Calgary Board of Education

Calgary Board of Education
Calgary School District No. 19
Location
1221 – 8 Street S.W.
Calgary, Alberta, Canada

Canada
Coordinates 51°2′52″N 114°3′30″W / 51.04778°N 114.05833°W / 51.04778; -114.05833Coordinates: 51°2′52″N 114°3′30″W / 51.04778°N 114.05833°W / 51.04778; -114.05833
District information
Superintendent David Stevenson
Chair of the board Joy Bowen-Eyre
Schools 226 (2015/2016)[1]
Budget CA$1.3 billion (2015-2016) [2]
Students and staff
Students 114,500 (2015)[3]
Staff ~ 13,000 (2015)[4]
Other information
Elected trustees Joy Bowen-Eyre, wards 1, 2
Lynn Ferguson, wards 3, 4
Pamela King, wards 5, 10
Trina Hurdman, wards 6, 7
Judi Hehr, ward 8, 9
Julie Hrdlicka, wards 11, 13
Amber Stewart, wards 12, 14
Website www.cbe.ab.ca

Calgary School District No. 19 or the Calgary Board of Education (CBE) is the public school board in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. As a public system, the CBE is required to accept any students who meet age and residency requirements, regardless of religion. It was founded in 1885 as the Calgary Protestant Public School District No. 19.[5]

Size

Statues by Mario Armengol outside the CBE's former headquarters

In terms of student population and school count, the CBE is the largest school board in Alberta, and over twice the size of the other major school district board in Calgary, the Calgary Catholic School District (CCSD), which teaches mainly, but not exclusively, Catholic students. The other two districts based in the city, both Francophone, are a fraction of the size of the CBE with only a handful of schools each. In land area, the CBE is the smallest of the four Calgary districts, as its territory is limited to municipal limits of Calgary (although its area is only slightly smaller than that of the CCSD). As the city limits have expanded, the CBE boundary has remained in sync. All CBE land overlaps the other three districts.

The CBE operates 226 schools in grades K-12. Non-adult student enrollment was 111,518, there is an additional enrollment of 2,982 for continuing education which is CBE-Learn and Chinook Learning. A total Enrollment of 114,472 in Sept 2014. The operating budget was $1.3 billion for the 2015/16 fiscal year. [6]

Governance

A group of seven elected trustees govern the CBE. Each trustee represents two wards in the city. They are elected every four years, in the regular municipal election. In the election, Calgary voters can only vote for a trustee to one (not both) of the two main school boards. The last election was in October 2013. The public (CBE) and Catholic (CCSD) systems operate independently of each other, and are both under the direct authority of the provincial government of Alberta.

Long serving Trustee and Chair of the Board, Pat Cochrane declined to run in the 2013 municipal elections. Cochrane was first elected in 1999 and has devoted much effort and time to the causes of Public Education. Fellow trustee George Lane was defeated by a wide margin in Wards 6 & 7.

Special programs

The CBE operates a number of special programs, usually, but not always operated out of regular schools (with regular instruction).

The CBE operates an adult and continuing education program through Chinook Learning Services. It offers High School Upgrading, Continuing Education and adult English as a Second Language (ESL) programs.

The Louise Dean Centre is a school specifically designed for female students that become pregnant before completing high school. It provides daycare for the children, flexible schedules for the students, and special counseling.

The CBE's Gifted and Talented Education (GATE) program assists qualified students with more advanced instruction. GATE compacts and accelerates the typical curriculum. It also provides extra experts and mentors. Currently, nine CBE schools offer the GATE program.[7]

In 2003, the CBE opened the board's only all-female school, Alice Jamieson Girls' Academy. In the same year, over the board's objections, the Calgary Girls' School (CGS) public charter school was also opened; but as a charter school, CGS is run independently of the CBE. Both schools teach grades 4-9, and are founded on the premise that females learn differently from boys, and will under-perform for social reasons when in the presence of male peers.

In 2011, the CBE opened the board's first all-male alternative program, based in the Sir James Lougheed School. The program teaches grades K-5, and similar to the all-girls schools - the program is founded on the premise that boys learn differently from girls, and they may behave differently in order to meet "macho" expectations, and that they require a more active, hands-on teaching style.

