This article needs additional citations for verification .(July 2009) |
Burnaby North Secondary School | |
---|---|
Address | |
751 Hammarskjold Drive , , Canada | |
Coordinates | 49°16′40″N122°58′19″W / 49.27778°N 122.97194°W |
Information | |
Motto | Excellence, Discovery, Service |
Established | 1922 [1] (101 years old) |
School board | Burnaby School District 41 |
Area trustee | Jen Mezei (Brentwood North Zone) |
Principal | Curtis Hodgson [2] |
Enrollment | 1707 (September 2019 [3] ) |
Colour(s) | Maroon and gold |
Mascot | Vikings |
Vice principal(s) | Barry Callister, Maria Nickolidakis [2] |
Website | north |
Burnaby North Secondary School is a secondary school in Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada. It encompasses two buildings at 751 Hammarskjold Drive in Burnaby. Nearly 1,800 students from grades 8 to 12 attend the school. [4] A statue of a Viking head, the mascot of the school's sports teams, stands in front of the two buildings. Burnaby North Secondary School is nestled in Kensington Park, providing room for the school's ice rink, 18 hole pitch and putt golfing centre, outdoor swimming pool, three tennis courts, four baseball diamonds, softball diamond, an artificial turf field, six-lane 400 metre concrete track and field tracks, and two outdoor natural grass fields. It is the largest school by population and school area in the school district of Burnaby School District 41.
Burnaby North was established in 1922 with around 50 students. Before moving to its present site, it was housed on Willingdon Avenue, which later became Burnaby Heights Junior Secondary, when it moved to the Hammarksjold location, which was built by Coyne and Ratcliffe Construction and completed in 1962.[ citation needed ] In 1982, Kensington Junior Secondary School (Crusaders) and Burnaby North Senior Secondary School (Vikings) were merged as one.[ citation needed ]
The project to merge Kensington Jr and Burnaby North Sr into Burnaby North Secondary began in the 1981/1982 school year. The objective was to see if money could be saved by sharing the resources and staff between the two schools.[ citation needed ] The former Kensington was referred as the "South Building" and Burnaby North Sr. was referred to as the "North Building". A wheelchair access elevator was added in 1983 to the North Building's east entrance.[ citation needed ]
To accommodate the merged schools, two connections were built. A level sheltered walkway was constructed to connect the ground-level south-facing entrance of the North Building to the second floor of the southwestern entrance of the South Building, and a wooden staircase was built on a hill to provide access from the North Building's east entrance to the South Building's ground-level north entrance. The latter was replaced by a sheltered walkway that had a more gradual slope to accommodate accessibility.[ citation needed ]
In 2010, the school was named Canada's Greenest School. [5]
In 2017, the British Columbia Ministry of Education announced that the school would undergo a program to seismically mitigate and upgrade all buildings (under the British Columbia Ministry of Education Seismic Mitigation Program). On 12 October 2018, the British Columbia Ministry of Education officially announced funding for a complete rebuild of the current campus totaling CA$79.2 million. Construction was slated to be complete for September 2021, to coincide with the 100th anniversary of Burnaby North Secondary School. [6]
On 4 October 2019, controversy erupted at Burnaby North when news articles and reports surfaced of an incident involving the 2019–20 Hong Kong protests. A student allegedly placed a "Free Hong Kong" poster with the Chinese characters for "Hong Kong democracy" on their school locker. The poster was ripped down multiple times by a number of unknown students. Subsequently, a male student pushed the fellow female student in a "shoving incident". This resulted in a confrontation "more physical than we would like to see", said Principal David Rawnsley. School staff broke up the incident, and all students and their parents were notified. [7]
In July 2020, construction work began to build a new school campus building with a capacity for 1,800 students and space for child care, adult education, and language development programs. [8] Construction was finished in January 2024. [9]
Burnaby North is a highly academic school which enrolls a population of over 2000 students in grades 8 through grade 12. The student body is composed of students from many ethnic backgrounds, although most are of East-Asian descent. The graduating class consists of approximately 450 to 500 students on average, many of whom are offered scholarships to attend well-known universities. Ivy League admission rates are very high in comparison to other Canadian public high schools;[ citation needed ] Burnaby North alumni have attended institutions such as Harvard University, Yale University, Princeton University and the University of Pennsylvania. In recent years[ which? ], Burnaby North graduates have won more than a million dollars in scholarship money annually.[ citation needed ]
In 2010, the eight high schools in the district earned almost $7.3 million in scholarship money. Burnaby North came in second place in the district, earning $1.2 million, $1.16 million of which came externally. [10]
Burnaby North has one of the largest Advanced Placement (AP) programs in Canada. Over 30% of the student body is enrolled in at least one Honours or AP course. [11] In May 2007, 297 students wrote a total of 687 exams in 17 subject areas and a score of 3 or higher was earned on 86% of those exams, and 104 students achieved AP Scholar status, indicating they had scored 3 out of a possible 5 on at least 3 AP exams. This indicates quite early that the program is not only large, but is also of high quality. In 2007, a total of 31 students achieved National AP Scholar status, the highest standing which requires an average score of 4 over five or more exams, surpassing the previous year's record of 18 and setting a national record. In 2008, a total of 97 students became AP Scholars, and 35 students achieved National AP Scholar status, again surpassing the previous year's record and setting a national record. In 2009, there were 86 AP Scholars and 23 National AP Scholars. [12]
In October 2013, Burnaby North announced that it would be offering the Advanced Placement (AP) Capstone Diploma starting in the 2014–15 school year. [13] This is a pilot program that was then offered in only a handful of schools worldwide.
