Thornlea Secondary School

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Thornlea redirects here, for other uses, see Thornlea (disambiguation)
Thornlea Secondary School
Address
8075 Bayview Ave.
Thornhill, Ontario, L3T 4N4, Canada
Information
School number 947814
School board York Region District School Board
Superintendent Helen Fox
Area trustee Susan Geller
Principal David Selby
Vice principal Terri Williamson
Sheila Hetherington
Rod Armstrong
School type Public High school
Grades 9 to 12
Language English
Area Thornhill
Motto Think and be thought of.
Colours Purple, White and Black
Founded 1968
Enrollment 1,800 (September, 2006)
Homepage thornlea.sharpschool.com

Thornlea Secondary School is a public high school that opened in 1969 and is located in Thornhill, Ontario, Canada, on the north east corner Bayview Avenue and Willowbrook Road, north of the Steeles Avenue border dividing the city of Toronto and the municipality of York Region. It is a well known fact that anyone who attended Thornlea before 2002 had a great time during their high school career. The school was, and still is very well known for its use of marijuana. The school was considered very open, where the students could really do whatever they want. Many students were seen smoking pot on the grass outside the school on a daily basis. This continued until cameras were set up inside and outside of the high school in the early 2000's.

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[edit] Extracurricular Life

Due to the demographic composition of the area, Thornlea boasts a highly multicultural population, and is generally not considered by its students to be a stereotypical high school, in that there are few jocks, cheerleaders, or nerds in the sense so often depicted in American popular culture. Rather, the emphasis among even the more "popular" members of the student body tends to be on community work and academic achievement. Thornlea students often play key roles in the social activist life of Thornhill, and have, in the past, helped organize the Terry Fox Run, as well as the Walk Against Male Violence. The school began in the '70s as somewhat of an educational experiment. The curriculum was unique, varied and highly specialised, following a trimester system, and students were encouraged to address their teachers by their first names and focus on independent learning. The school attracted innovative teachers and self-directed students. Gradually, this model gave way to a more traditional, but still high-achieving academic environment.

Generally, the school is known externally for its support for social causes. The school, which in the mid-'90s had an enrolment of over 2300 students and a staff of perhaps 150, was once known for its Grade 9 and 10 Gifted Program, Talented Athlete Program, musicals and other arts programs, all of which were cut or starved in the late '90s as a result of political pressures in the Board, and ostensibly an effort to lower the student population. This era saw the retirement or transfer of many dedicated teachers, the firing and hiring of new department heads, frequent curriculum changes, and the discontinuing of many specialty courses as the OAC program (Grade 13) was eliminated.

Thornlea also boasts a thriving artistic community, with many prominent Canadian musicians among its alumni, including the groups The Philosopher Kings, Prozzak, Courtesy Blush, By Divine Right, hHead, Hayden, and Moxy Früvous. Most of its more active extracurricular organizations are arts-oriented rather than athletics-oriented, the two most prominent arguably being the Drama Club and the Music Council. Despite occasional friction between members, the two organizations have been known to collaborate on intra-scholastic events and concerts. Notable quasi-annual examples of such events are known as Thornstock, and An Evening of the Arts. The Thornlea Lights Sets Sound (TLSS) committee also plays an instrumental role in the organization and orchestration of the school's extracurricular activities, as it is accountable for the technical work that many of the aforementioned events necessitate: for instance, the operation of audio-visual equipment, stage set-ups, mechanical labour and assistance, and so on.

Thornleas's Drama Department has a tradition of ambitious projects, including a weekly show called Maxwell's House that the OAC students put together in 2001-2002 as their collective graduating project. Sets, scripts, direction, stage managing, and acting were all undertaken by the students, and their show was free every week. It was a popular event that drew not only students either skipping or on a spare, but also field trips from other schools.

Other prominent groups in Thornlea include a yearbook committee, an anime club, an environment club, art and film clubs, a prom committee, and a local chapter of the Distributive Education Clubs of America (DECA). The school has a tradition of student and teacher activism on certain humanitarian-related issues. In January 2005, after the Tsunami Disaster in South-East Asia, a group of students quickly got together and organized a fundraising drive that collected over $5000 in less than a week.

Most student events at Thornlea are organized by Thornlea Student Association Council (TSAC). TSAC consists of six executive members and three appointed directors as well as three representatives from each grade. TSAC's major events include Thornstock, an end of year music festival, Some Wonderful Entertainment (SWE), and Hip Hop Away From Violence, a charity hip hop concert.

