Storefront school

Not to be confused with learning store.

A storefront school is a school that uses rented space, typically originally intended for retail, instead of a dedicated, purpose-built school building. They are often used for continuing education and upgrading by mature students or other students who do not need or want the facilities or social atmosphere associated with a traditional school.

Storefront schools are common across Canada.

Examples

Storefront School in Ottawa, Ontario (part of Ottawa-Carelton District School Board) "is designed to serve 19 to 21 year old adults with intellectual disabilities who have had prior successful independent Co-op placements. Storefront students come from a variety of programs within the city of Ottawa. This two-year transition program focuses on increasing independence and employability skills."[1]

At the Central Okanagan School District's three storefront school in British Columbia, which offer "an alternate program for students in grades 7 - 9 who are typically between the ages of 12 to 16[...] students attending are typically at risk of dropping out of school or find the more traditional regular school unable to meet their learning styles[...] Students attend 2 hours daily and are assigned to one teacher at a set time. Successful students in our school typically move on to our Grade 10 Program or return to a regular school or enter the work force."

Greater St. Albert Catholic Schools's St. Gabriel Storefront School in Alberta in 2007 was created as a merger of the district's previous outreach and online school programs.[2]

As part of its outreach department Edmonton Public Schools operates five "Learning Stores".[3]

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia - version of the Tuesday, January 27, 2015. The text is available under the Creative Commons Attribution/Share Alike but additional terms may apply for the media files.