St. Joan of Arc Catholic Academy

Summary

St. Joan of Arc Catholic Academy, formerly known as Jean Vanier Catholic Secondary School, is a Roman Catholic high school in the Eglinton East neighbourhood of Scarborough in Toronto, Ontario, Canada as a member of the Toronto Catholic District School Board (formerly the Metropolitan Separate School Board). The school building was originally opened in 1965 as Tabor Park Vocational School (1965–1986) by the Scarborough Board of Education, which became the Toronto District School Board who leased the building to the MSSB/TCDSB since 1989.

St. Joan of Arc Catholic Academy
St. Joan of Arc C.A., then known as Jean Vanier C.S.S, in the former Tabor Park building pictured in 2014.
Address
Map
959 Midland Avenue

, ,
M1K 4G4

Coordinates43°44′17″N 79°15′32″W / 43.738°N 79.259°W / 43.738; -79.259
Information
Former nameJean Vanier Catholic Secondary School (1989–2020)
School typeBill 30 Catholic High School
MottoMinds to Reason, Hands to Work, Hearts for God
Founded1989
School boardToronto Catholic District School Board
(Metropolitan Separate School Board)
SuperintendentPeter Aguiar
Area 7
Area trusteeMike Del Grande
Ward 7
School number554 / 723428
PrincipalVesna Filiplic
Faculty101
Grades9–12
Enrolment801 (2022–23)
LanguageEnglish
Colour(s)Navy Blue, Light Blue and Silver    
SloganAcademics • Arts • Athletics • Technology
In the Service of the Community
MascotMarch the Maverick
Team nameSt. Joan of Arc Mavericks
AffiliationRoman Catholic
ParishSt. Maria Goretti
Specialist High Skills MajorArts & Culture
Health & Wellness
Information and Communications Technology
Non-Profit
Transportation
Program FocusAdvanced Placement
Broad-based Technology
Websitewww.tcdsb.org/schools/stjoanofarc/

The school educates 1002 students as of the 2016–17 academic year and it is ranked 331 out of 725 schools in the Fraser Institute report card.[1]

Previously, the school was named after Jean Vanier, the founder of L'Arche in 1964. The school was renamed in July 2020 in honor of Joan of Arc in the aftermath of the posthumous sexual allegations against its former namesake.[2] Its motto is Minds to Reason, Hands to Work, Hearts for God.

History edit

Jean Vanier Catholic Secondary School (1989–2020) edit

 
The logo as Jean Vanier C.S.S. from 1989 to 2020
 
Jean Vanier was attempted to merge with Cardinal Newman in June 2000 at the former home of Midland Avenue Collegiate Institute, but the plans were never materialized.

Long before the existence of Jean Vanier Catholic Secondary School, the first Roman Catholic separate school, St. Maria Goretti Separate School opened its doors in September 1955 and St. Albert in September 1969 as the first schools within the parish of the same name. Between 1959 and 1962, David and Mary Thomson Collegiate Institute and Midland Avenue Collegiate Institute were then established although Midland was the sole secondary school in that area. However, by fall of 1973, Cardinal Newman Catholic Secondary School also opened its doors as the first Catholic high school in that same area as Midland.

The current location, Tabor Park Vocational School was designed by the architects Webb, Zerafa and Menkes, built in 1964 and established by the Scarborough Board of Education in September 1965 as a less academically challenged high school. Its programs were different from Bendale Vocational/Secondary with students integrated to mainstream schooling due to Tabor Park and Bendale were meant for streamed "vocational" high schools for people living near Midland and Thomson. The schools would later forged the model after Tabor Park by the openings of Maplewood and Sir William Osler in 1967 and 1975 respectively. In 1981, the enlarged library and gym storages were built.

By the time Tabor Park closed in 1986 due to low enrolment, Scarborough Centre for Alternative Studies, an adult high school began in this site. As a result of public funding of Catholic high schools, in May 1988, the SBE along with the six public boards to lease the Tabor Park property to the Metropolitan Separate School Board and was reopened and named after Jean Vanier, the Canadian philosopher and founder of L'Arche, to serve the rest of Scarborough. In that case, it was established to relieve overcrowding at Mary Ward, Francis Libermann and Senator O'Connor. By 1988, Scarborough had six anglophone Roman Catholic high schools.

Jean Vanier C.S.S. came to existence on September 5, 1989, within the St. Maria Goretti Parish catchment area as Central Scarborough's with 18 staff and 198 grade 9 students under the leadership of founding principal Michael Leroux, with the first students graduated Vanier in 1993. Construction and renovation began in 1990, and was completed in the spring of 1994, although the eastern portion building was erected and built with 18 classrooms in 1991 along with the front fascia and the school now accommodates close to 1,000 pupils. From the onset, the school was de-streamed in grade 9. The school was opened and blessed on November 13, 1994. In its conception, the school was originally to be named St. Francis Xavier Catholic Secondary School, named after a Jesuit priest, Francis Xavier. But despite a turnout and the elementary school using the name, it was changed to Jean Vanier thereafter.

