Edmonton Public Schools

Edmonton Public Schools(legallyEdmonton School Division) is the largest public school division inEdmonton,the second largest inAlberta,and the sixth largest inCanada.The division offers a variety of alternative and special needs programs, and many are offered in multiple locations to improve accessibility for students. As a public school division, Edmonton Public Schools accepts all students who meet the age and residency requirements set out in provincial legislation.[3]

Edmonton Public Schools
Location
,Alberta,T5H 4G9
Canada
Coordinates53°33′17″N113°29′45″W/ 53.55472°N 113.49583°W/53.55472; -113.49583
District information
GradesK-12
SuperintendentDarrel Robertson
Chair of the boardTrisha Estabrooks
Schools213[1]
BudgetCA$1.296 Billion (2023–24)[1]
Students and staff
Students115,176 (2023–24)[1]
Other information
Elected trusteesSherri O'Keefe, Ward A
Marsha Nelson, Ward B
Marcia Hole, Ward C
Trisha Estabrooks, Ward D
Dawn Hancock, Ward E
Julie Kusiek, Ward F
Saadiq Sumar, Ward G
Nathan Ip, Ward H
Jan Sawyer, Ward I[2]
Websitewww.epsb.ca

Size

edit

Edmonton Public Schools operates 213 schools. There are a total of 125 elementary schools, 38 elementary/junior high schools, 5 elementary/junior/senior high schools, 26 junior high schools, 4 junior/senior high, 15 senior high schools, and 7 other educational services offered. Approximately 115,000 students attend Edmonton Public Schools and there are over 10,500 full-time staff equivalencies. The proposed operating budget is $1.296 billion for the 2023–2024 fiscal year.[1]

Governance

edit

A group of nine elected trustees sits on the board of trustees for Edmonton Public Schools. Each trustee represents one ward in the city. They are elected every four years, in the regular municipal election throughFirst-past-the-post voting.

In the election, Edmonton voters can only vote for a trustee to one (not both) of the two main school boards. The last election was held on October 18, 2021.[2]The public and Catholic systems operate independently of each other, and are both under the direct authority of the provincial government ofAlberta.

History

edit

Edmonton's first schoolhouse was built in 1881 in the Saskatchewan River valley and was in use as a school until 1904. 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 formerMcKay Avenue School(now the Edmonton Public Schools Archives and Museum). It is a Provincial Historic Resource.[4]

Edmonton Public Schools Archives and Museum

edit

Edmonton Public Schools Archives and Museumis located in the historic McKay Avenue School. The building's cornerstone was laid in 1904 by the Governor General of Canada, Lord Minto. The year 1904 marked the beginning of an important new era of growth and prosperity in Alberta, and the building was designed to reflect this importance and inspire awe and grandeur. The design included unique features such as the Ionic Romanesque pillared entranceways.

McKay Avenue School served as the site of the first two sessions of the Alberta Legislature (1906 and 1907). It was on the third floor of Assembly Hall that the important decision was made to make Edmonton the capital of Alberta.

McKay Avenue School was designated a Provincial Historic Resource in 1976. The venerable brick building had played an important role in the educational, social and political development of Edmonton and Alberta, but when in 1983 the enrolment fell to a low of 59 students the school was closed. At that time, in recognition of its importance in the early history of Edmonton and of Alberta, a history-conscious school board made a momentous decision:McKay Avenue School would be preserved to reflect the school district's past and to pass its history on to future generations.[4]

Site-Based Decision Making

edit

Edmonton Public Schools pioneered the concept of site-based decision making (decentralization) in Canada. Site-based decision making gives principals, who are ultimately responsible for everything that goes on in their schools, the authority, the financial resources and the flexibility to make decisions based on the individual needs of their schools.[5]

In 1976, the district initiated a pilot project in seven of its schools and in 1980 had expanded the concept to all of its schools. This initiative has led to Edmonton Public offering an innovative school of choice model in which students have more options as to what school they want to attend to suit their interests, and has led to the creation of many very successful alternative programs such as Vimy Ridge Academy,Old Scona AcademicandVictoria School of the Arts.[6][7][8]The Edmonton Society for Christian Education[9]andMillwoods Christian School(not part of the former) used to be private schools; however, have both also become part of Edmonton Public Schools as alternative programs.[10][11]

