St. John Paul II Catholic Secondary School

St. John Paul II Catholic Secondary School

Laudetur Jesus Christus
Praised be Jesus Christ
Address
685 Military Trail
Morningside, Scarborough, Ontario, M1E 4P6
Canada
Coordinates 43°47′23″N 79°11′58″W / 43.789829°N 79.199549°W / 43.789829; -79.199549Coordinates: 43°47′23″N 79°11′58″W / 43.789829°N 79.199549°W / 43.789829; -79.199549
Information
School type Catholic High school
IB World school
Religious affiliation(s) Roman Catholic
Founded 1983
School board Toronto Catholic District School Board
Superintendent Geoff Grant
Area 8
Area trustee Nancy Crawford
Ward 12
School number 531 / 751537
Principal Michael Wetzel '92
Faculty 44
Grades 9–12
Enrollment 1387 (2014-15)
Colour(s) Navy Blue, Silver, White             
Mascot Panthers
Team name Pope Panthers
Newspaper Off The Wall
Parish St. Thomas More
Specialist High Skills Major Horticulture and Landscaping
Program Focus International Baccalaureate
Extended French
Broad-based Technology
Gifted
Hospitality and Tourism
Website www.tcdsb.org/schools/stjohnpaulii/Pages/default.aspx

St. John Paul II Catholic Secondary School (occasionally known as SJPII, St. John Paul II, SJPIICSS, JPII, or in short, Pope); known as Blessed Pope John Paul II Catholic Secondary School and Pope John Paul II Catholic Secondary School before the beatification of John Paul II is a publicly funded high school named after Pope John Paul II administered by the Toronto Catholic District School Board in a West Hill and Seven Oaks neighbourhoods of Scarborough, which is the eastern part of Toronto, Ontario, Canada. The motto for Pope is Laudetur Jesus Christus which translates as "Praised be Jesus Christ".

History

Pontiff

Main article: Pope John Paul II

John Paul II is considered by some authorities to have helped to end Communist rule in his native Poland and eventually all of Europe.[1] John Paul II worked to improve the Catholic Church's relations with Judaism, Islam, the Eastern Orthodox Church, and the Anglican Communion. He was criticised by progressives for upholding the Church's teachings against artificial contraception and the ordination of women, and by traditionalists for his support of the Church's Second Vatican Council and its reforms.

He visited 129 countries during his pontificate, beatified 1,340 people, and canonised 483 saints, more than in all of the preceding five centuries. He named many cardinals, consecrated or co-consecrated many bishops, and ordained many priests.[2] A stated goal of his papacy was to transform and reposition the Catholic Church, and "to place his Church at the heart of a new religious alliance that would bring together Jews, Muslims and Christians in a great [religious] armada".[3][4] On 19 December 2009, John Paul II was proclaimed venerable by his successor Benedict XVI; he was beatified on 1 May 2011 and canonised, together with John XXIII,[5][6] on 27 April 2014, Divine Mercy Sunday.[7]

Background

In September 1955, the first high school in the area West Hill Collegiate Institute opened to serves the growing communities of West Hill, Guildwood and Highland Creek years after the end of World War II. Over the years, several catholic separate schools in the Metropolitan Separate School Board (later became the Toronto Catholic District School Board) were established: St. Martin De Porres and St. Urusla in 1964, St. Thomas More in 1968, St. Malachy in the 10 acre site in 1969, St. Edmund Campion in 1971, St. Bede in 1978, and Cardinal Leger in 1988. The adjacent Military Trail Public School was built in 1968.

Realizing the overcrowding in Cardinal Newman to the south and Francis Libermann to the north due to growing population of Roman Catholics in the West Hill area, the Metropolitan Separate School Board began establishing a high school within the boundaries of St. Thomas More Roman Catholic Church. On September 6, 1983, the MSSB established Pope John Paul II Catholic Secondary School with the first 135 students in twelve temporary, portable classrooms next to the closed St. Bede. Paul M. Howard served as its inaugural principal for the first four years. The student population doubled in 1984, as did the number of portable classrooms over the years.

By 1985, Pope began construction of the current physical structure accommodating 1,074 pupils with the first 12 classrooms. Until its completion in September 1988, the building now consists of the gymnasia, library, cafeteria, tech shops, and addition classrooms. Although Pope's current building was opened and blessed in early 1989, 23 portables were placed due to the growing student population.

The Board approved the renaming of the school to Blessed Pope John Paul II Catholic Secondary School on June 16, 2011, following John Paul II's beatification the previous month.[8] In June 2014 the board renamed the school to St. John Paul II Catholic Secondary School after John Paul II's canonization.[5][9][10]

Overview

Campus

New tracks built for Toronto 2015 Pan American Games

St. John Paul II sits in a 14-acre land once held by the former St. Bede. The facilities consists of a baseball diamond-like structure building with 41 classrooms, seven science laboratories, three gymnasia, a large library, a student services area, a drama room, two music rooms, a drafting room, two tech shops, and two art rooms as well as a 400m eight-lane track and athletic field regularly found in public secular collegiate schools. To meet demand for overcrowding, there are 13 portable classrooms in place. As of 2014-15 school year, there are 1387 students attending SJPII.

During the 2015 Pan American Games, St. John Paul II received a newly paved track and hosted the roller speed skating competition.

Programs

SJPII, a publicly funded separate high school, provides a religious studies program in each year. The school was accredited by the International Baccalaureate Organization in 2002 with its first class of IB Diploma students graduated in 2005. The school also provides gifted, cooperative education, and extended French programs, as well as English and French Writing Clinics, a peer helper program (P.A.S.S) and a Math Help Centre.

Student life

Various councils run the majority of SJPII's inter and extracurricular activities. These councils are the Executive Student Council (ESC), DECA, and the Environmental Council. Following in their lead of student engagement are a multitude of clubs including the Health Action Team who runs the Breakfast Club. There is also a school newspaper by the name of "Off the Wall", that is published four times a year.[11]

Ninety percent of SJPII graduates go on to post-secondary education. About 1 in 20 graduates does so with a scholarship.[12]

Administration

As of 2014 the principal of SJPII was Michael Wetzel who previously attended the school from 1987-1992 and served as vice-principal from 2009-2011. Wetzel taught at Mary Ward Catholic Secondary School for several years.[13] From 2006 to 2013 Paul McAlpine was the principal and Louise Brighton the vice principal.

Notable students

See also

References

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Friday, April 01, 2016. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.