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Saskatchewan Valley School Division No. 49 Saskatoon (East) School Division No. 41 Saskatoon (West) School Division No. 42: 4 Prairie Valley School Division No. 208 [nb 10] Aspen Grove School Division No. 144 Grand Coulee School Division No. 110 Gray School Division No. 101 Eslin School Division No. 107 Pense School Division No. 98
Saskatoon Public Schools (SPS) or Saskatoon S.D. No. 13 is the largest school division in Saskatchewan serving 28,924 [3] students as of September 2024. Saskatoon Public Schools operates 47 elementary schools, one alliance school (Charles Red Hawk Elementary School on the Whitecap Dakota Nation), and 10 secondary schools in Saskatoon .
Construction of Centennial Collegiate began on June 1, 2006, and it officially opened in the fall of 2006, [3] having a total of $18.4 million invested in the construction of the school by the Saskatchewan government and the Saskatoon school division. Centennial was constructed in order to recognize Saskatchewan becoming a province and the ...
Evan Hardy Collegiate Institute is located on the east side of Saskatoon, Saskatchewan, Canada, serving students from grades 9 through 12. It is also known as Evan Hardy, Hardy, or simply EHCI. Evan Hardy Collegiate was named for noted University of Saskatchewan professor Evan Alan Hardy. The school was opened in 1966.
(b) "to receive instruction appropriate to that persons age and level of educational achievement" Education Act of Saskatchewan. through either school board system. [8] [9] The schools are divided by religion, publicly funded by a separate school board for Catholic-based education or publicly funded by a public school board or families may ...
Saskatoon's Chinatown was destroyed in the late 1920s to make room for the Saskatoon Technical Collegiate and a legion hall. [2] The Collegiate was completed in 1931. [3] On 7 November 1932 a group of unemployed men who had gathered on the school grounds was forcibly removed by a joint force of police and RCMP. [4]
Greater Saskatoon Catholic Schools (GSCS) is Saskatchewan's largest Catholic school division and the third largest school system in the province. [4]Greater Saskatoon Catholic Schools has approximately 22,000 students, [4] with 53 schools located in Saskatoon and the surrounding rural districts of Biggar, Humboldt, Martensville and Warman. [2]
It is named in honour of the Most Reverend James P. Mahoney, former Bishop of Saskatoon, in recognition of his many contributions to Catholic Education in Saskatoon. Prior to his appointment as Bishop, Mahoney was a classroom teacher at the former St. Paul's High School and E. D. Feehan Catholic High School.