Today, school-based management is functioning successfully in other educational jurisdictions across Canada.[12]

Schools

edit

Edmonton Public Schools' continuum grades are commonly found in two grade level groupings: kindergarten through grade six being Elementary and grades 7 through 12 being Secondary. Further, Secondary grade groupings can be broken into Junior High (7-9) and Senior High (10-12) schools. However, there are certain schools that include more than one grade level grouping or don't conform to the grouping system.

Elementary schools

edit

Elementary Schools offer instruction from kindergarten to grade six, unless otherwise noted.[13]

  • Abbott School
  • Aldergrove School
  • Aleda Patterson School (K–3)
  • Athlone School
  • Avonmore
  • Bannerman School
  • Baturyn School
  • Beacon Heights School
  • Belgravia School
  • Belmead School
  • Belmont School
  • Belvedere School
  • Bisset School
  • Brander Gardens School
  • Brightview School
  • Brookside School
  • Caernarvon School
  • Calder School
  • Callingwood School
  • Centennial School
  • Clara Tyner School
  • Constable Daniel Woodall School
  • Coronation School
  • Crawford Plains School
  • Daly Grove School
  • Delton School
  • Delwood School
  • Donnan School
  • Dovercourt School
  • Duggan School
  • Dunluce School
  • Earl Buxton School
  • Ekota School
  • Elmwood School
  • Evansdale School
  • Forest Heights School
  • Fraser School
  • Garneau School
  • George H. Luck School
  • George P. Nicholson School
  • Glengarry School
  • Glenora School
  • Gold Bar School
  • Grace Martin School
  • Greenfield School
  • Greenview School
  • Grovenor School
  • Hazeldean School
  • Hillview School
  • Holyrood School
  • Homesteader School
  • Horse Hill School
  • Inglewood School
  • J. A. Fife School
  • Jackson Heights School
  • James Gibbons School
  • John A. McDougall School
  • John Barnett School
  • Julia Kiniski School
  • Kameyosek School
  • Keheewin School
  • Kildare School
  • King Edward School
  • Kirkness School
  • Lago Lindo School
  • Lansdowne School
  • LaPerle School
  • Lauderdale School
  • Lee Ridge School
  • Lendrum School
  • Lorelei School
  • Lymburn School
  • Lynnwood School
  • Malcolm Tweddle School
  • Malmo School
  • Mayfield School
  • McArthur School
  • McKee School
  • McLeod School
  • Meadowlark School
  • Mee-Yah-Noh School
  • Menisa School
  • Meyokumin School
  • Meyonohk School
  • Michael A. Kostek School
  • Mill Creek School
  • Minchau School
  • McKee School
  • Mount Pleasant School
  • Northmount School
  • Norwood School
  • Ormsby School
  • Overlanders School
  • Parkallen School
  • Patricia Heights School
  • Pollard Meadows School
  • Prince Charles School
  • Princeton School
  • Queen Alexandra School
  • Richard Secord School
  • Rideau Park School
  • Rio Terrace School
  • Riverdale School
  • Roberta MacAdams School
  • Rutherford School
  • Sakaw School
  • Satoo School
  • Scott Robertson School
  • Sifton School
  • Soraya Hafez School
  • Steinhauer School
  • Sweet Grass School
  • Talmud Torah School(Canada's oldest Jewish day school, and the only one in North America that is part of a public school system.)[14][15]
  • Thorncliffe School
  • Tipaskan School
  • Velma E. Baker School
  • Virginia Park School
  • Waverley School
  • Weinlos School
  • Westbrook School
  • Westglen School
  • Windsor Park School
  • Winterburn School
  • York School
  • Youngstown School

Junior high schools

edit

Junior high Schools offer instruction from grades seven to nine, unless otherwise noted.[16]

