École secondaire catholique Garneau

Coordinates: 45°27′56.31″N 75°31′28.61″W / 45.4656417°N 75.5246139°W / 45.4656417; -75.5246139
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École secondaire catholique Garneau
Address
Map
6588, rue Carrière (Orléans community)

,
Canada
Coordinates45°27′56.31″N 75°31′28.61″W / 45.4656417°N 75.5246139°W / 45.4656417; -75.5246139
Information
School typeFrench language Separate Catholic
(publicly funded)
MottoApprendre pour devenir
(Learn to become)
Religious affiliation(s)Roman Catholic
Opened1972
School boardConseil des écoles catholiques du Centre-Est
PrincipalCaroline Viau
Grades7–12
LanguageFrench
Colour(s)Grey and Navy   
MascotObélix
Websitegarneau.ecolecatholique.ca

École secondaire catholique Garneau (Garneau Catholic High School), is a French-language high school teaching grades 7–12 in the community of Orléans in the eastern end of Ottawa, Ontario (capital of Canada).

History[edit]

Map of Ottawa showing the francophone concentrations

In 1972 the school was opened and named in honour of the French-Canadian politician, poet, and historian François-Xavier Garneau of the 19th century.[1]

Building and location[edit]

In 2001 the construction of l'école élementaire Garneau, a new addition onto l'école secondaire Garneau, was due in part to expanding demographics, the expanded school-closure of the francophone intermediate school, école intermediaire Léo-D-Côté and its transformation into l'École élémentaire catholique Saint-Joseph d'Orléans (703095). Garneau High School would eventually serve as both a high school and intermediate school, which, according to the Ministry of Education (Ontario), are two distinct schools : École intermédiaire Garneau 7e-8e (752576) and École secondaire catholique Garneau (710903). Both schools are physically located at 6588 Rue Carrière, Ottawa, Ontario, K1C 1J4.

Double cohort[edit]

Between the late 1990s and early 2000s high schools in Ontario, including Garneau, were affected by the Ontario Conservative Government's plans to reform secondary schools. A 1997 announcement by the government included plans to reduce Ontario's five-year high school program with a four-year program.[2] In 2003 this created a phenomenon dubbed the double cohort, whereas students from the old program, the five-year Ontario Academic Credit (OAC) or grade thirteen program, and the new four-year program graduated together for the first time.[2]

Over-population[edit]

École secondaire catholique Béatrice-Desloges, another Catholic high school in the Ottawa—Orléans region, was constructed in 1997 (25 years after Garneau) and gradually integrated students one grade year at a time. This prevented most students attending Garneau from switching over to the new school. It also helped with a gradual reduction of Garneau's over-population.

Geography[edit]

Garneau is located in a highly Francophone area (See map of Ottawa showing the francophone concentrations). The next closest structure and organization, which is 200 meters to the east of Garneau, is the Mouvement d'implication Francophone d'Orléans (MIFO), an organisation that has continuously encouraged Francophone culture within the community of Orléans. Approximately another 900 meters from MIFO is located an Independent grocery store.[3]

In April 2008, according to the City of Ottawa, Garneau was located in the Innes ward, previously known as "Old Ward no. 2".[4] The property area consisted of 20.22 acres (81,800 m2) and was legally described as "CON 2 OF PT LOT 3".[4]

School boards[edit]

Garneau is listed under the Conseil des écoles catholiques du Centre-Est (CECCE).[5] However, according to the Ontario government the official name of Garneau's School board, or more precisely the CECLFCE, is the Conseil scolaire de district catholique du Centre-Est de l'Ontario (CSDCEO).[6] Both school board names, CECLFCE and CSDCEO, correspond to the same physical address.[7] According to many students of the school, the school board and council often acts in an unjust fashion, especially when dealing with incidents like when a student caused a fire in one of the bathrooms

Parks[edit]

