Strathcona High School

Strathcona High School
(Scona)

Ut qui ministrat
As one who serves
Address
10450 - 72 Ave
Edmonton, Alberta, T6E 0Z6
Canada
Coordinates 53°30′32″N 113°29′57″W / 53.50889°N 113.49917°W / 53.50889; -113.49917Coordinates: 53°30′32″N 113°29′57″W / 53.50889°N 113.49917°W / 53.50889; -113.49917
Information
School type Public secondary
Established 1955 (campus built)
Founded 1908
School board Edmonton Public Schools
Principal Hans van Ginhoven
Grades 10–12
Enrollment 1,500
Colour(s) Scarlet and Gold         
Mascot Gaylord the Lion[1]
Website www.strathconaschool.ca

Strathcona High School, or Scona as students and staff refer to it, is a public high school located in Edmonton, Alberta. The school was referred to as Strathcona Composite High School up until 2014. The school was originally constructed to hold 1200 students, which a $455 Million renovation program expanded to 1500 students by Spring 2015. The school operated remains slightly over capacity for the 2014-2015 school year, with 1594 students in attendance.[2] Scona should not be confused with the nearby Old Scona Academic High School.

Overview

In the early 1900s, the original Strathcona High School building was built and named after Lord Strathcona, a pioneering Scottish businessman and Canadian Parliamentarian, who was very influential in the construction of the Canadian Pacific Railway.[1][3]

Strathcona Composite High School was opened in 1955 to accommodate the growing population of Edmonton. Many students from the original Strathcona High School (now known as Old Scona Academic High School) were transferred to Strathcona Composite in 1955. It is located on Edmonton’s south side just south of the Old Strathcona district on a large piece of parkland.

The school houses about 60 classrooms, several computer labs, two gymnasiums, a library media centre with networked CDs, a cafeteria, a fitness centre and a community pool operated by River City Recreation, a private contractor. Outside the school, the track team uses Rollie Miles Athletic Field. This field was also used as a training facility for the 1978 Commonwealth Games, the 2001 IAAF World Championships in Athletics, and the 2005 World Masters Games. Other facilities around the school include South Side Sports Arena, which Phys Ed classes use for the skating unit.

At the main entrance of the school, known as the Michener Entrance, an old lamp from the original Old Scona building is on during school hours and hangs over the Scona crest which, out of respect, students and staff will not walk across.

Global initiatives

Since 2008, Strathcona High School has united annually to turn the motto “as one who serves” into reality. As of 2016 students have raised over $1.3 million. By engaging in multiple local service projects and massive global initiatives, Strathcona students have had a chance to learn about servant leadership, entrepreneurship, global citizenship, and social affairs. Students in the Leadership Program work behind the scenes to plan and organize each initiative, but is the mass participation of all departments, clubs, teams and community allies that has made past campaigns successful. Below is a brief overview of previous campaigns:

Take a Spin For Chelsea (2008)

Spread the Word (2009)

Play it Forward (2010)

Not For Sale (2011)

Live Love Lend (2012)

H2All (2013)

Chain Reaction (2014)

Treehouse Project (2015)

Bike2Box (2016)

Theatre productions

Strathcona High School has a well established theatre program. In addition to the major productions listed below, the students at the school, with direction from the staff, participate in and create various other theatre projects including: OneAct Festival (plays directed by Grade 12 Students using student cast and crew), smaller scale productions by the various Drama classes, pep rallies, and in conjunction with Students Union and other student bodies, a Talent show and an Awards night.

Strathcona's Schools Productions:

Strathcona has also earned multiple Cappies awards including Outstanding musical for Footloose, West Side Story, Les Misérables, Legally Blonde, In the Heights and many other technical, dance, and acting awards.[6]

Student Theater clubs: Dance Ensemble, Technical Theatre Crew, Improv Team, OneActs, Year Play, Cappies

Athletics

Scona has a rich history of athletics not only in the Edmonton region, but at a provincial level as well. There is rarely a year the school does not have multiple sports end up as city champions.

