University of Toronto Schools

University of Toronto Schools (UTS)

Velut arbor ita ramus
As the tree, so the branch
Address
371 Bloor Street West
Toronto, Ontario
Canada
Coordinates 43°40′1″N 79°24′8″W / 43.66694°N 79.40222°W / 43.66694; -79.40222Coordinates: 43°40′1″N 79°24′8″W / 43.66694°N 79.40222°W / 43.66694; -79.40222
Information
School type Independent laboratory school
Established September 12, 1910
Principal Rosemary Evans
Teaching staff 65[1]
Grades 7-12
Gender Coeducational
Enrollment 645 (2010)
Language English
Hours in school day 7:07
Houses Althouse Gators, Cody Cougars, Crawford Knights, Lewis Vikings
School colour(s) Blue     
Team name UTS Blues
Newspaper Cuspidor
Yearbook The Twig
Tuition $20,875+(2012-2013)[1]
Affiliation University of Toronto
Nobel laureates 2
Website utschools.ca
UTS in 2011

University of Toronto Schools (UTS) is an independent secondary day school affiliated with the University of Toronto in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. The school follows a specialized academic curriculum, and admission is determined by competitive examination. It is known as one of the most prestigious high schools in Canada. UTS is associated with two Nobel Prize Laureates.

History

UTS in 1920

University of Toronto Schools was founded in 1910 as a "practice school", also known as a laboratory school, for the University of Toronto's Faculty of Education.[2] As originally conceived and reflected in its present name, UTS was intended to be a collection of at least two schools, one of which would enroll female students.[3] The original plan was to recruit 200 teachers and 1200 students, but financial constraints limited the number of students to 375 boys.[2]

The first headmaster of UTS' history was H. J. "Bull" Crawford, who also taught Classics at the school.[4] Crawford was responsible for most administrative tasks, which, until a secretary was hired in 1921, included signing admit slips.[4] The school won the first ever Memorial Cup in 1919, as the best junior ice hockey team in the country. They defeated the Regina Patricias in two games, by scores of 14-3 and 15-5. The school was Eastern Canadian Champions, the same year, defeating the Montreal Melvilles 8-2 in a single-game playoff. Future NHL defenceman Dunc Munro played for this team.[5] In 1925, Mike Rodden coached the UTS Rugby team to an undefeated season, culminating in the Canadian Interscholastic Championship.[5]

In 1934, A.C. Lewis succeeded John Althouse to become the third headmaster.[6] In 1944, W. B. "Brock" MacMurray, a 1924 graduate of the school, became the fourth headmaster; his 28-year term at UTS remains the longest in school history.[7] In 1957, the House System was established, with three of four houses named after the school's first three headmasters - Crawford, Althouse, and Lewis. The fourth house, Cody, was named after a former president of the University of Toronto.

The 1960s were a "turbulent" decade in the history of UTS.[8] Prior to the 1960s, the Ontario Ministry of Education required seniors to complete a number of matriculation exams in order to graduate. The student who scored highest in his or her exams province-wide would be awarded the Prince of Wales Scholarship; during the matriculation era, UTS students won thirteen Prince of Wales Scholarships.[9]

Although matriculation exams would eventually be abolished in the 1960s, UTS students had been calling for change since the late 1930s in the form of valedictory addresses and protests. Addresses by Mark Czarnecki and Richard Reoch in 1963 and 1966, respectively, targeted the tendency for matriculations to reduce "a tangible desire for knowledge", producing instead "a mind that cannot think for itself".[7] In 1967, Ian Morrison's valedictory address lambasted a number of teachers and administrators who had been responsible for rigidly holding UTS to its past.[10] The speech was not published in The Twig the following year, but was still circulated among students.[10] Discontent with the school's inability to reform climaxed in the "Protest for Nothing" in May 1969, which was led by Brian Blugerman, Michael Eccles, Paul Eprile and David Glennie.[11] Unlike most protests, the placards that the protesters held were blank; when headmaster MacMurray asked for their demands, a student famously showed him a blank sheet of paper and stated, "This is a list of our demands." The protest was front page news in Toronto newspapers and was widely reported in the U.S. media, including the New York Times. It was the first (and perhaps only) time that UTS was the subject of such wide public attention.

