Pierrefonds Comprehensive High School
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Pierrefonds Comprehensive High School | |
Location | |
Montreal, Quebec, Canada | |
Information | |
School board | Lester B. Pearson School Board |
Principal | Cecil Humphries |
School type | Public Middle and High School |
Grades | Secondary 1 to 5[1] |
Language | English |
Mascot | Killer Bees |
Team name | Trojans |
Founded | 1971 |
Enrollment | 1189 |
Homepage | http://pchs.lbpsb.qc.ca/ |
Pierrefonds Comprehensive High School (PCHS) is a non-denominational, English speaking educational facility located in Montreal, (formerly Pierrefonds), Quebec, Canada with an enrolment of approximately 1,200 students, in grades 7 through 11. It operates within the Lester B. Pearson School Board and has functioned as a secondary school since 1971. The principal of the school is Mr. Cecil Humphries.
Contents |
[edit] History
PCHS began as an academic and vocational high school for both English and French speaking students, to accommodate West Island population expansion at the beginning of the 1970s. Prior to its opening in 1971, other established schools like Saint Thomas High School, located in Pointe Claire, Quebec, were doubling their enrolment to help the community cope. Originally conceived under the proposed name of Villa Nova, it opened as Polyvalente de Pierrefonds Comprehensive High School, to better reflect its multi-disciplined approach. In 1977 it ceded half its population when French speaking students moved to the new Polyvalente des Sources high school, located nearby. PCHS served from this point on as the north-west shore's sole English speaking high school.
In 1994 it began its International Baccalaureate program which continues to this day, and in 1995 undertook a campaign to amend its name, although a strategic focus group decided to keep the name "comprehensive", to reflect both the wide variety of programs and services offered and the commitment to meeting all student needs[2]. In 2001 it celebrated its 30th anniversary and honoured four teachers for their long standing and exceptional educational service and dedication to the school.
Architecture
PCHS was built as an "open-concept" over a "reflected plan" - meaning that one side mirrors the other - along an axial core. It features a large cafeteria at the center, and a gigantic gymnasium, or "Field House", at the south end, which is connected by a tunnel. Designed by a Californian architect, as recommended by the school's first principal, Mr. John Oss[3], it employed industrial, visual cues like unfinished concrete walls, exposed ceiling pipes and ducts that were painted primary red, blue and yellow enamel, and small windows that did not open. Stylistically it was considered radical for an educational institution at the time, particularly due to the fact that the classrooms had no doors, an experiment that resulted in students sometimes being distracted by people passing by in the halls. The school was still being finished when classes began in the fall of 1971.
[edit] PCHS
Besides its International Baccalaureate program, PCHS participates in an aggressive immersion program, an English program and a remedial program. In sports it is a member of the GMAA (Greater Montreal Athletic Association) and is represented by the Trojans (rugby, girls' football, basketball) and the Killer Bees (Indoor and Outdoor soccer). It also participates in other sports like volleyball.
Features
- Auditorium: State-of-the-art professional theatre
- Art facility: Well-equipped art and music rooms
- Science and technology facility: 11 science labs, 2 computer labs with 34 computers per lab, computer workstations located in individual classrooms
- Library: Newly renovated and fully automated library, access to books in French, English and Spanish, equipped with 6 computers
- Atrium: A place situated next to the library where people may socialize
[edit] Footnotes
- ^ Education levels in Quebec: Secondary 1 - 5 is the equivalent of grades 7 to 11 in Canada, and 7th to 11th grades in the US
- ^ Our History From the official website
- ^ Our HistoryArchitectural Design, first paragraph
[edit] External links
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