French as the primary language of instruction

The board also operates a French immersion program in a limited number of schools. The program is geared mainly for English-speaking families who wish their children to become fully fluent in French. It offers early and late adoption programs.

Up until 2000, the CBE also provided French instruction (as the primary language of instruction) to children from French families (who didn't need or want immersion). When the Greater Southern Francophone School Board was formed in 2000, the CBE relinquished its authority over such schools, and handed over (what was then known as) Ecole Queen's Park (its only such school at the time) to the Francophone board.

Senior high schools

Western Canada High School is the oldest and largest school operated by the CBE

In Alberta, a senior high school teaches grades 10-12. However, some may not teach all three grades. Also, some are combined with junior high schools, which teach grades 7-9. The following is a list of senior high schools operated by the CBE as of 2005, taken from the CBE's complete list. The board divides the city into five areas.[8]

School Name Grades Area Location
Alternative High School
(at Clinton Ford Centre)
10-12 IV 5003 - 20 St. S.W.
Bowness High School 10-12 I 4627 - 77 St., N.W.
Centennial High School 10-12 V 55 Sun Valley Blvd., S.E.
Central Memorial High School 10-12 IV 5111 - 21 St., S.W.
Crescent Heights High School 10-12 II 1019 - 1 St., N.W.
Dr. E.P. Scarlett High School 10-12 V 220 Canterbury Dr., S.W.
Ernest Manning High School 10-12 IV 20 Springborough Boulevard S.W.
Forest Lawn High School 10-12 III 1304 - 44 St., S.E.
Henry Wise Wood High School 10-12 V 910 - 75 Avenue, S.W.
Jack James High School 10-12 III 5105 - 8 Avenue, S.E.
James Fowler High School 10-12 II 4004 - 4 St., N.W.
John G. Diefenbaker High School 10-12 II 6620 - 4 St., N.W.
Lester B. Pearson High School 10-12 III 3020 - 52 St. N.E.
Lord Beaverbrook High School 10-12 V 9019 Fairmount Dr., S.E.
Nelson Mandela High School 10-12 III 45 Saddletowne Circle NE
Robert Thirsk High School 10-12 I 8777 Nose Hill Drive N.W.
Sir Winston Churchill High School 10-12 I 5220 Northland Dr., N.W.
Western Canada High School 10-12 IV 641 - 17 Avenue, S.W.
William Aberhart High School 10-12 II 3009 Morley Trail, N.W.
Combined Junior and Senior High Schools
School Name Grades Area Location
Juno Beach Academy of Canadian Studies
(at Dr. Norman Bethune School )
7-12 V 315 - 86 Avenue, S.E.
Louise Dean Centre 7-12 II 120 - 23 St. N.W.
National Sport School
9-12 IV Suite 101 - 151 Canada Olympic Rd., S.W.
Queen Elizabeth Junior/Senior High School 7-12 II 512 - 18 St., N.W.
Online School
School Name Grades Area Location
CBe-learn
(at Career and Technology Centre)
7-12 All 2336 53 Avenue. S.W.
Career and Technology Centres
School Name Grades Area Location
Career and Technology Centre
(at Lord Shaughnessy High School)
7-12 All 2336 53 Avenue, S.W.

The CBE, in 2010, launched the CBE Chief Superintendent's Student Advisory Council - a group of high school students with student representation from each of the CBE's high school programs. They meet regularly with the CBE's Chief Superintendent, David Stevenson, to discuss issues in the system and propose solutions.[9]

See also

Notes

  1. List of Schools
  2. Budget Information
  3. 2015 Enrollment Count
  4. About the CBE
  5. Ward, Tom (1975). Cowtown : an album of early Calgary. Calgary: City of Calgary Electric System, McClelland and Stewart West. p. 392. ISBN 0-7712-1012-4.
  6. http://www.cbe.ab.ca/about-us/about-the-cbe/Pages/Facts-and-Figures.aspx] Facts about the CBE
  7. http://www.cbe.ab.ca/programs/spec_ed/se-gifted.asp
  8. "Area Offices - Leadership - CBE". www.cbe.ab.ca. Retrieved 2015-09-14.
  9. Empowering Student Voice Information Package.

References

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