The school crest was designed by the first art teacher, Martine Girard-Agro in 1989. It features a calligraphy of a "J" and a "V" with a t-like cross.

Following the closure of Midland Collegiate in 2000, Vanier received the remaining students from Midland. To date, students living in the school's former catchment area have applied or attended Vanier since.

In February 2011, Jean Vanier C.S.S. received Dr. Bette M. Stephenson Recognition of Achievement award from EQAO.

Jean Vanier C.S.S. celebrated its 20th anniversary in June 2010 since it opened in September 1989 with the Mass and Alumni social. The school celebrated its 25th in October 2014 in conjunction with L'Arche's 50th anniversary of its founding.

St. Joan of Arc Catholic Academy (2020-present) edit

According to an internal report by L'Arche in February 2020, this report concluded that Jean Vanier had engaged in "manipulative and emotionally abusive" sexual relationships with six women in Trosly-Breuil, France, between 1970 and 2005.[3][4][5] A Change.org petition set up by a former student called for Jean Vanier's name to be removed and has lobbied the board to do so.[6]

At a school board meeting on July 16, 2020, the TCDSB recommended the name St. Joan of Arc Catholic Academy starting in the 2020–21 school year.[2][7][8] The school formally completed its renaming at the end of August 2020. Amidst the COVID-19 pandemic affecting Toronto, the school reopened under its new name the following September with heavy restrictions in place.

The current emblem retains the cross from the previous Vanier insignia now sporting a fleur-de-lis with a sword standing in the centre.

Overview edit

The enrolment of the school as of 2015–16 is 996 pupils. It is a co-educational semestered school operating in grades 9–12. The school draws crowds from the Bendale, Ionview, Knob Hill, Scarborough Junction, and most parts of Scarborough as well as some from Toronto and as far from Pickering and Ajax. It became a popular destination powerhouse with its excellent facilities and programs since the closure of nearby Midland Avenue Collegiate Institute in June 2000.

Emphasizing on the "AAA" focus, the school has a large athletic field found in most regular public high schools, but usually unavailable with purpose built Catholic high Schools. The design of the former Tabor Park school consists of brown bricks and overall structure in the middle where the quadrangle/courtyard stands. The two catwalks along with 20 new academic classrooms, a seminar work room, and an exercise room was eventually added in 1991 to expand enrolment.[9] as well as black cross was retrofitted in the centre.[10] Other features in the leased 126,241 sq. ft. facility include 28 academic classrooms, two automotive shops, four state-of-the-art science labs, three computer labs, two Mac labs, a visual arts studio, cafetorium, library, expanded ME/DD classroom, a double gymnasia that can be split into two, a drama room, two music rooms, a photography room, guidance area, a recently renovated home economics room and a chapel.

The school's main palette is beige, grey, light blue, blue and white with the lockers colored light blue and royal blue though they were painted aqua green. It has an aforementioned layout in which it is divided into three floors with two separate wings:

  • The first floor (basement) is a science/computer studies wing in which the old carpentry/automotive/metal shops were renovated over while the greenhouse was removed and on the same floor, which is the English/history/geography wing, it originally had ten academic classrooms until its reduction to seven due to an enlarged room being the ME/DD program.
  • On the second floor (the main floor), it features two distinctive wings being the mathematics and one exercise room in the new section and at the old 1965 section, it consists of a larger library and computer room formerly split into three shops for textiles, merchandising and assembly), weight room (child care), photography (hairstyling), the CYW office/classroom (assembly and production), drama arts (visual arts), and renovated staff and home economics rooms (food and baking rooms) as well as the chapel, credit recovery room, and the music room that was formerly four classrooms and a library respectively. The gymnasium and cafetorium were renovated.
  • In the upper level, the third floor, the arts/Com Tech/business wing originally designed with six academic classrooms and presumably four science labs. Currently, it has three classrooms, one ESL room, two computer labs, one Special Education room and one visual arts studio.

In 2011, three portables made their way back to the facility to accommodate more students in the existing campus since the addition was added. All portables were removed from the property in late 2020.

SJA also has a diverse population consisting of South Asians, Filipinos, Whites, Latin Americans, Blacks/African Canadians, Chinese, Arabs, and several other ethnic minorities.

Academics edit

Since its inception, Jean Vanier offers various courses in the comprehensive academic program for its students. Students can choose from a variety of courses at the academic, applied, and open levels. These, and other specialized courses, help prepare students for university, college, or the world of work after they have completed their studies at the school. Vanier currently offers math, English, science, Canadian History, geography, and religious studies. It also has special education programs.

Vanier, every year, competes in the University of Waterloo mathematics competition.