At the turn of the decade, UTS developed a "New Program", which focused on completing subjects ("units") for graduation instead of matriculations.[12] The administration also agreed to allow students to complete their secondary school requirements in 4 years instead of 5,[12] an advantage that was enjoyed until the 2003 double cohort. The Executive Council was formed in 1968 to provide a liaison between students and staff. Some of the Executive Council's first recommendations were implemented in 1969, including making Latin optional after grade 11 and introducing non-numerical grades for Arts and Music courses.[12] In addition to academics, certain aspects of the school's extracurricular traditions were gradually being phased out. In 1966, participation in the Cadet Corps, which had been a bastion of UTS tradition, became optional; eventually, the Corps was discontinued.[13] Change was also evident in the school's teaching staff: in the 1960s alone, 35 new teachers were hired, compared to only 15 hirings during the 1950s.[14]

Donald Gutteridge had originally arrived in 1962 at MacMurray's request, and had taught Grade 13 English. In 1972, Gutteridge succeeded MacMurray.[15] Although he was the school's fifth headmaster, he was the first to call himself a "principal".[16] During his tenure as the Premier of Ontario, Bill Davis came under fire for publicly funding UTS, which Liberal education critic Tom Reed called an "elitist" institution. Under pressure from the provincial government and the University of Toronto, a decision was made to admit girls into the school.[15] Two proposals were tabled: the first involved expanding the school by maintaining the same number of incoming boys, and the second involved maintaining the class size by reducing the number of incoming boys.[16] On January 18, 1973, the University of Toronto approved the second proposal, paving the way for a co-educational UTS the following academic year.[17] The first two co-educational cohorts totalled 70 students; each cohort was divided into two classes of 35 students.[18] In spite of initial concerns about the watered-down quality of UTS boys athletics, the junior girls basketball team won a city title in 1978.[17] In order to assist families in financial need, the UTS Endowment Fund was set up in 1980; in 1989, approximately $50,000 was distributed to students in need.[19]

In April 1993, the New Democratic government of Ontario announced the withdrawal of public funding from the school, leading to a dramatic rise in tuition costs, and prompting the mobilization of all its constituencies to make up the loss.

In 2004, UTS became an ancillary unit of the University of Toronto separate from the Ontario Institute for Studies in Education. The school formed its own board of directors representing alumni, parents and the university administration. Throughout the 2009-2010 school year, the school celebrated its centennial year with the Kickoff celebration at Varsity Stadium and the Homecoming weekend to be held in the school itself. The centennial year also saw the introduction of its new school song, written by Nathalie Siah '10, the House Centennial spirit pennant, as well as the House Cup, awarding the House who collected the most points (athletic, literary, and spirit) over the school year.

Possible relocation or redevelopment

The University of Toronto informed UTS in 2011 that it was rejecting its proposal for a $48 million refurbishment of its facilities and that the university intends to reclaim the property at 371 Bloor Street West for its own use. UTS had been given until 2021 to find and move to new space.[20] However, in 2014, it was announced by the chair of the UTS board of directors that the University of Toronto and UTS were negotiating to maintain an affiliation between the two institutions and keep the school at its present location but redevelop the site so that it could fit meet the needs of both the university and the school.[21]

In October 2015, the University of Toronto and UTS announced a 50-year agreement that would renew the school's official affiliation with the university, allow UTS to remain on its Bloor Street campus, redevelop 70,000 square feet of its space as well as build a 70,000 square feet addition. The redevelopment proposal would include the construction of a 700-seat auditorium that would also function as a university classroom, a double gym, an atrium and a black box theatre. The university would retain ownership of the building and land but UTS would pay for construction and operating costs. The agreement is subject to approval by the university's governing council.[22]

Admissions

Most students enter in Grade 7 through a two-stage competitive process. Prior to the admission of the class of 2014, the first stage consisted of a multiple choice exam;[23] those who passed this test in the top percentiles (usually 200 students) were invited back for a second written exam and an interview. However, starting with the class of 2014, the admission process consists of the Secondary School Admission Test (SSAT), and for the top 170 - 190 applicants, a second exam (focused on Math and English) and an interview with a staff member and UTS alumni. Ultimately, 96 candidates (48 boys and 48 girls) are chosen from around 350 applicants in the first-stage process each year; the typical cutoff for SSAT scores for Grade 7 entrance is in the mid to high 1900s for boys, and low 1900s for girls, depending on the applicant pool for that year. For upper year entrance the process is slightly different. UTS will admit approximately 24 students, the average size of a class, for grade 9, and handful at grade 8, 10 and 11. Usually there is an equal number of boys and girls who are accepted into the school. On average, for the first year (F1/grade 7) there are four classes each of which consists of 24 students. Candidates must be Canadian citizens or landed immigrants and may apply to enter either Grade 7 or the upper school (Grade 9 and above). For details about applying, it is best to look at the school's web site or call the admissions office.