  • Allendale School
  • Avalon School
  • Britannia School
  • D. S. MacKenzie School
  • Dickinsfield School
  • Edith Rogers School
  • Hillcrest School
  • John D. Bracco School
  • Kate Chegwin School
  • Kenilworth School
  • kisêwâtisiwin School(formerly Dan Knott School)[17][18]
  • Killarney School
  • Londonderry School
  • Mary Butterworth School
  • Michael Phair School
  • Ottewell School
  • Riverbend School
  • Rosslyn School
  • S. Bruce Smith School
  • Spruce Avenue School
  • Steele Heights School
  • Thelma Chalifoux School
  • T. D. Baker School
  • Vernon Barford School
  • Westminster School
  • Westmount School

Senior High Schools

edit

Senior High Schools offer instruction for grades ten, eleven and twelve, and offer 10, 20 and 30 level courses, unless otherwise noted.[19]

Combined Schools

edit

Combined Elementary/Junior High Schools

edit

Combined Elementary/Junior High Schools offer instruction from kindergarten through grade nine, unless otherwise noted.[16]

  • A. Blair McPherson School
  • Alex Janvier School (4–9)
  • Balwin School
  • Bessie Nichols School
  • Crestwood School
  • David Thomas King School
  • Donald R. Getty School
  • Dr. Donald Massey School
  • Dr. Lila Fahlman School
  • Dr. Margaret-Ann Armour School
  • Edmonton Christian Northeast School
  • Edmonton Christian West School
  • Elizabeth Finch School
  • Ellerslie Campus School
  • Esther Starkman School
  • Florence Hallock School
  • Garth Worthington School
  • Grandview Heights School (1–9)
  • Hardisty School
  • Highlands School
  • Hilwie Hamdon School
  • Ivor Dent School
  • Jan Reimer School
  • Joey Moss School
  • Johnny Bright School
  • Kensington School
  • Kim Hung School
  • Laurier Heights School
  • Major General Griesbach School
  • McKernan School
  • Meadowlark Christian School
  • Michael Strembitsky School
  • Nellie Carlson School
  • Parkview School
  • Shauna May Seneca School
  • Stratford School
  • Svend Hansen School
  • Wîhkwêntôwin School (formerly Oliver School, renamed after Oliver neighbourhood was renamed)[20][21]

Secondary schools

edit

Secondary Schools (combined Junior/Senior High) offer instruction from grade seven through twelve, and offer 10, 20 and 30 level courses, unless otherwise noted.[16]

  • Amiskwaciy Academy
  • Braemar School (8–12) (academic programming for pregnant and parenting teens)
  • L. Y. Cairns School
  • Vimy Ridge Academy

Combined Elementary/Secondary Schools

edit

Combined Elementary/Secondary Schools offer instruction in all grade levels from kindergarten to grade twelve, and offer 10, 20 and 30 level courses, unless otherwise noted.[16]

Other schools

edit

The Learning Stores are flexible-schedule store front operations for students who are returning to school or upgrading, and the Tevie Miller Heritage School is for students with diagnosed speech and language delays, disorders or disabilities.[22]

  • Learning Store at Blue Quill (10–12)
  • Learning Store at Northgate (10–12)
  • Learning Store on Whyte (10–12)
  • Learning Store West Edmonton (10–12)
  • Tevie Miller Heritage School Program (K–6)

Programs

edit

Edmonton Public Schools offers Regular programs, Alternative programs and Special education programs.[23]

Special education programs are available at select schools and include programs for students who are academically advanced, and students who have Behaviour Disabilities, Cognitive Disabilities, Diagnosed Learning Disabilities and Academic Delays.[24]

There are more than 30 Alternative programs available with a focus on a specific type of arts, athletics, language, faith, culture or teaching philosophy. This includes: Aboriginal education, Cogito,American Sign Language,Hockey Training,Waldorfand theInternational Baccalaureate Diploma Program.[25]

Early Years Programming

edit

Early Education

edit

This program supports children with mild/moderate and severe disabilities, aged2+12to4+12years. Programming focuses on cognitive, self-help and social skills, speech and language, and motor development. Parents and staff work together to support each child.