Arts edit

The word “Arts” is one that is immensely rich in meaning and its value is greatly appreciated in the school community. The creativity, style, expression, compassion and unique artistic approach is very obvious in 5 Arts Disciplines such as drama, instrumental/vocal music, visual arts, and photography. The drum line was introduced in 2012 by Michael Fanning, a new music teacher at the school.[11]

The combined art, music, technology show called Festival of Sight and Sound started by the arts department in the 1990s consisting of the talents of the music students as well as the work of the Art, Drama and Photography students. It is held in December and May each semester.

On March 6, 2014, Vanier was selected for the MusiCounts Band Aid Grant program costing at $600,000. The school received their $10,000 in equipment for the drum line program such as the marimba and a complete set of cymbals.[12][13] The guests were Juno Award-winning musicians Classified and David Myles who also performed their single Inner Ninja live in front of 300 students.[13]

Athletics edit

The Jean Vanier Maverick has had a history of athletic excellence, which continues today.[citation needed] The school was well represented with the colours of red, black, silver and compete in the TDCAA locally and OFSAA provincially. So far, Vanier Mavericks compete in basketball, volleyball, soccer, flag football, rugby, cross country, track and field, badminton, and indoor soccer. It notably previously competed in ice hockey and curling.

Technology edit

Jean Vanier offers technology courses such as CITI Motive (Automotive Class) - Dual High School / College Credits, Communications Technology, Partnership with Apple Inc., Yearbook (Desktop Publishing), Photography, among others.

"In the service of the community" edit

In today's world, the students practice an active, faith life through service to the community. The education component is learned through religion classes, regular school practices and through special initiatives such as their affiliation with Development and Peace. Their support with the community through activities such as:

The school has donated volunteer time, food and money to organizations such as: Development and Peace, Nelson Mandela Children's Fund (Canada), Share Life – Covenant House, Inner City Angels, Raising the Roof, Help a Family Fundraiser (a school and orphanage in Puerto Plata, Dominican Republic), St. John the Compassionate Mission, Mothers Against Drunk Driving (MADD), The Royal Canadian Legion Poppy Day Sales, The Louise Russo Fund, Right to Life, and L'Arche Daybreak (Richmond Hill, ON).

School media edit

Yearbooks edit

Over the years, Jean Vanier has publish several yearbooks in its 22-year life. Unlike all other high schools who receive yearbooks at the end of the year, the yearbooks are released the next year.

  • 10th Anniversary (1999–2000)
  • Tomorrow Came too Soon (2001–2002)
  • "www.jeanvanier.com" (2002–2003)
  • FlashBACK (2003–2004)
  • 15th Anniversary (2004–2005)
  • Timeless (2005–2006)
  • Growing Together (2006–2007)
  • Turning Points (2007–2008)
  • Forever Young (2008–2009)
  • 20th Anniversary: And ya Don't Stop! (2009–2010)
  • Word (2010–2011)
  • Connections (TTC-style motif) (2011–2012)
  • Pieces of Us (Jigsaw puzzle motif) (2012–2013)
  • TBD (2013–2014)
  • TBD (2014–2015)

Vanier Vision edit

Vanier Vision is a newsletter that highlights the events happening in Jean Vanier throughout the school year. Published by the school principal and the communication technology teacher, it is distributed to students quarterly upon mailing the report cards in November, February, April, or July. The redesign took place starting in the Spring 2013 issue.

Other publications and media edit

  • Vanier Vibe [1] (Student Podcast - Since taken off the air)
  • Vanier Vibe: The Revival (Student newscast produced in Communication Technology and broadcast throughout the school - Started Spring 2018)
  • Maverick Star (formerly Papercut)

Administration edit

Principals edit

As of July 2015, only four active principals of Jean Vanier Catholic Secondary School remain employed with the TCDSB.

Principal Previous School Date started Date finished Notes
Michael Leroux Francis Libermann Catholic High School
Regina Pacis Catholic Secondary School
1989 1998 Founding Principal of Jean Vanier.
Carmine Settino 1998 2001 Currently Principal at Chaminade College School.
Joseph Clarkson Brother Edmund Rice Catholic Secondary School 2001 2007 There's an award named after him named The Joseph Clarkson Award that is given to a student in each graduation ceremony.
Peter Aguiar Francis Libermann Catholic High School
Mary Ward Catholic Secondary School
2007 2011 Currently at 21st Century Learning as a Program Co-ordinator. Formerly at Francis Libermann Catholic High School as English teacher (1988–2002)
Anthony Bellisario
(Acting)
Mary Ward Catholic Secondary School
Brebeuf College School
2007 2007 Placed on an interim basis due to Aguiar's heart surgery. Currently at James Cardinal McGuigan as a principal.
John Brady James Cardinal McGuigan Catholic High School
Cardinal Carter Academy for the Arts
2011 2015 Served as vice-principal for five years in two schools. Formerly a math teacher at Neil McNeil.
Linda Maselli-Jackman Monsignor Fraser College
Blessed Archbishop Romero Catholic Secondary School
St. Joseph's Morrow Park Catholic Secondary School
2015 present