Garneau High School has several surrounding parks and fields that are regularly used by students and east-end athletic associations. In 2007 the Orléans Bengals and Gloucester Dukes football clubs had publicly complained about the mosquito infestation within the east-end Ottawa fields, especially the Garneau fields.[8] Innes Councilor Rainer Bloess jokingly stated in a press conference that he "went up to visit and see if they really had a problem or if they were just being wimps."[8] He also stated that "after being with them [athletic or football associations] for five minutes I beat a hasty retreat back to my van and spoke to them through a little crack in the window... enough to convince me that the location is obviously a prime mosquito location." In June 2007, Councillors Bloess, Rob Jellett and Bob Monette agreed to a year-long pilot program to reduce the amount of mosquito larvae by possibly using biological protein crystals produced by naturally occurring bacteria called Bti.[8]

Programs offered[edit]

CCNA Cisco courses and computers[edit]

Garneau offers a variety of specialized courses including programming and economics in addition to traditional coursework. Garneau and Cisco Systems have paired together to offer the students of grade 10, 11 and 12 a college-level Cisco CCNA networking course. The Cisco Networking Academy Program lists 114 Secondary Schools and 29 Colleges as participating schools.[9] The School's name is not specifically mentioned on the list, however it is listed under the official school board's name the Conseil scolaire de district catholique du Centre-Est de l'Ontario.[9] The Cisco 3 class was split into Cisco 3 and Cisco 4 classes, adding further depth and time into the program.

Fotek[edit]

An in-school IT enterprise started, maintained fully by students. Teachers, staff, students and parents can have their computers repaired, receive tutorials or other IT services.

Audio engineering[edit]

Created circa 2008, the audio engineering (TGR3M) program involves the editing, recording and publication of music and the creation of radio advertisements for the school's station.

An example of such work was located at Garneau's YouTube page. It featured the French folk song "Noël c'est l'amour", created by students and teachers at the school. The main musicians were Élizabeth Chamberland, Sara Nizman and Kelly Raffray. The instruments were either recorded or created using an Oxygen 25 MIDI Controller and HALionOne. The song was then edited by the school's audio engineering students, mainly using Cubase software.

Notable alumni[edit]

See also[edit]

Notes and references[edit]

  1. ^ ÉSC Garneau • François-Xavier Garneau
  2. ^ a b Ontario English Catholic Teachers Association (OECTA). "Ontario’s double cohort: A government’s experiment in education". March 2002. OECTA.on.ca:Toronto, Ontario. Accessed July 9, 2009.
  3. ^ "Dessureault Your Independent Grocer to 6600 Carrière St". Dessureault Your Independent Grocer to 6600 Carrière St. Retrieved November 2, 2020.
  4. ^ a b "Property Information – 6588 Carriere St". City of Ottawa. Retrieved July 4, 2008.note: Through eMap at www.ottawa.ca by searching for address number "6588" and street "carriere".
  5. ^ Conseil des écoles catholiques du Centre-Est: Liste des écoles: 21 Octobre, 2008. Accessed October 23, 2008 9:48:01 am EST.
  6. ^ Government of Ontario, Canada. "Board Directory – Conseil scolaire de district catholique du Centre-Est de l'Ontario:". October 22, 2008. Queen's Printer for Ontario. Accessed October 23, 2008 9:48:01 am EST. note: The web address listed on the Ontario government's website for CSDCEO directs to the website of the CECLFCE.
  7. ^ Compare Conseil des écoles catholiques de langue française du Centre-Est (CECLFCE) to Conseil scolaire de district catholique du Centre-Est de l'Ontario (CSDCEO).
  8. ^ a b c Cummings, Laura (June 22, 2007), "Sports teams 'abuzz' about mosquito program", Weekly Journal, vol. 12, no. 27, pp. 1–2
  9. ^ a b "Networking Academy Program-Networking Academy - Cisco Systems". www.cisco.com. Archived from the original on November 8, 2006.

External links[edit]