Early Learning

edit

This program supports children3+12to4+12years of age who are English Language Learners or in need of specialized supports and services. Programming focuses on developing communication and co-operative learning skills, and is available to children attending their designated school.

Kindergarten

edit

Children who are four years of age on or before March 1 of that year, may register in Kindergarten for the upcoming school year. Children may attend their designated school or apply to a school or program of choice. Kindergarten is offered half-day in the mornings or afternoons at most elementary schools, and full-day at some elementary schools for children living in the designated attendance area.[26]

Advanced Education Programs

edit

Challenge Program [K-9]

edit

For children who have high academic standards. This program is formatted to make the learning more challenging and focuses on problem solving and inquiry skills.

Extensions Program [1-9]

edit

This program is for children with advanced intellectual abilities. These students enjoy being challenged, grasp new ideas easily, and perform far beyond their current grade level.

Academic Delay Programs

edit

Literacy Program [4-9]

edit

This program is for children for academic delays. This program focuses on literacy and numeracy.

Strategies Program [4-9]

edit

This program is for children who have diagnosed learning disabilities and a high cognitive ability. It focuses on assisting students who need extra help.

Cognitive Disabilities Programs

edit

Opportunity Program [1-12]

edit

This program assists students with mild cognitive disabilities who experience significant academic and social challenges. Programming focuses on literacy, numeracy and skills necessary for responsible independent living and employment.

Community Learning Skills Program [1-12]

edit

This program assists students with moderate cognitive disabilities. Programming focuses on assisting students to gain the independent life skills necessary for supervised living and employment.

Individual Support Program [1-12]

edit

This program assists students with severe to profound cognitive delays, including physical, sensory or behaviour disabilities. The program is designed to enhance quality of life for students and emphasizes functional life skills development.

Behavior Programs

edit

Connections Program [1-9]

edit

This program assists students with severe behaviour disabilities. Programming focuses on helping students make academic gains, learn socially acceptable behaviour and develop appropriate social skills in the classroom and community.

Connections/Opportunity Program [1-9]

edit

This program assists students with both severe behaviour and mild cognitive disabilities. Programming focuses on helping students to learn behaviour control and the pro-social, literacy and numeracy skills necessary for independence in the community.

Community Learning and Behaviour Skills Program [1-9]

edit

This program assists students with both moderate cognitive and severe behaviour disabilities. Programming focuses on helping students manage with their social, emotional and academic challenges.

Other District Centre Programs

edit

Interactions Program [1-12]

edit

This program assists students who have been clinically diagnosed within the autism spectrum. Programming focuses on assisting students to gain socially appropriate communication and behaviour patterns in the classroom and community.

Deaf and Hard Of Hearing Program [1-12]

edit

This program assists students who have a moderate to profound hearing loss. Programming focuses on helping students gain communication skills and strategies necessary to complete school and access secondary education or employment.

Bilingual and Immersion Language Programs

edit
  • American Sign Language Bilingual
  • Arabic Bilingual
  • Chinese (Mandarin) Bilingual
  • French Immersion
  • Late French Immersion (starting in Grade 7)
  • German Bilingual
  • Hebrew Bilingual
  • International Spanish Academy

[27]

Second Language Courses

edit
  • Arabic
  • American Sign Language (ASL)
  • Chinese
  • Cree
  • English as second language (ESL)
  • French
  • German
  • Japanese
  • Punjabi
  • Spanish
  • Ukrainian

All students from grades 4-9 must learn a second language.