In the late 1990s, Thornlea students published a newspaper called Deadline. This paper, unfortunately, was discontinued the year after its editor-in-chief graduated. During the 2001-2002 school year, the Music Council funded the publication of an arts-oriented paper called Volume, which again was discontinued after the graduation of its entire editorial staff at the end of that year. A new publication known as Ka-boom has recently been founded, the latest in Thornlea's turbulent but prolific tradition of student journalism. Past student publications included Shonen Knife and Thornlea RAW.

For a short time, in the early 1980s, Thornlea was the hub of a student-driven journalism movement that published a newspaper called "The Underground." The paper only published a handful of editions before school administrators discovered the identities of those involved, and shut it down.

[edit] Academic Life

For all of its extracurricular idiosyncrasies, Thornlea is by all accounts a reasonably paradigmatic Canadian high school with departments in a fairly standard set of subject areas. Alongside traditional disciplinary staples such as English, mathematics, science (chemistry, physics, and biology), and social science (divided evenly between history and geography), Thornlea also offers courses in the fine arts, music (vocal, choral, orchestral, wind ensemble and jazz), drama, and design and technology. A survey course in philosophy that is generally popular among Thornlea seniors has also been offered inconsistently over the years, depending upon the availability of a qualified instructor. A variety of popular creative writing courses have also been offered over the years, again, the existence of which has typically been a function of instructor interest and availability.

Students from Thornlea have been known to perform extremely well in provincial competitions in the sciences, such as the Ontario Biology Competition, hosted by the University of Toronto, and various mathematics and engineering competitions hosted by the University of Waterloo. Business students have also done extremely well, with Thornlea sending many to the DECA international finals over the years, as well as having many students achieve high scores on the ¢OIN CA Challenge accounting contest, run by the Institute of Chartered Accountants of Ontario. In addition, Thornlea has been recognized as claiming the top prize for several years in Wilfrid Laurier University's Stock Market Competition. Thornlea's also has an excellent Modern Languages department, as evidenced by its students' consistently high scores in regional and provincial French competitions over the past decade.

The acceptance rate of Thornlea graduates into post-secondary institutions, in general, is quite high. Whether this is due to rigorous academic standards at Thornlea itself, Thornlea students' own peculiar diligence, or the overall socio-economic privilege of the community is largely a matter of speculation.


Wilfrid Laurier University's Stock Market Competition Winnings:

  • Fall 2005 - Jason Snow (National Champions)
  • Winter 2005 - Liran Tal and Richard Srour (National Champions)
  • Winter 2005 - Jon Fishman, Jason Snow and Jaynie Rovet (Ontario Regional Awarads, Ontario - Greater Toronto Area)
  • Fall 2004 - Sarah Bleiwas, Turbo Kwok and Phillip Keung (National Champions)
  • Fall 2004 - Andrew Linzon, Jaclyn Weintraub, Daniel Modarres, John Hu and Natasha Fernandes (Ontario Regional Awarads, Ontario - Greater Toronto Area)

[edit] Criticisms

Overpopulation is yet another serious challenge faced by the Thornlea community. Since the school's construction in the late 1960s, the population of the surrounding municipality has ballooned due to both immigration and urban sprawl. The rapidly expanding middle-class towns of Richmond Hill, Markham and Vaughan have led to a corresponding increase in wealthy students, while emigration from Milliken Mills, Scarborough and other peripheral areas in the former Metropolitan Toronto has led to a somewhat smaller demographic increase of substantially less privileged students.

The physical structure of the building itself has been the target of many complaints, notably due to its poor internal ventilation, and its noticeable lack of exterior windows (there are windows inside the school). This architectural peculiarity is accounted for by the fact that Thornlea was originally intended to be a prototype for an educational model where extrinsic stimuli (such as vegetation, the sky, wildlife) are minimized, while intrinsic stimuli (such as bookshelves, other students in class, computer terminals) are maximized. The idea was that students would then be less distracted and more psychologically conditioned to focus on their studies during the day. At some point the experiment was abandoned, and finally, to the delight of students and staff alike, a new southern wing was built during the 2000-2001 school year, complete with windows for every classroom that has an externally facing wall.