The school fields teams in:

Badminton

Basketball (Boys and Girls, both Junior and Senior)

Cross Country

Football

Golf (Boys and Girls)

Rugby (Boys and Girls)

Soccer (Boys and Girls, both Junior and Senior)

Swimming

Track and Field

Volleyball (Boys and Girls, both Junior and Senior)

Scona's athletics programs holds various winning streaks in Edmonton's city championships including:

Academics

16 Rhodes Scholars have come from Scona. Included in this number is the first female Rhodes scholar from Alberta. Scona also has an Advanced Placement (AP) program, which is one of the largest in Canada. By completing internationally recognized exams, administered by the College Board, many Scona students earn credit that can be applied to first year University courses. Currently, the school offers AP courses in Studio Art, Biology, Calculus AB, Calculus BC, Chemistry, Physics B, English Language, English Literature, Environmental Science, Spanish Language, European History, French Language, French Literature, and German Language. Each year, Scona is represented amongst Canada's National AP Scholars by students who score high grades on five or more AP exams. In 2001 to 2008, 248 Scona students were ranked as AP Scholars; 66 of Alberta's 139 AP National Scholars were Scona Lords; and all 10 Edmonton Public Schools AP Award winners were from Strathcona.

For the 2014-2015 school year and registered enrollment for the 2015-2016 school year, Strathcona High School has the largest AP (Advanced Placement) program in Canada. AP grade averages ranked the highest in Canada, and Second in North America.

In 2012 Strathcona High School was one of 10 schools worldwide to participate in the pilot program of the AP Capstone program.[7] The program became fully operational for the 2014-15 school year, with 100 of the more than 20,000 AP schools participating.[8] Strathcona is the only school in Alberta, and one of only 15 in Canada, to participate in the program.[9]

Notable alumni

Many of Edmonton's influential community leaders, including Lois Hole and Robert Stollery, have graduated from Scona, while Ross Sheppard was its principal at one time. Recent Scona graduates continue to have strong influence as community leaders.[1]

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 http://www.canada.com/story_print.html?id=6d75d0fc-fab7-4448-80ba-fe4bd478a606&sponsor=
  2. https://epsb.ca/schools/strathcona/
  3. http://strathconaschool.ca/about/history-archive
  4. "Bike2Box". Strathcona Initiative 2016. Retrieved 18 March 2016.
  5. French, Janet (18 March 2016). "Strathcona High leads the way with charity bike-a-thon". Edmonton Journal.
  6. http://www2.canada.com/edmontonjournal/features/cappies/story.html?id=eda36003-b0d1-47a5-904b-e454019a3d18
  7. http://news.epsb.ca/tag/university-of-cambridge/ Edmonton School Board press release
  8. "Advanced Placement". Strathcona High School. Retrieved 4 February 2016.
  9. "Participating High Schools". AP Capstone. The College Board. Retrieved 4 February 2016.
  10. Zdeb, Chris (24 January 2013). "From Prairie girl to L.A. stuntwoman". Calgary Herald.
  11. "Jon Hameister-Ries - 2005 Football". University of Tulsa. Retrieved 23 August 2016.
  12. Couture, Xanthe. "Don Iveson's Favourite Teacher". The Alberta Teachers’ Association. Retrieved 23 August 2016.
  13. "History & Archive". Strathcona High School. Retrieved 23 August 2016.
  14. MacKinnon, John (28 July 2007). "A big day in Rio for River City". Edmonton Journal.
  15. Moddejonge, Gerry (4 June 2014). "Aside from a stint at St. Francis Xavier University, Eskimos LB Corbin Sharun played all his football in capital region". Edmonton Sun. Retrieved 23 August 2016.
  16. http://www.inmemoriam.ca/view-announcement-28270-robert-bob-stollery.html
  17. Hall, Vicki (28 June 2013). "Tsoumpas enters season a lean, mean machine after off-season of healthy eating". Calgary Herald. Retrieved 23 August 2016.
This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the 8/23/2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.