Academics

UTS is attended by students from grades 7 through 12, with 78 students per grade in classes graduating before 2001, 104 students per grade in classes graduating before 2009, and 110 in classes graduating thereafter.

UTS has enriched courses and a specialized curriculum,[24] which are designed to challenge and educate at a higher level than at most public and many independent schools. Because potential UTS candidates are required to pass a rigorous entrance examination to attend the school, its curriculum is accelerated on the assumption that its students assimilate information faster. For this reason several higher-grade subjects are taught at lower grade levels. For example, Grade 10 students can take an enriched version of Ontario's Grade 11 courses in introductory physics, biology, and/or chemistry and Grade 7 students take both the Ontario grade 7 curriculum and grade 8 curriculum. As well, effort is made to enrich classes with extra material and more in-depth discussions.

UTS offers Advanced Placement courses, but does not have an International Baccalaureate program. In addition to the Ontario Secondary School Diploma, graduates earn a UTS Diploma, which signifies the completion of certain specialized courses, among them Latin and Romance of Antiquity (ROA), and attesting to an attainment level beyond the provincial standards.

UTS's rate of student achievement is commensurate with its selective admissions policy, both in academics and in extracurricular activities. Virtually all UTS students go on to university following graduation:[25] in 2004, the University of Toronto, McGill, Queen's, Waterloo, McMaster, and UBC were the most popular destinations, accounting for more than two-thirds of graduates; of the rest, a majority attended U.S. universities (primarily Ivy League and other "top tier" US institutions) or UK institutions. The school's alumni include 22 Rhodes Scholars [26] and two Nobel Prize winners: chemist John Polanyi and economist Michael Spence.

UTS's grade level nomenclature differs from that used commonly in Ontario high schools. This nomenclature has varied somewhat over the many years, and is due in part to a curriculum whose courses do not fit neatly into the provincial grading system, and in part to what had until the elimination of Grade 13 in Ontario constituted a six-year course to seven grade levels. The grade level nomenclature, with rough equivalents, consists of:

Prior to the double cohort in 2003, F1 and F2 formed both halves of the Ontario Grade 7-9 curriculum; M3 was equivalent to Grade 10, and so forth.

Extracurriculars

Each student is placed in one of four Houses (Althouse Alligators, Cody Cougars, Crawford Knights, and Lewis Vikings); several competitive House events are held throughout the year. These events include the House Track Meet, Lip-Sync contests, gameshow-themed competitions, intramural sports, and four-way soccer games. The house system is only one facet of an unusually rich extracurricular life at UTS, however, and activities range from the school newspaper and yearbook – Cuspidor and Twig (along with its offshoot, the Twig Tape which features student and alumni musical compositions) – to champion sports teams and clubs, to the Science Club and Food Appreciation Team, to the Card Strategy Club. The school has in recent years been a four-time winner of the Reach for the Top National Trivia. UTS has also won the Ontario Student Classics Conference for twenty years running as of 2015, with the first win coming in 1996. UTS students are actively involved in public speaking; the UTS Debating Society is a major club and UTS students organize the Southern Ontario Model United Nations Assembly (SOMA), the largest and oldest Model United Nations conference run entirely by High School students in North America and the second largest Model UN conference for high school students in Canada.

There are several other events during the school year such as Arts and Music Month, known prior to 2008-2009 as Arts and Music Week, Halloween Fun Week and more. Arts and Music Month is a month when UTS students display their art work and show off their music skills either in their music class, in small bands, solo, or in an extracurricular group. There were many events such as the art work displayed in the UTS gym, battle of the bands where students form into small groups and play the song of their choice on stage in the auditorium, there is also a Holiday Breakfast where the student council (informally known as StudCow) makes breakfast for the whole school while holiday music is played by some of the music students. Also there are the junior and senior music nights, during which the senior classes and the junior music classes play music, and the Senior and Junior plays, in which are both put on by the Senior drama class, the Junior Play being acted out by students in the younger grades, and the Senior Play being acted out by students in the older grades. The UTS Show is the biggest annual school production put on by the student body. It is an amalgamation of acting, modeling, cultural dancing, costume designing, set constructing and painting. All aspects of the Show are 100% student run, from the script writing to the choreographing to the directing.