Vice principals edit

Feeder schools edit

  • Our Lady of Fatima Catholic Elementary School
  • Precious Blood Catholic Elementary School
  • St. Agatha Catholic Elementary School
  • St. Albert Catholic Elementary School
  • St. Barbara Catholic Elementary School
  • St. Boniface Catholic Elementary School
  • St. Joachim Catholic Elementary School
  • St. Lawrence Catholic Elementary School
  • St. Maria Goretti Catholic Elementary School
  • St. Martin De Porres Catholic Elementary School
  • St. Nicholas Catholic Elementary School
  • St. Richard Catholic Elementary School
  • St. Rose of Lima Catholic Elementary School
  • St. Theresa Shrine Catholic Elementary School
  • St. Thomas More Catholic Elementary School
  • St. Ursula Catholic Elementary School
  • St. Victor Catholic Elementary School

This school also accepts students from Bliss Carman Senior Public School, Cedarbrook Public School, Donwood Park Public School, General Crerar Public School, Ionview Public School, John McCrae Public School, Knob Hill Public School, Robert Service Senior Public School, Tredway-Woodsworth Public School and St. Andrew's Public School. All of the schools are located within the vicinity of Cedarbrae Collegiate Institute, David and Mary Thomson Collegiate Institute, R.H. King Academy and Winston Churchill Collegiate Institute.

Notable alumni edit

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Jean Vanier Catholic Secondary School Toronto Ontario Academic school ranking". ontario.compareschoolrankings.org. Archived from the original on 2013-08-16. Retrieved 2013-05-27.
  2. ^ a b Alozzi, Raneem (22 July 2020). "Jean Vanier's name to be removed from Scarborough high school following allegations of sexual abuse". The Star. Archived from the original on 25 July 2020. Retrieved July 25, 2020.
  3. ^ "Revered charity founder 'abused six women'". BBC News. February 22, 2020. Archived from the original on February 29, 2020. Retrieved February 22, 2020.
  4. ^ Corbet, Sylvie (February 22, 2020). "Respected Canadian charity founder sexually abused 6 women: report". CTVNews. Archived from the original on February 22, 2020. Retrieved February 22, 2020.
  5. ^ Mares, Courtney. "L'Arche reports sexual misconduct by founder Jean Vanier". Catholic News Agency. Archived from the original on February 22, 2020. Retrieved February 22, 2020.
  6. ^ "Petition aims to remove Jean Vanier's name from Scarborough school". Toronto.com. 12 March 2020. Archived from the original on 18 June 2020. Retrieved June 7, 2021.
  7. ^ "twitter.com/tcdsb_paguiar/status/1284129655000358912?s=21". twitter.com. Retrieved June 7, 2021.[self-published]
  8. ^ "TORONTO CATHOLIC DISTRICT SCHOOL BOARD SPECIAL VIRTUAL BOARD MEETING: REVISED AGENDA JULY 16, 2020". TORONTO CATHOLIC DISTRICT SCHOOL BOARD. p. 325. Archived from the original on July 18, 2020. Retrieved July 18, 2020. Staff recommends that Jean Vanier Catholic Secondary School be renamed St. Joan of Arc Catholic Academy.
  9. ^ "Tabor Park Vocational School | A view of Tabor Park Vocation…". Flickr. 26 December 2009. Archived from the original on 14 December 2014. Retrieved June 7, 2021.
  10. ^ CSAC Minutes: 21 September 2009 Archived 7 March 2014 at the Wayback Machine, Toronto Catholic School Board
  11. ^ "Music Program". Archived from the original on April 16, 2013. Retrieved March 27, 2013.
  12. ^ MusiCounts Announces $75,000 in Grants to TCDSB Schools Archived 2016-03-04 at the Wayback Machine - TCDSB
  13. ^ a b MUSICOUNTS PROVIDES OVER $600,000 TO 70 SCHOOLS NATIONWIDE FROM THEIR BAND AID GRANT PROGRAM Archived 2014-09-10 at the Wayback Machine - Musicounts
  14. ^ Notre Dame Yearbook 2004: Discovery
  15. ^ "Vijay Thanigasalam | MPP, Scarborough—Rouge Park". Vijay Thanigasalam. Archived from the original on 2022-12-13. Retrieved 2022-12-13.
  16. ^ "torontochinesepageant.com/en/contestant/1/". torontochinesepageant.com. Archived from the original on February 27, 2019. Retrieved June 7, 2021.

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External links edit

  • St. Joan of Arc Catholic Academy