[edit] Thornlea Lore

The Thornlea experience has spawned a class of expressions that have attained metonymic and in certain cases eponymous status among Thornhill residents. Examples include:

  • The Graduation Hall: Lined with composite graduation photos and sports actions shots from years 1982-1986, this is Thornlea's most traditional and impressive hallway.
  • The Purple Hallway: "The Spot" in the school where the more popular students would hang out in between classes and at lunch. In 2003 the purple hallway became an academic hallway removing any form of "hanging out". The following year doors were put up and no longer would the popular students have a place to sit.
  • The Un-Carpeted Hallway: Refers to a tiled hallway that connects the recreational wing of the school with the classrooms proper. A location that is monitored by school authorities in theory only, and was once known as the carpeted hallway for its previous furnishings.
  • The Caf: As the name interprets, it is obviously the area where students and usually teachers come and eat lunch. It is the most popular area in the school due to its largeness and its variety of foods to buy. Pharley's Place is located inside of here.
  • The Thornlea Loft: A secret location somewhere in the school's main gym, strictly monitored by the school's drama department, the Thornlea Light Set Sound (TLSS) team, and the Costume Goddesses.
  • The Music Hallway: Named for its proximity to the school's two music rooms, and is adjacent to one of the only sets of windows that were included in the building's original plans.
  • The Pit: As of October 20th 2006, the pit no longer exists due to traffic congestion along Willowbrook Ave.(by the intersection of Bayview & Willowbrook). Students mourned the destruction of the pit as the pavement was replaced by grass and a fence was constructed. It was once just a depression in the ground immediately beyond the southern frontier of school property. It was also the main smoking area for highschool students because smoking on school property is illegal. The Pit was also the name given to room 016, the home of the Autonomous Learners' Programme in the 1980s. The name was given to it owing to the mini-amphitheatre located in the classroom, sunken below floor level.
  • The Rock: A metonym for an enclosure on the school's east side within which a multi-coloured boulder is contained.
  • The Dennis Herbert Wall of Fame: Named after former coach, teacher, and mentor Dennis Herbert, the wall boasts pictures of those students who have made exceptional contributions to Thornlea Athletics during their high school careers.
  • Pharley's Place: A mythological persona for whom the student-run convenience store in the cafeteria is named.
  • The New Wing: Completed in the summer of 2001, the new wing is the latest addition to the school in an attempt to fight overcrowding. However, even with 12 new classrooms and 2 computer labs, overcrowding is still a problem.
  • The Res (Reservoir): An unpaved area, located on the northeast side of the school property. Students are allowed to park their cars there although on occasion, the vehicles will sink into the mud and have to be rescued by the custodial staff. In addition, you can often find people smoking cigarettes in this area.
  • The Big Gym: It is referring the larger gym of two in the school campus. It is located in the middle of the main building.
  • Pool Gym: The smaller of the two gyms. It is in the swimming pool building beside the pool, which is separate from the main school building.
  • The "Secret" Spot: Another secret location located directly across from the loft. It usually consists of a sofa & chairs and usually very dark to see, even if the loft lights are on. Very few people know about this place, as it is hidden very well, but it is a great spot to just "chill out" during lunches and sporting games.

Thornlea was the first high school in the district to have a computer. The IBM 1130 was installed at or shortly after the school was opened in the late 1960s. Unlike the way students program modern computers, programs were generally prepared on punch cards and run in batches; the output was printed in a line printer. There were a few experiments with the pioneering interactive APL system.

[edit] Famous alumni


York Region District School Board Secondary Schools
Town: School(s)
Aurora: Aurora H.S.Dr. G.W. Williams S.S.
Keswick: Keswick H.S. | King City: King City S.S. | Maple: Maple H.S.
Markham: Markham District H.S.Markville S.S.Middlefield C.I.Milliken Mills H.S.Pierre Elliott Trudeau H.S.Unionville H.S.
Newmarket: Dr. John M. Denison S.S.Huron Heights S.S.Newmarket H.S.Sir William Mulock S.S.
Richmond Hill: Alexander Mackenzie H.S. • Bayview S.S. • Langstaff S.SRichmond Green S.S.Richmond Hill H.S.
Stouffville: Stouffville District S.S. | Sutton: Sutton District H.S.
Thornhill: Thornhill S.S.Thornlea S.S.Vaughan S.SWestmount C.I.
Vaughan: Emily Carr S.S. • Stephen Lewis S.S.Woodbridge College
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