Turner Fenton Secondary School

Turner Fenton Secondary School

Remis velisque
Address
7935 Kennedy Road South
Brampton, Ontario, L6W 0A2
Canada
Information
School type high school
Founded 1992 merger (1972, 1974)
School board Peel District School Board
Superintendent Hazel Mason
Area trustee Kathy McDonald
Rick Williams
School number 918440
Principal Michelle Stubbings
Vice principal Ben Keeley
Laura Garner
Paul Hamilton
Sue Laidlaw
Peter Banhan
Grades 9-12+
Enrollment 1916[1] (November 8, 2015)
Language English, Extended French
Colour(s) Royal Blue, Black, White and Silver                 
Team name Trojans
Newspaper Turneround (1977–2014)[2]
Trojan Times (2014–)[3]
Endowment $1.4 million
Website www.turnerfenton.com

Turner Fenton Secondary School is the Peel District School board's largest high school in Peel region, located in Brampton, Ontario. The principal is Michelle Stubbings. It operates under the Peel District School Board, and is credited as one of the highest funded schools in Ontario, with an endowment of $1.4 million.

Feeder schools (schools in the Turner Fenton family of schools) include Peel Alternative School North (formerly IndEC North), Cherrytree Public School, Fletcher's Creek Sr. Public School, Helen Wilson Public School, Hickory Wood Public School, Parkway Public School, Sir Wilfrid Laurier Public School and William G. Davis Sr. Public School.[4]

Programs

Turner Fenton Secondary School is known for its high academic standards, with consistently high rankings on standardized provincial tests.

Turner, as it is commonly referred to, is a diverse school, due to the varied array of programs it offers. The following educational programs are available:[5]

Until the end of the 2004-2005 school year, the Regional Enhanced Program was also available for students in grades 11 and 12 at Turner Fenton.

The school also works with the William Osler Campus, a Peel Board facility for those admitted to hospital for terms longer than 14 days.

International Baccalaureate

Turner Fenton offers the International Baccalaureate (IB) Middle Years Programme (MYP) for grade 9 and 10 students and the IB Diploma Programme (DP) for grade 11 and 12 students. The MYP, based on similar principles as the DP, is offered as preparation for the DP, requiring students to engage in the study of languages, sciences, mathematics, and humanities all in an attempt for them to recognize not only the individuality of each of the disciplines but also to understand the co-relation between them. The DP is a globally recognized program that prepares students for university. From 2009, Turner Fenton's DP students have displayed considerable academic excellence with some students topping in the Peel District School Board nearly every year with a 100% average.[6]

The admission process into the IB program at Turner Fenton Secondary School is highly selective. Students from more than 100 elementary schools all over Brampton apply for the rigorous high school program. In 2014, the application includes basic identification information, previous report cards and an online written response about an extracurricular activity and its demonstration of an IB Learner Profile attribute.[7] Students from across the Peel District School Board apply to be a part of the program but only around 150 students are accepted each year. MYP students feed directly into the Diploma Programme in grade 11.

Sports, clubs, and traditions

CultureFest

CultureFest[8], called Diversity Celebration until 1996, has been an annual event held at Turner Fenton Secondary School since the founding of the school. It was started by students at J. A. Turner SS and was inherited by Turner Fenton after the merger.[9] The festival is entirely student-run and comprises live performances, educational booths and workshops, as well as a marketplace of international foods spread over two days and one community night.

Turner Fenton also has clubs pertaining to cultural diversity and identity, including the Sikh Students Association (SSA)[10] and Turner Fenton Tamil Association.[11] These groups enlighten students about cultural diversity and hope to empower youth in becoming active cultural members in school and in society.

Conferences

Throughout the school year, many students are actively involved in a variety of different leadership conferences. Turner Fenton students runs the annual START (Students: The Active Risk-Takers) conference, a 2-day event in November open to all Peel high school students. Moreover, the IB (International Baccalaureate) students of the school run the annual one-day Mentorship Conference (IBMC) in September of every year, introducing the new Grade 9 MYP (Middle Years Programme) students to the high school atmosphere.[12] Turner Fenton students are also recognized for their high involvement in the Peel Student Presidents' Council, whether students are executives on the council itself or take part in the yearly leadership conference as delegates, security or leadership developers.

