Ross Sheppard High School
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Ross Sheppard High School | |
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Okimawitaw Otatuskewin
Mastery of Service
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13546-111 Avenue Edmonton, Alberta, T5M 2P2 Canada |
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Information | |
School type | Public High School, International Baccalaureate, and French Immersion |
Founded | 1957 |
School board | Edmonton Public Schools |
Superintendent | Darrel Robertson |
Area trustee | Orville Chubb |
School number | 7053 |
Principal | Rick Paulitsch |
Grades | 10-12 |
Enrollment | 1,853 (2014-2015) |
Language | English, French Immersion, Mandarin Chinese, Spanish, American Sign Language, French Language |
Area | West Edmonton/Coronation |
Colour(s) | Navy Blue, Columbia Blue, and White |
Mascot | Earl Bird |
Team name | Thunderbirds/T-Birds |
Website | shep |
Ross Sheppard High School or École Ross Sheppard (SHEP or Ross Shep) is a high school located in a northwest neighbourhood of Coronation Park, in Edmonton, Alberta, Canada. The school colours are Colombia blue and navy blue. It is represented by a Thunderbird, also known as a T-Bird. Outside the school is a totem pole with a T-Bird on top, representing the school mascot. The school serves the needs of over 2,000 students attending grades 10-12, including approximately 35 international students annually. Ross Sheppard School's philosophy is based on four pillars - Academics, Arts, Athletics and Service.
Contents
Academics
Ross Sheppard School offers the standard academic program as well as International Baccalaureate (IB), Physical Education, Careers and Technology, Fine Arts, and practical arts. Languages offered other than English include American Sign Language, Chinese Mandarin (as part of the ECBEA program), Spanish and all levels in French.
Ross Sheppard offers the International Baccalaureate (I.B.) Diploma Program in addition to the Alberta education curriculum. During this year continue in a partial I.B. program, or continue in the regular Alberta education program. Most students take the regular Alberta education program while few students take the full program. Students complete the I.B. program while fulfilling their Alberta diploma requirements. Ross Sheppard also offers French Immersion with the first class graduating in 2008 with a bilingual diploma.
Partnering with Edmonton Public Schools and Northern Alberta Institute of Technology, Ross Sheppard provides the "Foundations of Health Sciences" course. The course allows students to receive hands-on skills in the health care field and to look to a future career in acute and long-term care or other fields with strong communication and interpersonal skills. Allowing students to either choose to immediately pursue a career in health care, or to study further in related post-secondary programs. Students enrolled in level 2 of the Skills Centre programs are eligible for enrollment to NAIT through the Skill Centre Project.
According to Fraser Institute, Ross Sheppard is rated as one of the top 10 best high schools out of all 25 public high schools in Edmonton, Alberta, and eighty-first out of two hundred and thirty-nine high schools in Alberta.[1]
Arts
Ross Sheppard offers a wide range of programs in the Arts.
School Year | Performances |
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2014-15 | Bye Bye Birdie, Who Has Seen The Wind |
2013-14 | 1984, Once Upon a Mattress |
2012-13 | Les Misérables, Copacabana |
2011-12 | Grease, Romeo and Juliet |
2010-11 | Rebel Without a Cause, Snow White the Pantomime |
2009-10 |
Athletics
Ross Sheppard offers a wide range of sports including swimming, volleyball, hockey skills academy, cross-country running, rowing, curling, rugby, water polo, cheer team, track and field, women's soccer academy, indoor soccer, elite athletes sports program, basketball, badminton, football, golf, golf academy and handball. It offers 17 sports and 40 teams, over 1,000 student athletes, multiple city and provincial championship teams, a full-time strength and condition coach and a full-time therapist. Ross Sheppard offers an extensive co-curricular program of athletics, the arts, recreational and academic interests. It also boasts some impressive facilities such as an Olympic-sized swimming pool, covered ice arena, football and track stadium, three major playing fields, tennis courts, Telus World of Science (Edmonton), and the Commonwealth bowling green and clubhouse facilities. Ross Sheppard offers a unique, Elite Athlete Program that provides flexible scheduling for student athletes competing at provincial, national and/or international levels. The school features a Hockey, Soccer and Golf Skills Academy. New for 2012-13 will be the Triathlon Academy.
Service
Service is interwoven into Shep's fabric. There are a number of student-led clubs in the school that center around helping local and international charities.
- The Centennial Interact Club is a junior affiliate of Rotary International. In addition to the local charities it supports, student members from the Interact Club also do volunteer work in Belize during their 11th or 12th year.
- Project Green is the school's environmental club that supports local and international environmental causes.
Resource centres
Three resource centres are located throughout the school and are easily accessible and offer students a great deal of support with their academic studies.
- In its main floor library is the Shep Connection Centre, where students take a number of individualized courses (online and correspondence). We also have a special section in our main floor library with a number of mandarin resources from the Confucius Institute in Edmonton.
- On the upper floor, there is another Learning Commons, affectionately known as "the Bookloft." This new venue hosts a technology resource centre, including laptops, SMARTBoard and a VideoConferencing suite. The school has online access to both the University of Alberta and Edmonton Public Library Catalogues. They offer an outstanding selection of reference materials and literature. Students now have the opportunity to reserve and download their latest books through an eBook solution called Overdrive (available as a download in the Apple App Store).
- Student Services is a place for students to come for assistance in aspects of High School (career counselling, personal counselling, post-secondary transition). A number of students, faculty and staff also assist international students in adapting to their new environment and making the transition into Canadian culture as easy and seamless as possible. Student Services is the hub for scholarship information. Over a half million dollars in scholarships are earned by Shep students each year.
