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Marc Garneau Collegiate Institute, formerly known as Overlea Secondary School, is a high school in Toronto, Ontario, Canada within the North York area, and part of the Toronto District School Board. Until 1998, this school was part of the East York Board of Education .
North Toronto Collegiate Institute is a semestered, public high school institution with over 1,200 [3] students located in North Toronto area of Toronto, Ontario, Canada. The school is operated and governed by the Toronto District School Board. [4] From its founding until 1998, it was overseen by the Toronto Board of Education.
In the 2000s, the Toronto Catholic District School Board used the Bathurst Heights building to house the students from Brebeuf College School during re-construction and later Dante Alighieri Academy Beatrice Campus. The school's building is now leased out by the Toronto District School Board to several tenants: Swim camp; Toronto ESL Learning ...
Toronto Junction High School (1892–1903) Toronto Junction Collegiate Institute (1903–1909) School type: High school: Motto: Felix qui potuit rerum cognoscere causas. (Happy is he who knows the causes of (reasons for) things.) Founded: 1892: School board: Toronto District School Board (Toronto Board of Education) Superintendent: Sandy ...
Earl Haig Secondary School, formerly Earl Haig Collegiate Institute, is a public high school with 2,048 students in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. In addition to being a public secondary school, the school is also host to the Claude Watson Arts Program , an auditioned arts program integrated into the secondary school curriculum .
The school that would later be known as the Le Collège français was founded here in 1979, before moving to the Jarvis Collegiate in 1981. Monarch Park Collegiate is an International Baccalaureate World School, offering the IB Prep program for students in Grades 9 and 10, and the IB Diploma Programme for students in Grades 11 and 12.
The school, originally called Southview Heights Secondary School, was built in 1959. The purpose of the school was twofold: to accommodate the skyrocketing number of new students in the area, and to ease overcrowding at Northview Heights Secondary School. The school opened in September 1960. [2] It was originally slated to be a junior high ...
The school building was designed by an architectural firm, Carter, Coleman and Rankin Associates [3] and the building completed during the eight-month span. Churchill opened to its first 690 students on September 7, 1954, as the third high school in Scarborough under the founding principal, A. B. Alison.