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Four school boards provide public elementary and secondary education to resident pupils of Etobicoke. The four school boards operate as either English or French first language school boards, and as either secular or separate school boards. In addition to elementary and secondary schools, Etobicoke is also home to two public post-secondary ...
This is a list of elementary schools in the Toronto District School Board (TDSB). The TDSB is Canada's largest school board and was created in 1998 by the merger of the Board of Education for the City of York, the East York Board of Education, the North York Board of Education, the Scarborough Board of Education, the Etobicoke Board of Education and the Toronto Board of Education.
The school opened originally as a small elementary school called Fairhaven Public School that opened in 1954. SEE school began in 1971 as one of two alternative schools in the Etobicoke School Board. When the government of Mike Harris merged the Toronto area school boards and sharply cut budgets in 1998, the school was threatened with closure. [2]
Etobicoke 379: CALC Secondary School: Toronto 552: Central Etobicoke High School: Etobicoke 141: City School: Toronto 120: Contact Alternative School: Toronto 183: Delphi Secondary Alternative School: Scarborough 118: Drewry Secondary School: North York 118: East York Alternative Secondary School: East York 121: Eastdale Collegiate Institute ...
As the Toronto Catholic District School Board does not operate an arts school in Etobicoke, Father John Redmond was chosen as the Catholic board's Regional Arts Centre on June 12, 2005. The school serves Catholic students from the former Lakeshore Municipalities (Mimico, New Toronto, Long Branch) in southern Etobicoke.
Vincent Massey Junior School (Vincent Massey JS, VMJS or Massey), formerly Daisy Avenue Public School is located at 68 Daisy Avenue in the Long Branch area of Etobicoke, Ontario, Canada. This school has kindergarten through grade five. The property was owned by the Toronto District School Board and was sold to a developer in 2017. [1]
The Etobicoke Board of Education was formed in 1949. Around that period the district had over 50,000 students. [2] The board expanded through the mergers of three small lakeside municipalities — the Village of Long Branch, the Town of New Toronto, and the Town of Mimico — to form the borough of Etobicoke in 1967.
KMCI, Etobicoke’s twentieth and final conventional high school, was constructed in 1970 and opened its doors in September 1971. This school, like most schools in Etobicoke, was design by Gordon Adamson and Associates Architects. Its architecture reminds one of a factory - specifically, there is a distinct lack of windows.