The school's namesake
Sheppard represented Canada in the 1924 Olympic Games in Paris, and competed in the hop, step and jump. Sheppard went on to become a teacher, principal and school administrator, and served as superintendent of the Edmonton Public School Board from 1940 to 1955. When he retired, the school board named its newest high school in his honour, constructed starting in 1956, and then added onto in 1958. Sheppard devised the composite high school system, becoming the first superintendent in Canada to implement the concept. During his 15 years as Superintendent of Schools, the number of permanent public schools increased from 30 to 63. Sheppard’s retirement in 1955 concluded 42 years of service to the Edmonton public school system. He died 12 years later, on September 4, 1967.
Notable alumni
- Ruth B - singer/songwriter
- Jermaine Bucknor - Basketball player
- Meghan Collison - High Fashion Model
- Paul Comrie - NHL player
- Jessica Gregg - Olympic Short Track Speed Skater (2010) Silver Medalist
- Wayne Gretzky - aka The Great One - Edmonton Oilers Alumni & holder of numerous NHL records (did not graduate)[2]
- Barb Higgins - former newscaster and journalist for CTV Calgary
- Susan Humphreys - Olympic Figure Skater (1994), National Champion (1996–97)
- Hugh O'Neill - Current CFL player for the BC Lions[3]
- Annamay Pierse - Olympic Swimmer (2008), World short course Record Holder (2009)
- Jamie Salé - Olympic Figure Skater & Olympic Gold Medalist
- Adam Thrasher - Creator of Space Moose[4]
- Angela Whyte - Olympic Track and Field (Hurdles) (2004, 2008)
Notable accomplishments
- In 2007, the Ross Sheppard Cheer Team placed second in the Nationals against some of the best teams in the United States.[citation needed]
- On November 30, 2011, the Ross Sheppard Swim Team was titled "City Champions" at the Edmonton Public School's swim competition, held at Kinsmen Sports Centre. They placed number one in the Tier Two division, taking the place M.E. LaZerte Swim Team held from 2007-2010. M.E. LaZerte placed second in the Tier One division.[5]
- On February 10, 2012, Shep had its first lip-dub, a first of its kind in the school district. It featured over 500 Shep students, showcasing various aspects of the school. A number of media outlets picked this story up, including Global Edmonton and City TV's Breakfast Television.
Incidents
- On March 16, 1959, 19-year-old Stan Williamson opened fire with a .22 calibre rifle inside a crowded corridor of Ross Sheppard High School, killing 16-year-old Howard Gates and wounding five teenage girls. The shooting ended when three 18-year-old students held the gunman down until he could be arrested by police.[6]
- On July 9, 2009, summer school classes were interrupted after a suspected arson broke out. Firefighters managed to contain the flames to a boy's washroom that afternoon, but the soot damage covered three floors of the northwest wing of Ross Sheppard. A quarter-million dollars worth of repair work was finished in time before classes resumed in September.[7]
- On September 19, 2011, students at Ross Sheppard high school were sent home early Monday morning after carbon monoxide was detected to be at potentially dangerous levels. Fire alarms at the school were triggered around 8 a.m. after staff reported the smell of exhaust. The school was evacuated, with students sent to neighboring Westmount Mall. Eventually students were told to go home for the day. Luckily, no injuries were reported.[8]
- In May 2012 physics teacher Lynden Dorval became the object of local newspapers such as the Edmonton Sun,[9] the Edmonton Journal[10] and the National Post,[11] when they learned he was brought before a school board hearing for giving students scores of zero if they did not hand in assignments, which went against the school's no-zero policy. On May 18, 2012 he reportedly received a letter informing him he had been suspended indefinitely. Dorval feels that not giving zeros went against his principles as an educator, whereas the school feels that zeros on assignments that were not handed in do not accurately measure intelligence but are more a comment on a student's behaviour.[12] In August 2014, a provincial review board ruled that Dorval "was treated unfairly in his dismissal" and ordered full repayment of salary from the day of his dismissal and a top-up of his pension. The Edmonton Public School Board were given 30 days to file an appeal to the review board.[13]
References
- ↑ http://alberta.compareschoolrankings.org/high/Ross_Sheppard_School/Edmonton/Report_Card.aspx#
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Hugh O'Neill's profile
- ↑ Thrasher, Adam and Colby Coshe. "Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ) about SPACE MOOSE/www.spacemoose.com/smfaq.htm." Space Moose. Retrieved on February 4, 2011.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Ross Sheppard Composite High School
- ↑ http://www.inews880.com/Channels/Reg/LocalNews/Story.aspx?id=1113651
- ↑ http://edmonton.ctv.ca/servlet/an/local/CTVNews/20110919/edm_school_110919/20110919/?hub=EdmontonHome
- ↑ http://www.edmontonsun.com/2012/06/02/suspended-teach-feels-better-because-of-support
- ↑ http://www.edmontonjournal.com/health/Staples+Suspended+teacher+hero+fight+high+standards+updated/6710502/story.html
- ↑ http://news.nationalpost.com/2012/06/02/edmonton-teacher-may-lose-job-for-refusing-to-let-kids-skip-assignments/
- ↑ http://news.epsb.ca/2012/05/why-do-we-grade-students-the-way-we-do/
- ↑ http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/edmonton/lynden-dorval-fired-for-giving-zeros-treated-unfairly-appeal-board-rules-1.2751007