Vancouver Technical Secondary School

Summary

Vancouver Technical Secondary School, often referred to as Van Tech, is a public secondary school located on the East Side of Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. Vancouver Technical currently offers Advanced Placement, Summit, Flex Humanities, and French Immersion programs.[1]

Vancouver Technical Secondary School
Vancouver Technical Secondary from East Broadway
Address
Map
2600 East Broadway

, ,
Canada
Coordinates49°15′41″N 123°03′06″W / 49.2614°N 123.0517°W / 49.2614; -123.0517
Information
School typeSecondary school
Motto"Semper Sursum"
(Ever Upwards)
Founded1916
School boardSchool District 39 Vancouver
SuperintendentSuzanne Hoffman
Area trusteeFraser Ballantyne
School number03939011
PrincipalRoberto Moro
Grades8-12
Enrollment1620 Students
LanguageEnglish, French immersion
AreaMount Pleasant
Grandview-Woodland
Hastings-Sunrise
Renfrew-Collingwood
Colour(s)Forest Green and Gold   
MascotTalisman
Team nameVan Tech Talismen
Public transit access7, 9, 16, Millennium Line (Skytrain), 27, 99 - (Select Trips Only)
Websitevantech.vsb.bc.ca
Last updated: March 2020

History edit

Vancouver Technical School opened in September 1916 as a boys-only school and was located in the basement of King Edward Highschool on 12th and Oak. It was the province's first vocational school and was led by J. George Lister, who would later be called the "Founder of Technical Education in BC.[2] The school then moved to the Labour Temple, located on the corner of Homer and Dusmuir.[3]

As enrollment grew, plans were developed for a modern technical school along Broadway. The building was designed by architects Townley and Matheson to include large technical shops, laboratories, cafeteria, auditorium, gymnasium, and swimming pool. However, the swimming pool was never completed due to lack of funds. The school moved to the new building in 1928, where it is located to this day. Girls were admitted into the school starting in 1940 and were given their own wing on the East side.

Major seismic upgrades to the school's five buildings began in 2005 and was completed in 2008 at a cost of $40 million.[4] The seismic upgrades reduced the available floorspace, leading to the relocation of classroom and workshops. Classrooms and workshops were relocated or replaced during the upgrade as there was less floor space available. this reduced the school's capacity from 2,100 students to 1,700. The auditorium's interior was also renovated during the upgrade, with the funds being raised by students' parents.[5]

One of the school's founders (and principal from 1930 until 1944), James George Sinclair, is also the great-grandfather of 23rd Canadian Prime Minister Justin Trudeau.[citation needed]

Mini Schools edit

Vancouver Technical offers two mini school programs.

Summit is a five-year mini school program as of 2018, which focuses on enriching the four academic courses: Math, Science, Social Studies and English. The Summit program offers accelerated sciences and mathematics, with students completing Chemistry 11 and Pre-Calculus 11 in grade 10. Students in the Summit program engage in many extra-curricular activities including a three-day camp at the beginning of the school year, and opportunities to travel to Europe.[6][unreliable source?]

Flex Humanities is a mini-school that integrates Philosophy, World Literature, History, Fine Arts, Film and Media Studies, and Integrated Arts and Technology from grades 8 – 12. In grade 12, the students have the opportunity to participate in a major culminative field study; in past years, this trip has involved Quebec City/Montreal or New York.

Facilities edit

With its seismic upgrade from 2005 - 2008, many classrooms were moved around and their 500 wing was demolished. With this, Vancouver Technical was a recipient to a $1,000,000 artificial turf field that was approved in 2006.[7] Tennis courts were built off Slocan St. and Vancouver Technical is set to receive Vancouver's first regulation Track and Field Training Facility.[8]

Notable alumni edit

  • Greg Joy, Olympic medalist - track and field
  • Sam Sullivan, former mayor of the city of Vancouver, former MLA for Vancouver False Creek
  • Bowinn Ma, MLA for North Vancouver-Lonsdale
  • John Ferguson (1938–2007), NHL player/coach[citation needed]
  • Dean Malkoc, NHL player for the Vancouver Canucks, Boston Bruins, and New York Islanders
  • Julia Grosso, Soccer player for Canadian women's national team and 2020 Olympic Gold Medallist
  • Milton Wong, Member of the Order of Canada, Order of British Columbia, Chancellor, Simon Fraser University, Business Laureates of British Columbia Hall of Fame, philanthropist

Popular culture edit

References edit

  1. ^ "Vancouver Technical Secondary School Programs". Vancouver Technical Secondary School. Vancouver School Board. Retrieved 28 November 2020.
  2. ^ "Vancouver Technical School". VancouverHeritageFoundation.org. Retrieved 21 July 2020.
  3. ^ "School History". vsb.bc.ca. Retrieved 21 July 2020.
  4. ^ "VAN TECH SEISMIC UPGRADE". colbornegroup.com. Retrieved 21 July 2020.
  5. ^ McCabe, Samantha; Vescera, Zak (11 February 2019). "hy Quake Proofing Schools Is Shaking up Resistance". The Tyee. Retrieved 21 July 2020.
  6. ^ "HOME".
  7. ^ "Vancouver Technical Secondary School - Playing Field License Agreement" (PDF).
  8. ^ Chan, Kenneth (20 May 2020). "Vancouver to build its first regulation competitive track-and-field training facility". DailyHive.
  9. ^ "Movies Filmed at Vancouver Technical Secondary".

External links edit

  • Vancouver Technical Secondary School
  • Vancouver School Board - Vancouver Technical Secondary
  • Van Tech students playing Spanish Fever
  • Van Tech Music Program