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Harry Ainlay High School is a high school located in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada, in the Royal Gardens neighbourhood, south of Whitemud Drive on 111 Street. The school is operated by the Edmonton Public School System and has a wide variety of educational opportunities for students, including full French Immersion instruction, the International Baccalaureate Program (designated an IB school since ...
The Coralwood Adventist Academy Tigers are a member of the Edmonton School Athletics association. They compete in Tier 3 in girls volleyball, boys basketball, and boys and girls flag football. Coralwood also regularly participates in tournaments hosted by Burman University and by the Canadian Adventist Schools Athletics association. Their ...
The wooden-frame building was the first free public school in Alberta, and sometimes served as a courthouse and meeting hall. The school building was restored as an Edmonton Public Schools' centennial project in 1982, and has been moved to the grounds of the former McKay Avenue School (now the Edmonton Public Schools Archives and Museum). It is ...
The Edmonton Catholic School Division currently operates 96 schools. [1] There are a total of 1 pre-K school, 49 elementary schools, 21 elementary/junior high schools, 2 elementary/junior/senior high schools (not counting the Kisiko Awasis Kiskinhamawin in Mountain Cree Camp as the school is managed outside the ECSD main budget), 12 junior high schools, 1 junior/senior high school, 9 senior ...
Tempo School is a K-12 private school in the Riverbend neighbourhood of Edmonton, Alberta. It was founded upon the idea that the education of children is the responsibility of parents. The name of the school TEMPO is an acronym of its Latin motto: Tota Edocenda Maxime Parentum Officium (“all teaching is pre-eminently the duty of parents”).
The school was founded in January 1919 as Edmonton Central School. It catered for both girls and boys, but originally they were taught in separate buildings. In 1922, Middlesex County Council took over the school from the Municipal Borough of Edmonton , and changed its name to Edmonton County Secondary School.
The Edmonton Public Schools Archives and Museum is in the McKay Avenue School. [4] The organization is a public research facility housing records and artifacts related to Edmonton Public Schools . It also offers curriculum-based, hands-on education programs for students and a museum highlighting the history of Edmonton Public Schools and ...
The following is a list of schools that operated as part of the Canadian Indian residential school system. [nb 1] [1] [2] The first opened in 1828, and the last closed in 1997. [3] [4] [5] These schools operated in all Canadian provinces and territories except Prince Edward Island, and New Brunswick. [6]