. [5] The examination system allowed students in British Columbia to receive approved external credentials for Grade 11 and 12 Visual and Performing Arts upon completion of their Grade 7 and 8 piano and theory, respectively.
BCeSIS (the British Columbia Enterprise Student Information System) is the implementation of a common student information system that was used by independent schools and school districts of British Columbia, Canada. eSIS is commercial software developed by The Administrative Assistants Ltd of Ontario, Canada, that provides a foundation for a centrally hosted, web accessible student information ...