Loretto College School

Loretto College School
Address
151 Rosemount Avenue
Earlscourt, Toronto, Ontario, M6H 2N1
Canada
Coordinates 43°40′32″N 79°26′37″W / 43.6756°N 79.4435°W / 43.6756; -79.4435Coordinates: 43°40′32″N 79°26′37″W / 43.6756°N 79.4435°W / 43.6756; -79.4435
Information
School type Catholic High School
Motto Cruci dum Spiro Fido
(Throughout My Life, I Shall Place My Hope in the Cross)
Religious affiliation(s) Roman Catholic
(Loretto Sisters)
Established 1915
School board Toronto Catholic District School Board
Superintendent Dr. Jim Saraco
Area 5
Area trustee Frank D'Amico
Ward 6
School number 511 / 728063
Principal Vince Russiello
Grades 9-12
Enrollment 467 (2016-17)
Colour(s) Blue and White         
Mascot Loretta
Team name Loretto Lightning
Parish St. Clare Parish
Website www.lorettocollege.tcdsb.org

Loretto College School (LCS, Loretto College, or Loretto) is a Catholic high school for young girls in Toronto, Ontario, Canada.

History

Loretto College School was founded as a private school by the Sisters of the Institute of the Blessed Virgin Mary in 1915. The roots of the school go back to 1847 when the Loretto Sisters from Ireland opened a boarding and day school for young Catholic women in Toronto. The boarding school eventually became known as Loretto Abbey and the day school as Loretto "Bond Street" and then Loretto College.

The school building (built in 1954) and convent (built 1915) were located on Brunswick Avenue in the Annex neighbourhood and the school was usually known as "Loretto Brunswick".[1] By the 1980s, LCS opened an annex on the former site of St. Dominic Savio Catholic School on Bathurst Street (closed in 1986) to accommodate overflow from the main campus. That campus later became Monsignor Fraser College Annex that eventually moved to the former St. Peter.

The school was relocated to a new building on 151 Rosemount Avenue, the former home of Richard W. Scott (Senior) Catholic School, in 2005.[2] Originally, the site was shared by Bishop Francis Marrocco Catholic High School that opened in 1986.

Student life

Loretto College is a semestered school. Students select a program of study from courses at the academic, applied, open and locally developed levels. In Grade 11 and 12, courses are selected based on the student's post-secondary choice of destination- university, college, apprenticeship or the workplace.

Loretto's special education services are delivered through integrated programming in the mainstream classroom.

In addition to the academic program of study, students are encouraged to explore and develop the full range of their talents and interests by participating in athletics, student government, peer ministry, yearbook, leadership, drama, dance and musical activities.

Spiritual life

As at all Catholic schools, students at Loretto College School take a religion course each year. The school's faith life also includes retreats, liturgies, charitable works and Catholic perspectives across the curriculum. Mary Ward and the Loretto Sisters are role models.

Academics

One out of six students are on the school's honour roll. 84% of applicants have been accepted into post-secondary education in recent years.

Alumnae

Staff

Diane Vautour, a history teacher, was awarded the 2010 Governor General's Award for Excellence in Teaching Canadian History.[4]

See also

References

  1. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2011-10-06. Retrieved 2011-01-18.
  2. "Archived copy". Archived from the original on 2007-12-13. Retrieved 2008-05-16.
  3. http://www.histori.ca/minutes/minute.do?id=14288
  4. "OISE :: news article 101122 :: Ontario Institute for Studies in Education of the University of Toronto". www.oise.utoronto.ca.
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