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Quebec has publicly funded French and English schools. In publicly funded primary and secondary schools, according to the Charter of the French Language, all students must attend a French language school, except: students with a parent who did most of their elementary or secondary studies in English in Canada and is also a Canadian citizen
This is a list of school districts in Quebec, grouped by administrative region and language. Since 2020 each french school service centre cover five school districts. List of Quebec school service centres
The school was founded in 1938 by Raoul Dandurand and other wealthy French Canadians as a Roman Catholic subsidiary of the renowned Collège Stanislas de Paris in Paris, France. Architect Jean Julien Perrault designed the campus on Dollard Boulevard in Outremont in 1941. [1] The second location in Ste.-Foy opened in 1989.
In 1991, the code for Quebec was changed from PQ to QC. Nunavut's code became effective on 13 December 2000; before this date, but after Nunavut's creation on 1 April 1999, the abbreviation "NT" was used for Nunavut as well as the Northwest Territories.
School districts in Quebec (7 C, 41 P) Pages in category "French-language school districts in Canada" The following 11 pages are in this category, out of 11 total.
The Collège international Marie de France (formerly Collège Marie de France, named after Marie de France, a French poet of the 12th century) is a French-language private international school in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. Founded in 1939 by French expatriates, the school prepares its students from age 4 to 18 for the French baccalauréat.
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Enrollment in the Eastern Shores School Board's schools and centres continues to decline as it does in most anglophone public school boards in Quebec. This is a part of an ongoing decline which began with the enactment of the Charter of the French Language (Bill 101) by René Lévesque's Parti Québécois government in 1977 [citation needed].