The building, 371 Bloor St. West was also used as a location for significant exterior and interior shots for the 2006 film Take the Lead, but the school was only credited in the DVD director's commentary.

Notable alumni

References

  1. 1 2 University of Toronto Schools. Quick Facts. Accessed March 16, 2008.
  2. 1 2 Advani, With Pardonable Pride: The University of Toronto Schools, p.35
  3. "UTS". Retrieved July 14, 2015.
  4. 1 2 Advani, With Pardonable Pride: The University of Toronto Schools, p.70
  5. 1 2 Advani, With Pardonable Pride: The University of Toronto Schools, p.56
  6. Advani, With Pardonable Pride: The University of Toronto Schools, p.71
  7. 1 2 Advani, With Pardonable Pride: The University of Toronto Schools, p.39
  8. Advani, With Pardonable Pride: The University of Toronto Schools, p.34
  9. Advani, With Pardonable Pride: The University of Toronto Schools, p.37
  10. 1 2 Advani, With Pardonable Pride: The University of Toronto Schools, p.40
  11. The Toronto Daily Star, Monday May 5, 1969, front page, "The Latest in Protests - A Sit-in For Nothing"; New York Times, Tuesday May 6, 1969, p.32. An October, 2014 article in the Toronto Star quoted Michael Tory, a UTS old boy, to the effect that his brother, John Tory, also a former UTS student and, in 2014, a Toronto mayoral candidate, had been one of the organizers of the 1969 protest. In fact John Tory had no hand in its organization and had no involvement of any kind in the protest.
  12. 1 2 3 Advani, With Pardonable Pride: The University of Toronto Schools, p.43
  13. Advani, With Pardonable Pride: The University of Toronto Schools, p.42
  14. Advani, With Pardonable Pride: The University of Toronto Schools, p.79
  15. 1 2 Advani, With Pardonable Pride: The University of Toronto Schools, p.64
  16. 1 2 Advani, With Pardonable Pride: The University of Toronto Schools, p.65
  17. 1 2 Advani, With Pardonable Pride: The University of Toronto Schools, p.66
  18. Advani, With Pardonable Pride: The University of Toronto Schools, p.61
  19. Advani, With Pardonable Pride: The University of Toronto Schools, p.27
  20. "University of Toronto gives eviction notice to school for the gifted". Globe and Mail. April 28, 2011. Retrieved October 4, 2014.
  21. "Toronto high school optimistic it will stay in century-old building". Globe and Mail. June 27, 2014. Retrieved December 30, 2014.
  22. "U of T deal allows on-campus private school to stay put and grow out". Toronto Star. October 30, 2015. Retrieved October 30, 2015.
  23. "UTS". Retrieved July 14, 2015.
  24. "UTS". Retrieved July 14, 2015.
  25. "UTS". Retrieved July 14, 2015.
  26. "Excellence under fire". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved July 14, 2015.
  27. "The Root - Fall 2008" (PDF). Utscholls.ca. Retrieved November 27, 2012.
  28. "David Ross Brillinger". Retrieved May 18, 2014.
  29. 1 2 "The Root - Spring 2009" (PDF). Utschools.ca. Retrieved November 27, 2012.
  30. "Obituary: Ralph Hennessy's Storied Life at Sea," Ottawa Citizen, June 19, 2014
  31. "biography - greg hollingshead". Retrieved July 14, 2015.
  32. rob mclennan. "rob mclennan's blog". Retrieved July 14, 2015.
  33. "The Windsor Daily Star - Google News Archive Search". Retrieved July 14, 2015.
  34. Katrina Onstad, "Bestselling novelist Claire Messud returns with The Woman Upstairs," Toronto Life, March 2013.
  35. Canadian Encyclopedia, "James Blair Seaborn," Canadian Encyclopedia.
  36. "For James Tory, law 'just seemed like a grace for him'". The Globe and Mail (Toronto). August 26, 2013.
  37. ""Ralph Heintzman, Tom Symons: A Canadian Life".
  38. Sandra Martin. "John A. Tory: A quiet, humble man who shaped Canadian dynasties". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved August 8, 2012.
  39. "Vincent Massey Tovell Collection," Archives Canada
  40. "Vincent Massey Tovell, 1922-2014," The Root, Fall 2014 (page 33)

Further reading

In popular culture

The school was used in the 2006 movie Take the Lead.

External links

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