The SOAR (Suddenly Opportunities Are Reachable) conference, which is a leadership conference for Peel middle-school students in grades 7 and 8, is also organized by Turner Fenton students.[13] Due to lack of positive response from teachers, the conference temporarily stopped taking place. However, in 2012, the conference was restarted and took place at W. G. Davis Sr. Public School, a feeder school for Turner Fenton. Because Ontario high school teachers protested against Bill 115 by not leading extracurricular activities, the conference did not take place in 2013 either. Since 2014, the SOAR conference has been taking place again at Turner Fenton.[13][14]

In December 2014, Turner Fenton hosted its first French conference Imaginons le Français, promoting francophone culture.[15]

DECA

Turner Fenton also has an elite DECA chapter with members ranking highly in the Regional, Provincial and International levels. The DECA Regionals take place in the month of November. Students who succeed in the Regionals move to the next stage which is known as DECA Provincials. Provincials take place in the month of February and takes place in the Sheraton Hotel. each year students from TFSS DECA attain top places in their respective chapters and move to the final stage; the Internationals where they represent Canada. TFSS DECA prepares its students by providing the essential skill sets to perform at each stage of DECA.[16]

History

Turner Fenton Secondary School is composed of two buildings, called the North Hall and the South Hall. Until 1992, the two buildings were each schools in their own right, the North being J. A. Turner SS, and the South being W. J. Fenton SS. W. J. Fenton was the first of the two to open in 1972, built by Val Mitchell Construction. C.A. Smith built J. A. Turner Secondary in 1974. Both buildings were designed by architect Don E. Skinner Thughliphe.

The rooms of the "new" North Hall are numbered 100s and 200s on the first floor and second floor, respectively; the South Hall rooms are numbered 300s on the first floor and 400s on the second floor. The portables are 500s. Each faculty department generally has its own section of the school. The English, math, science, business/technology and music departments, as well as the library and main administration, are in the North Hall. The history, moderns (French and other language studies), geography, arts (dramatic, visual, digital, culinary and cosmetic) departments are in the South Building. However, there are exceptions, such as certain biology classes that are taught in the South Hall. Administrative offices are split between the two buildings, with certain vice principals and guidance counsellors located specifically in the South Hall. Each building also has a cafeteria, the North Hall cafeteria being the larger of the two. Additionally, as the South Hall was equipped to serve culinary arts teaching, the cafeteria in the South Hall allows students to make/serve food.

Following the merger of the schools in 1992, the school was referred to officially on its main outdoor signage as "Turner Fenton Secondary School," but it had also adopted a secondary brand name "Turner Fenton Campus" used on school letterhead. In the early 2000s (decade), the school board forced Turner Fenton to standardize its name, because the school had not filed the proper forms upon its creation in 1992.

Notable alumni

See also

References

  1. "About Us". Turner Fenton Secondary School. Peel District School Board. Retrieved 8 November 2015.
  2. "Turneround E-zine". Turneround E-zine. Retrieved 22 December 2014.
  3. "November Issue 2014". TFSS Trojan Times. Retrieved 22 December 2014.
  4. "Families of Schools 2014-15". Peel District School Board. Retrieved 27 November 2014.
  5. "Turner Fenton Secondary School" (PDF). Peel District School Board. Peel District School Board. Retrieved 31 December 2014.
  6. Rushowy, Kristin (10 July 2014). "6 students score 100% averages at the same Brampton high school". Toronto Star (Toronto Star Newspapers Ltd.). Retrieved 9 April 2015.
  7. "International Baccalaureate Programme (IB): MYP and DP at Turner Fenton Secondary School" (PDF). International Baccalaureate - Turner Fenton Secondary School. Retrieved 9 April 2015.
  8. "Culturefest". Culturefest. Retrieved 15 February 2016.
  9. "History". CultureFest 2011. Turner Fenton Secondary School. Retrieved 28 November 2015.
  10. "TFSS SSA". Twitter. Retrieved 29 November 2015.
  11. http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=hV1GR4CxgYM
  12. "IB Mentorship Conference". International Baccalaureate - Turner Fenton Secondary School. Retrieved 28 November 2015.
  13. 1 2 "What is SOAR?". SOAR Conference. Soar Legacy. Retrieved 31 December 2014.
  14. Whiteside, Kyle; Sreerangan, Pooja. "Suddenly Opportunities Are Reachable Volunteer Application" (PDF). Turner Fenton Secondary School. Peel District School Board. Retrieved 31 December 2014.
  15. "Imaginons les Francais [sic] 2014". TFSS Trojan Times (Winter Issue 2015): 3. February 23, 2015. Retrieved 24 March 2015.
  16. "Teens display business knowledge". BramptonGuardian Article. 2010-12-09. Retrieved 2012-07-08.

External links

Coordinates: 43°40′31″N 79°43′10″W / 43.675384°N 79.719329°W / 43.675384; -79.719329

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, February 16, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.