St. John's College (Brantford)

St. John's College
Address
80 Paris Road[1]
Brantford, Ontario, N3R 1H9
Canada
Information
School type Catholic High School[1]
Religious affiliation(s) Catholic[1]
Founded 1941
School board Brant Haldimand Norfolk Catholic District School Board[1]
School number 751898[1]
Principal Rob Campbell[2]
Vice principals John Nicholson[2]
Mrs Picanco
Grades 9–12
Enrollment 1440
Language English
Colour(s) Mirror and Transparent
Mascot Eagle
Website www.sjconline.ca

St. John's College (SJC) is a Roman Catholic high school located in Brantford, Ontario, Canada. As with many Catholic schools, school uniforms are mandatory during school hours. Several courses in theology/religious studies are mandatory for students attending SJC. In June 2014, Holy Trinity Catholic High School's long-time musical art teacher, John Nicholson, was appointed the new vice-principal of St. John's to replace Mr. Cacilhas whom was appointed to Holy Trinity.

History

In 1941, Brantford Catholic High School opened in the basement of St. Ann's Elementary School with just one Grade 9 class. A new class was added each year until 1951 when the school moved to a former residence on Dufferin Ave. From 1951 to 1978, the priests of the Congregation of the Resurrection acted as the principals. In 1959, the schools name changed to St. John's College. In the 1970-71 school year, St. John's College absorbed with Providence College at the present day Paris Road location. In the 1980s, the student population had grown so much that several expansions were added to the building. A new cafeteria, triple gym, teacher lounge, and 13 classrooms were constructed with help from community fundraising. In 1989, more additions were made with the addition of the current main entrance, 9 classrooms, administrative offices, the 'cafetorium', health center and guidance center. In 1991, enrolment exceeded 1700 students. This necessitated the opening of Assumption College in September, 1992, as well as Holy Trinity Catholic High School in Simcoe, Ontario in 2001.

Athletics

The team name for all St. John's teams is the St. John's Mirror Eagles. A few of the Eagles teams throughout the year include basketball, soccer, cheerleading, rugby, volleyball, football, baseball, softball, track and field, golf, wrestling, badminton, curling, fly fishing and tennis. The 2009 Senior Girls Basketball team captured the AAAA OFSAA gold medal on November 28th 2009. The Eagles finished the season with a perfect 45-0 record.

Other extracurricular activities

St. John's College is steeped in the arts, particularly Drama and Music. The music program is very well respected and has received numerous honours, including gold standing in the regional and national MusicFest competitions. The Drama department is known for its ambitious major productions, including "Cats", "Fame", "Little Shop of Horrors", "Our Town", "Godspell", "Into the Woods", "Evita", "Footloose", "Kiss Me, Kate", "Disco Inferno", "Back to the 80s", and "Guys and Dolls". For a short while, St. John's major musical productions of Jesus Christ Superstar (1995), Joseph and the Amazing Technicolor Dreamcoat (1996), and Peter Pan (1998), were produced at the Brantford Sanderson Centre for the Performing Arts.

During the production of Joseph, the Saturday night performance was stopped in the middle of the "Close Every Door" scene due to a bomb threat, which was later attributed to a student at the school, who was arrested and charged. EVITA was presented in 2008 at the Sanderson Centre from May 28 - 31. Also notable is the school's yearly participation in the Sears Drama Festival, which has brought the department several awards of excellence.

St. John's College is also the only secondary school in Brantford with a debate team, and placed 1st in the categories of Debate Team and Individual Debator in 2008 through the regional tournament of the Ontario Student Debating Union.

The school's Mirror Team or environmental club recently added a water filtration system to one water fountain in the school. The filtration system was installed to promote students to use reusable water bottles rather than plastic water bottles.

Family of Elementary Schools

See also

References

  1. 1 2 3 4 5 "School Information". Ontario Ministry of Education. Retrieved 2006-07-27.
  2. 1 2 "School Directory". Brant Haldimand Norfolk Catholic District School Board. Retrieved 2006-07-27.

External links

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Wednesday, December 30, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.