Alternative Programs

edit
  • Aboriginal Education - Amiskwaciy Academy
  • Awasis (Cree)
  • Cree Extended
  • Academic Alternative
  • Advanced Placement
  • Arts Core
  • Caraway
  • Child Study Centre
  • Cogito
  • Dance Program
  • Edmonton Christian School
  • Logos Christian Program Schools
  • Meadowlark Christian School
  • Millwoods Christian School
  • Sports Training Programs
  • Hockey Training Program
  • Lacrosse Training Program
  • Soccer Training Program
  • Sport Recreation Program
  • Sports Alternative
  • International Baccalaureate Certificate
  • International Baccalaureate Career-Related
  • International Baccalaureate Diploma
  • International Baccalaureate Middle Years
  • International Baccalaureate Primary Years
  • Pre-Advanced Placement
  • Sakinah Circle
  • Science Alternative
  • Victoria School Of Performing And Visual Arts
  • Traditional

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^abcd"Facts and Stats".Edmonton Public Schools.Retrieved14 October2024.
  2. ^ab"Board of Trustees".Edmonton Public Schools.Retrieved16 February2022.
  3. ^"Education Act 2012, cE‑0.3 s3; Education Act 2019, c7 s4".Queen's Printer, Alberta. 17 September 2012.Retrieved9 February2022.
  4. ^ab"History".Archived fromthe originalon February 13, 2013.RetrievedJuly 17,2013.
  5. ^"AASA | American Association of School Administrators".aasa.org.Retrieved2020-04-09.
  6. ^"Alternative Programs Handbook"(PDF).Edmonton Public Schools.April 5, 2016. Archived fromthe original(PDF)on March 3, 2019.RetrievedMarch 31,2020.
  7. ^"The Development of School-Based Management in the Edmonton Public School District".mun.ca.Retrieved2020-03-31.
  8. ^French, Janet (August 27, 2016)."Retired Edmonton school superintendent bets he can overhaul massive Las Vegas school system".edmontonjournal.Archivedfrom the original on 2016-08-27.Retrieved2020-03-31.
  9. ^Edmonton Society for Christian Education."Edmonton Society for Christian Education".Archived fromthe originalon September 25, 2012.RetrievedFebruary 28,2009.
  10. ^Edmonton Society for Christian Education."Edmonton Society for Christian Education".Archived fromthe originalon September 25, 2012.RetrievedApril 18,2010.
  11. ^Millwoods Christian School."Millwoods Christian School".Archived fromthe originalon January 25, 2010.RetrievedApril 18,2010.
  12. ^Kostek, M.A. (1992). A century and ten: The history of Edmonton Public Schools. Edmonton, AB: Edmonton Public Schools.
  13. ^"Elementary Schools".Edmonton Public Schools.Retrieved15 October2024.
  14. ^"Talmud Torah School".Jewish Federation of Edmonton.Retrieved16 October2024.
  15. ^"Welcome to Talmud Torah School".Talmud Torah School.Edmonton Public Schools.Retrieved16 October2024.
  16. ^abcd"Junior High Schools".Edmonton Public School.Retrieved15 October2024.
  17. ^"kisêwâtisiwin: Dan Knott junior high given new Indigenous name".edmontonjournal.May 17, 2022.Archivedfrom the original on 2022-05-18.Retrieved2022-07-12.
  18. ^Gibson, Caley (May 17, 2022)."Southeast Edmonton junior high school renamed to kisêwâtisiwin School".Global News.Archivedfrom the original on 2022-05-18.Retrieved2022-07-12.
  19. ^"Senior High Schools".Edmonton Public Schools.Retrieved15 October2024.
  20. ^"Celebrating the newly renamed Wîhkwêntôwin School".Edmonton Public Schools. 9 April 2024.Retrieved16 October2024.
  21. ^Bartko, Karen (9 April 2024)."Edmonton's Oliver School renamed wîhkwêntôwin School".Global News.Retrieved16 October2024.
  22. ^"Other Schools".Edmonton Public Schools.Retrieved15 October2024.
  23. ^"Special Education Needs".Edmonton Public Schools.RetrievedJanuary 15,2018.
  24. ^"Learning Guide"(PDF).Edmonton Public Schools.RetrievedJanuary 15,2018.
  25. ^"Alternative Programs"(PDF).Edmonton Public Schools.RetrievedJanuary 15,2018.
  26. ^"Early years".Edmonton Public Schools.RetrievedJanuary 15,2018.
  27. ^"Programming: Language and Culture".Edmonton Public Schools.RetrievedJanuary 15,2018.
edit