Clarkson Secondary School
Clarkson Secondary School | |
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Committed to Excellence | |
Address | |
2524 Bromsgrove Road Mississauga, Ontario, L5J 1L8 Canada | |
Coordinates | 43°30′15″N 79°38′46″W / 43.504029°N 79.646131°WCoordinates: 43°30′15″N 79°38′46″W / 43.504029°N 79.646131°W |
Information | |
School type | Public, high school |
Founded | 1969 |
School board | Peel District School Board |
Superintendent | Patricia Rosall |
Area trustee |
Brad MacDonald Don Stephens |
Principal | James Kardash |
Vice Principals | Harry Chamourian and Kristy Zammit |
Staff |
104 teachers, 2 vice-principals, 6 secretaries, 8 janitors, 4 cafeteria staff |
Grades | 9-12+ |
Enrollment | 817 (October 2015) |
Language | English, French immersion |
Campus | Urban |
Area | Clarkson |
Colour(s) | Gold and Black |
Mascot | Charlie The Charger (Horse) |
Team name | Clarkson Chargers |
Newspaper | The Clarion |
Feeder schools | Hillside Senior Public School, Green Glade Senior Public School, Hillcrest Public School |
Recent Yearbooks |
2009-2010 - Puzzles and Games 2008/2009 - Back to Basics 2007/2008 - CSI: Clarkson Secondary Investigation 2006/2007 - Spirit 2005/2006 - Energy 2004/2005 - Distorted Perspectives 2003/2004 - Breaking Traditions |
Website |
clarksonss |
Clarkson Secondary School is a high school located in the Clarkson community of Mississauga, Ontario, Canada; designated Ward 18 by the Peel District School Board. Clarkson is an average school in both population (11th, at 885 students) and age (13th, built in 1969)[1] of the entire Peel range of 28 public secondary schools. It is also known as the "Peel Academy for International Students".
School Design
Original Plan
Clarkson was designed like many 1970s-era schools in Ontario as part of an experimental “open-concept” design. On the ground floor, the cafeteria and auditorium are central to the design; a tech/drama wing, staff room, and gymnasiums are placed on the west side, while a classroom wing adorns the east side. These were open to the hallways, to other classrooms, separated only by pillars. Other schools using the same concepts include The Woodlands Secondary School, Bayridge Secondary School, and St. Thomas More Catholic School.
Demise of the Open-Concept Design
During the late 1970s, the design was abandoned for a more traditional approach, as the open-concept design proved deficient in many aspects: notable, the leakage of noise from other classes.[2] The school to this day has very few proper walls in its main section, with thin, temporary walls shielding the view of other classes. The sound spill still remains a problem in many of the school’s classes.
Extracurriculars
Clarkson's sports teams include football, basketball, volleyball, ice hockey, soccer, cricket, baseball,wrestling teams; as well as many after-school groups, including cross country, golf and others like the anime club, the PALS, and several drama presentations per year. A full list is here on their website. The local Studenwrites student-written drama festival is held in the school's 160-seat theatre, as is a division of the Sears Ontario Drama Festival. The school's paper is the Clarkson Clarion.
Cancer Drive
For part of the school year, the Clarkson Cancer Drive is hosted annually in late April as a fundraiser for Camp Oochigeas, a camp for cancer-stricken children. The 2006 year raised $26,500 over a period of one week from a myriad of fundraising events run by individual classrooms, as well as the "dunk tank", "milk chug", "rent-a-friend". In 2012 they beat their all-time record, raising $27,142 for Camp Oochigeas. In 2014 they beat that record again raising $30,001.
Lorne Park
Clarkson has been known to have a rivalry for nemesis Lorne Park.
This rivalry started the year that Clarkson opened (1969). The building was not finished in time for the beginning of the school year and so Clarkson students were "hosted" by Lorne Park from September to December.
The school day operated on two shifts with Lorne Park students taking the morning shift and Clarkson students (bused to Lorne Park) taking the afternoon shift.
Programs
- French immersion
- English as a Second Language
- International Program
- Spanish Program
- Specialist High Skills Major - Manufacturing (Grade 11-12)
Notable alumni
- Phil X - Session Guitarist
- Brad Boyes - NHL hockey player
- Sean Jones - R&B singer
- Don Kerr - multi-instrumentalist and record producer
- Matt Kudu - CFL football player
- Shaun Majumder - Comedian, writer, and actor[3]
- Camilla Scott - Actress and host of the television show The Camilla Scott Show
- Debbie Van Kiekebelt - Track & Field star and former Citytv personality
- Francis D'Souza - CityTv Personality
- Mathew Murray - web series creator, filmmaker[4][5][6]
- Barbara Turnbull - Journalist and Activist for people with Disabilities.
- Alex Wright - Record producer and musician
See also
References
- ↑ Peel District School Board
- ↑ Canadian Language & Literacy Research Network - Does the Classroom Assist or Impede the Learning Process?
- ↑ NewfoundlandersAbroad - Shaun Majumder
- ↑ IMDb - Mathew Murray
- ↑ "Sex, drugs & violence: Toronto's provocative Web Series "Teenagers" returns for Season Two". Shedoesthecity. Retrieved 2015-10-23.
- ↑ 15, Playback Staff January. "New web series Teenagers attracts Degrassi alum". Retrieved 2015-10-23.