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Bur Oak Secondary School (BOSS) is a public secondary school in Markham, Ontario, Canada established in 2007, and is part of the York Region District School Board. [1] The school was named after the road which it is built on, which in turn is named for the city of Markham's official tree, the Bur oak . [ 4 ]
Currently, the projected number of people for that year is to be 1650, a drop of about 450 students from the 2006/2007 year. This will occur as a result of another high school's (Bur Oak Secondary School) territory overlapping with Markham District's current boundaries. The school fields are now located to the rear of the old school site.
Bill Crothers Secondary School; Bill Hogarth Secondary School; Bur Oak Secondary School; D. Dr. John M. Denison Secondary School; E. Emily Carr Secondary School; H.
Seven schools have armed student resource officers; staff will have capability to call for a lockdown; students' social media use is Gaggle-monitored. Safety of students, staff No. 1 priority in ...
French Immersion school Bayview Secondary School: Richmond Hill: 1960 1,766 International Baccalaureate school Bill Crothers Secondary School: Markham: 2008 1,556 Athletics focused Bill Hogarth Secondary School: Markham: 2017 1,607 Bur Oak Secondary School: Markham: 2007 1,559 Offers various SHSM programs Dr. G.W. Williams Secondary School ...
A massive bur oak in Lexington that had lived through hundreds of years of storms, droughts and human development finally succumbed to Friday’s powerful winds. ‘Famous’ 300-year-old bur oak ...
The school is named after Bill Hogarth, a former teacher and director of the York Region District School Board. [4] Construction of the school was delayed by rain from April to July 2017, necessitating the school's opening being delayed from September to November 2017. [5] During those months, students attended the nearby Bur Oak Secondary ...
Construction of Pierre Elliott Trudeau HS commenced in June 2001. The school opened on September 3, 2002 with 500 students in grade 7, 8, 9 and 10. The grade 7 and 8 students were from Castlemore Public School, a designated feeder school, and were segregated from the high school students. The Class of 2005 was the first graduating class.