Alternative Pupil Placement for Limited Expelled Students

Alternative Pupil Placement for Limited Expelled Students
A.P.P.L.E.
formerly St. Martin Catholic School
Address
55 Salisbury Avenue
Toronto, Ontario, M4X 1C5
Canada
Coordinates 43°40′03″N 79°21′53″W / 43.6674333°N 79.3646167°W / 43.6674333; -79.3646167Coordinates: 43°40′03″N 79°21′53″W / 43.6674333°N 79.3646167°W / 43.6674333; -79.3646167
Information
School type Catholic expulsion alternative High school
Catholic elementary school
Religious affiliation(s) Catholic
Founded 2005
School board Toronto Catholic District School Board
Superintendent Rory McGuckin
Safe Schools, APPLE, Parent and Community Engagement
John Shanahan
Area 6
Area trustee Jo-Ann Davis
Ward 9
School number 222 / 824178
Principal Tracey Parish
Grades 7-12
Language English
Public transit access TTC:
North/South: 65 Parliament
West/East: 94 Wellesley
Rapid Transit: Castle Frank
Parish Our Lady of Lourdes
Website www.tcdsb.org/school/AlternativeLearningCentres/Pages/default.aspx

The Alternative Pupil Placement for Limited Expelled Students (acronym A.P.P.L.E.) is a high school located in the Cabbagetown neighbourhood of Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It is part of the Toronto Catholic District School Board program for students who are on a limited expulsion. Backed by Monsignor Fraser College, this program provides a flexible and individualized alternative setting for youth 16 years of age and older who are at risk and are experiencing halted success with the regular secondary school system.[1]

As St. Martin

St. Martin Catholic School is a former Catholic elementary school from 1920–2002. It has a long history of serving the Catholic children in the Cabbagetown area of Toronto.

Over the years the students have been alternately served by the pastors of St. Paul's and Our Lady of Lourdes' churches. In 1995 the boundaries were expanded to allow more children to attend St. Martin. Most of these students came from Our Lady of Lourdes Catholic School. For most of the school's history, the teaching staff consisted mainly of Loretto and Ursuline nuns. In the last few decades, lay teachers have replaced the nuns in staffing the school. It was closed in 2002 and are part of the Our Lady of Lourdes community.[2]

See also

References

  1. A.P.P.L.E. Program at St. Martin's School/
  2. "St. Martin Catholic School". Web.archive.org. 2001-02-13. Archived from the original on February 13, 2001. Retrieved 2013-07-14.

External links

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