Burnaby North also offers a very well established Career Preparation program through which students go out on work experience for between 30 and 90 hours. The goal is to introduce students to the world of work and to enable students to explore a career area that is of interest to them. Burnaby North is at the leading edge of the latest industry training programs (ACE-IT) that enable students to complete the first year theory exams and a portion of the on-the-job training requirements of an apprenticeship program.
Burnaby North currently offers a Hockey Academy, a Soccer Academy, and a Basketball Academy program. Several NHL players have attended this school, most notably Joe Sakic, Cliff Ronning, Mike Santorelli, and Ryan Nugent-Hopkins.
The school has a competitive volleyball team, which has several provincial titles, and a competitive swimming team, which has won multiple district titles and often places high at the provincial level. The school has very talented soccer teams as well, both boys' and girls'. Burnaby North is also well known for their table tennis team, which has won numerous provincial titles.
Burnaby North has a competitive cheerleading team which performs at school events and competitions, including the Sea to Sky International Cheerleading Championships. This competition is the second largest in North America.
While Burnaby North is considered a highly academic school, its music program is also renowned. In the summer of 2015, the band director, Peter Wenzek, who ran the concert bands, the orchestra, and the marching band, left Burnaby North to teach elementary students. The jazz bands, concert bands, marching band, and orchestra are taught by Alley Steiger. [14]
The school's concert and jazz band programs are the largest in Western Canada, and are often invited to national music festivals, such as the Kiwanis Music Festival. The school's marching band, well known for their maroon uniforms and Viking headwear, are often invited to participate in the Calgary Stampede [15] and other national events. New uniforms for the marching band were introduced in June 2012 during the annual Hats Off Day Parade. The band won gold in the large ensemble and orchestra classes of the 2015 Vancouver Kiwanis Music Festival.
Burnaby North's Viking Head statue was installed in 1994. The enormous black head wearing a two-horned helmet and facing Union Street was built by the school's Technology Education wing's welding staff and students. Traditionally, it is decorated with a Santa hat every Christmas season, and bunny ears during Easter. During the 2010 Winter Olympics in Vancouver, it was covered with a red and white tuque and scarf, the national colours of Canada.
Burnaby North was used for the public service announcement-style commercial of Metroid Prime 2: Echoes that was shown in North America.
The movie Hot Rod had scenes filmed at the outside stairway location.[ citation needed ]
Burnaby is a city in the Lower Mainland region of British Columbia, Canada. Located in the centre of the Burrard Peninsula, it neighbours the City of Vancouver to the west, the District of North Vancouver across the confluence of the Burrard Inlet with its Indian Arm to the north, Port Moody and Coquitlam to the east, New Westminster and Surrey across the Fraser River to the southeast, and Richmond on the Lulu Island to the southwest.
Walter Johnson High School is a public upper secondary school located in the census-designated place of North Bethesda, Maryland. The school was founded in 1956 and named after Walter Johnson, a famous baseball player who was also a native of Montgomery County, Maryland. The high school was the first to be named after a player of Major League Baseball. WJHS serves portions of Bethesda, North Bethesda, Potomac, and Rockville, as well as the towns of Garrett Park and Kensington. It is a part of Montgomery County Public Schools (MCPS).
The British Columbia Institute of Technology, is a public polytechnic institute in Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada. The technical institute has five campuses located in the Metro Vancouver region, with its main campus in Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada. There is also the Aerospace Technology Campus in Richmond, the Marine Campus in the City of North Vancouver, Downtown campus in Vancouver, and Annacis Island Campus in Delta. It is provincially chartered through legislation in the College and Institute Act. The school operates as a vocational and technical school, offering apprenticeships for the skilled trades and diplomas and degrees in vocational education for skilled technicians and workers in professions such as engineering, accountancy, business administration, broadcast/media communications, digital arts, nursing, computing, medicine, architecture, and law.
