Glebe Collegiate Institute
Address | |
---|---|
212 Glebe Avenue Ottawa, Ontario, K1S 2C9 Canada | |
Coordinates | 45°24′06″N 75°41′49″W / 45.40169°N 75.69687°WCoordinates: 45°24′06″N 75°41′49″W / 45.40169°N 75.69687°W |
Information | |
Motto |
In Alta Tende (Strive for the Heights) |
Founded | 1929 |
School board | Ottawa Carleton District School Board |
Superintendent | Walter Piovesan |
Area trustee | Rob Campbell (Zone 9) |
Administrator | Pamela Wilson |
Principal | Steven Massey |
Grades | 9-12 |
Language | Multi |
Campus | Urban |
Area | Glebe |
Colour(s) | Yellow and blue |
Mascot | The Gryphon |
Team name | Gryphons |
Public transit access | OC Transpo |
Website |
www |
Glebe Collegiate Institute is a high school in the Glebe neighbourhood of Ottawa, Ontario, Canada. Administered by the Ottawa-Carleton District School Board, Glebe Collegiate Institute has approximately 1,700 students. Glebe is the district's largest school.
Students and sports teams are referred to as "Gryphons". The Gryphons' performance has led to Glebe Collegiate Institute being consistently ranked one of the premier athletics schools in Canada. The Gryphons' impressive record includes OFSAA championships in ice hockey, track and field, XC running, tennis, alpine skiing, soccer, volleyball, Nordic skiing and rowing.
Glebe Collegiate was selected as one of Canada's best schools in the 23 August 2004 edition of Maclean's news magazine.[1]
The school offers specialized programs, such as French immersion, English as a second language, bilingual gifted, and a special education learning centre.
It has an excellent academic standing and one of the best music programs in the city, including a unique, five-time gold award-winning, unconventional percussion group called Offbeat. Glebe's excellence in the arts has also been demonstrated in improvisation, and Glebe has placed twice at the Canadian National Final.[2] Glebe's robotics program participates in US FIRST international robotics competition and won the SKILLS Canada STEM and Controls competition in 2015.
In 2008 and 2010, a group of four teachers (Andrew Cumberland, Dan Lajoie, Colin Harris, and Masato Kachi) from Glebe placed second in Canada in the Discovery Channel's Iron Science Competition.[3]
Notable alumni include NHL hockey players, including Hall of Famer Syd Howe, singer Alanis Morissette and CBC news icon Peter Mansbridge.
History
The school was founded not as an independent entity but as an expansion of the Ottawa Collegiate Institute. In 1919 the Adolescent School Attendance Act had made attending school compulsory until age 16, leading to a dramatic rise in secondary school enrolment. The OCI had outgrown its existing facility (now Lisgar Collegiate Institute) and constructed a new facility on what was then the outskirts of the city. The construction of "Ottawa Collegiate Institute, Glebe Building" was a slow process, and classes began in 1922 before it was complete, causing some inconveniences for students. Symbols of the OCI continue to adorn the entrance to the school. The building was officially opened in 1923.
The rivalry between Glebe and Lisgar Collegiates commenced soon after the division of the OCI. In one incident, a banquet was held at the Glebe building that included student clubs from both schools. In the middle of the meal, a food fight erupted between the two groups and only an enraged principal could persuade students to stop.
In 1974, Glebe Collegiate Institute concert and stage bands produced an album, Something gold... Something blue, and in 1978 (January 30) produced a second album, Glebe Stage Band, on which a third album is suggested, all under the direction of music teachers Stan Clark Sr. and John Nichols.
As of 2012, Glebe's population was 1,700 students and 150 teachers.
Glebe Collegiate Institute was used in the filming of the 2008 Canadian-American drama film The Perfect Assistant.
In the 2012-2013 school year, $9,000 was raised for cancer research, more than $17,000 for the Children's Hospital of Eastern Ontario as well as the largest food donation ever to the Centre Town Emergency Food bank.
Facility
Constructed in the early 20th century, the school has an old-fashioned architectural style that has been kept consistent despite additions to the building. The school has recently gone through extensive renovations in its science department to make the labs the most modern in the school district. Notable features of the building include an underground swimming pool, auditorium with balcony seating, and a small greenhouse on the roof. The school is a Wi-Fi hotspot, and all students and teachers have access to the internet via wireless devices and computers.
Notable alumni and students
- Donald Brittain, filmmaker with the National Film Board of Canada
- Bill Cowley, Hall of Fame professional ice hockey player
- Brian Doyle, author
- Harvey Glatt, founder of CHEZ-FM; music impresario
- Luba Goy, later National Theatre School of Canada graduate; comedian most notable as a member of the Royal Canadian Air Farce
- Elizabeth Hanna, later National Theatre School of Canada graduate; noted voice actor and speech-language pathologist
- Angela Hewitt, concert pianist
- Syd Howe, [Hall of Fame professional ice hockey player
- Clark Johnson, actor, director, producer; played Canadian college football while attending Concordia University in Montreal, Quebec
- Fiona Kenney, just a really nice person. honest
- John Manley, former cabinet minister; graduated from Bell High School
- Peter Mansbridge, news anchor for The National (CBC)
- Dewey Martin (born Walter Midkiff), drummer for Buffalo Springfield
- David McGuinty, politician, MP
- Sean Michaels, Scotiabank Giller Prize winning author and music critic
- Alanis Morissette, seven-time Grammy award winning singer
- Quddus, video jockey, MTV
- Michael J. Reynolds, actor, writer
- Rick Sowieta, linebacker for the Toronto Argonauts and the Ottawa Rough Riders
- Patrick Watson, author, television producer, director, interviewer and host
See also
References
- Bibliography
- By Ottawa Collegiate Institute. Ex-pupils' (January 12, 2010), A History Of The Ottawa Collegiate Institute 1843-1903 By Ottawa Collegiate Institute. Ex-pupils', Ottawa, Ontario: BiblioLife This is a reproduction of a book published before 1923.
External links
Wikimedia Commons has media related to Glebe Collegiate Institute. |
- Glebe Collegiate School website
- OCDSB Website
- 2006-2007 OCDSB school profile
- 2005-2006 OCDSB school profile
- 2004-2005 OCDSB school profile
- 2003-2004 Glebe school profile (PDF format)
- Glebe Robotics
- Glebe Music Program