Sir Winston Churchill Secondary School is a public secondary school located in Vancouver, British Columbia. Churchill Secondary is one of three International Baccalaureate schools and one of three French immersion secondary schools in Vancouver. It is named after Winston Churchill, the former prime minister of the United Kingdom. Churchill has the largest student body population in district 39 with about 2000 students in the campus.
Woburn Collegiate Institute is a semestered, English-language public secondary school on Ellesmere Road in the Woburn neighbourhood of the Scarborough district of Toronto, Ontario, Canada operated by the Toronto District School Board. From its inception in 1963 until 1998, it was operated by the Scarborough Board of Education.
North Sydney Girls' High School is a government-funded single-sex academically selective secondary day school for girls, located in Crows Nest, in Sydney, New South Wales, Australia.
Sentinel Secondary School is a secondary school located in West Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. It is one of three public secondary schools in the West Vancouver district including West Vancouver Secondary School and Rockridge Secondary School. The school is the only school in the West Vancouver district featuring French immersion program. The school has a grass field, two baseball diamonds, three street hockey courts, and three tennis courts. The main field is used for some outdoor sports, such as soccer, football, baseball, and rugby. There are also two gyms and a weight room.
Killarney Secondary School is a public secondary school in Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. It is the largest public secondary school in the city by area. The school and the neighbourhood it is located in are named after Killarney, Ireland.
Handsworth Secondary School is a high school in the district of North Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada, and part of School District 44 North Vancouver. As of September 2023, the school reported 1,487 students enrolled in Grades 8–12, the largest school in the North Vancouver School District. On January 15, 2018, it was announced that construction of a new school to replace the existing 57 year old building was expected to start in 2019. The construction was delayed and started in March 2020. The new school began operation on February 7, 2022.
Point Grey stəywəte:n̓ Secondary School, previously called Point Grey Secondary School, is a public secondary school located in the Kerrisdale and Shaughnessy neighbourhoods of Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada.
École Secondaire Belmont Secondary School is a secondary school located in Langford, a western suburb of Victoria, British Columbia, Canada. It is one of three secondary schools in School District 62 Sooke. It serves the suburban West Shore area of Colwood, Highlands, Langford, and Metchosin. It currently stands as the largest Secondary School by student population, on Vancouver Island.
Moscrop Secondary School is a publicly operated secondary school in Burnaby, British Columbia. The school serves grades eight through twelve and currently has an enrollment of about 1500 students. It is one of the three high schools in School District 41 to offer the French Immersion program.
Pitt Meadows Secondary School (PMSS) is a public high school in Pitt Meadows, British Columbia, part of School District 42 Maple Ridge-Pitt Meadows. The school was founded in 1961 and celebrated its 50th anniversary with an open house on September 30, 2011. It is one of two high schools a part of SD42 that has a French Immersion program from grades 8-12.
St. Thomas More Collegiate, commonly abbreviated as STMC, or just STM, is an independent private school located in Burnaby, British Columbia, Canada.
Cullman High School is the only public high school in the city of Cullman, Alabama as well as the largest high school in Cullman County, Alabama. The school is classified as a 6A school and belongs to the Cullman City School District.
William Lyon Mackenzie Collegiate Institute is a semestered high school located in Toronto, Canada. The school was opened in 1960 by the North York Board of Education. It is located near Sheppard Avenue West and Allen Road, close to Sheppard West subway station.
Westmount High School is a public co-educational anglophone secondary school located in Westmount, Quebec, Canada, located near Alexis Nihon Complex Shopping Mall.
Notre Dame Regional Secondary is a co-ed Catholic Secondary school, under the administration of Catholic Independent Schools Vancouver Archdiocese (CISVA) school board in Canada. The school participates in sporting events under the name of the "Jugglers", with the team colours of blue, white and silver.
Dr. E.P. Scarlett High School is a public senior high school located in Calgary, Alberta, Canada. The school was named after Earle Parkhill Scarlett, a Calgary physician, educator, scholar and writer. The school is run by the Calgary Board of Education. The school graduates around c. 500 Grade 12 students every year, with a 91% graduation rate. Scarlett is located on Elbow Drive and Canterbury Drive, and is one of few high schools servicing the deep south districts. Scarlett has the largest and most established AP program in the city and hosts French Immersion and Spanish bilingual programs.
Ryan Jarromie Noel Nugent-Hopkins is a Canadian professional ice hockey player and alternate captain for the Edmonton Oilers of the National Hockey League (NHL). Nicknamed "Nuge" by Oilers fans, Nugent-Hopkins was selected first overall by the Oilers in the 2011 NHL Entry Draft.