NBIAA Handbook-2021.Pub

Total Page:16

File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb

NBIAA Handbook-2021.Pub SECTION 1 DIRECTORY NBIAA CONTACTS President Vice-President Andy Clark Rodney Buggie Hartland Community School Blackville School 217 Rockland Road 12 McLaggan Drive Hartland, N.B., E7P 0A2 Blackville, N.B., E9B 1Y4 Phone: 375-3000 Phone: 843-2900 Past President Executive Director Allyson Ouellette Phone: 457-4843 Administrative Assistant Lisa Johnstone Phone: 457-6986 CONFERENCE PRESIDENTS Northern Eastern Conference President Conference President Mae Cameron Josette Allain Sugarloaf Senior High School École Clément-Cormier Campbellton, N.B. Bouctouche, N.B. Phone: 789-2170 Phone: 743-7207 [email protected] [email protected] Southern Western Conference President Conference President Carrie Shea Ann Fitton St. Malachy’s Memorial High School Nackawic Senior High School Saint John, N.B. Nackawic, N.B. Phone: 658-5790 Phone: 575-6044 [email protected] [email protected] 6 EXECUTIVE COMMITTEE Conference Representatives Northern Conference AAA: Stéphane Hachey École secondaire Népisiguit AA: Mae Cameron Sugarloaf Senior High School A: Lori Johnson Dalhousie Regional High School Eastern Conference AAA: Stacey Boudreau Bernice MacNaughton High School AA: Josette Allain École Clément-Cormier A: Brigitte Daigle Poly. Mgr. M.-F.-Richard Southern Conference AAA: Carrie Shea St. Malachy’s Memorial High School AA: David Taylor St. Stephen High School A: Michael Head Sir James Dunn Academy Western Conference AAA: Kurt Allen Leo Hayes High School AA: Nathan Everett Woodstock High School A: Ann Fitton Nackawic High School Anglophone District Representative Jay Colpitts Anglophone School District West Francophone Superintendent Marc Michaud Francophone School District Department of EECD liaisons: Anglophone Francophone Tanya Thibeau Isabelle Perron Desjardins Physical Education and Health Agent pédagogique provincial Learning Specialist Programmes d’études et évaluation HIGH SCHOOL SPORTS An integral part of the curriculum 7 CLASSIFICATION OF SCHOOLS AAA SCHOOLS - 16 NORTHERN CONFERENCE SOUTHERN CONFERENCE École secondaire Népisiguit Harbour View High School Kennebecasis Valley High School Saint John High School Simonds High School EASTERN CONFERENCE St. Malachy`s Memorial High School Bernice MacNaughton High School Harrison Trimble High School WESTERN CONFERENCE École L’Odyssée Cité-des-Jeunes-A.-M. Sormany École Mathieu-Martin Fredericton High School Moncton High School Leo Hayes High School Riverview High School Oromocto High School AA SCHOOLS - 20 NORTHERN CONFERENCE SOUTHERN CONFERENCE Bathurst High School Fundy High School James M. Hill Memorial High School Hampton High School Polyvalente Louis-Mailloux Rothesay High School Polyvalente Marie-Esther St. Stephen High School Miramichi Valley High School Sussex Regional High School Sugarloaf Senior High School Polyvalente W.-Arthur-Losier EASTERN CONFERENCE WESTERN CONFERENCE Bonar Law Memorial High School Carleton North High School École Clément-Cormier École Sainte-Anne Polyvalente L.-J.-Robichaud Polyvalente Thomas-Albert Tantramar Regional High School Woodstock High School A SCHOOLS - 39 NORTHERN CONFERENCE SOUTHERN CONFERENCE École Aux quatre vents Campobello Island Consolidated School Blackville School Grand Manan Community School École Carrefour Beausoleil Harvey High School Central NB Academy McAdam High School Centre La Fontaine Rothesay Netherwood School Dalhousie Regional High School École Samuel-de-Champlain North & South Esk Reg. High School Sir James Dunn Academy Polyvalente Roland-Pépin Sussex Christian School École Régionale de Baie-Sainte-Anne Stanley Consolidated School EASTERN CONFERENCE WESTERN CONFERENCE Belleisle Regional High School Polyvalente A.-J.-Savoie Caledonia Regional High School Canterbury High School Cambridge-Narrows School Fredericton Christian Academy Chipman Forest Avenue School École Grande-Rivière École Étoile de l’Acadie Hartland Community School J.M.A. Armstrong School John Caldwell School École Mgr-M.-F.-Richard École Marie-Gaétane Minto Memorial High School Nackawic Senior High School Moncton Christian Academy Saint Mary’s Academy Petitcodiac Regional School Southern Victoria High School Tobique Valley High School 8 .
Recommended publications
  • ASD-W) Multi-Year Infrastructure Planning Mcadam Study (K to 12)
    Anglophone West School District (ASD-W) Multi-year infrastructure planning McAdam Study (K to 12) New Brunswick Department of Education and Early Childhood Development (EECD) 31 March 2020 Table of Contents Scope 3 Summary of options 9 Appendix A – Overview of the feed schools in the McAdam catchment area 13 Appendix B – Vital Statistics (NB Birth Rates) 16 Appendix C – 2016 Census and enrolment data 19 Appendix D – Scenario 1 (Re-configure McAdam High School to K-12 and 28 close McAdam Elementary School) Appendix E – Scenario 2 (Close both McAdam schools and replace with a 35 new K-12 school) Appendix F – Scenario 3 (Re-configure McAdam Elementary School to K-8 38 and 9-12 attend Harvey High) Appendix G – Scenario 4 (Re-configure McAdam High School to K-8 and 9- 51 12 attend Harvey High) Appendix H – Scenario 5 (New K-8 McAdam School and 9-12 attend Harvey 54 High) Appendix I – Scenario 6 (Keep McAdam Elementary and close McAdam 57 High, with 6-12 attending Harvey High) Appendix J – Scenario 7 (New K-5 McAdam Elementary School, with 6-12 65 attending Harvey High) Appendix K – Scenario 8 (Close both McAdam schools and add the 68 catchment areas to the Harvey schools) Scope – ASD-W has initiated a review of the two schools in McAdam to examine potential scenarios for long-term infrastructure planning McAdam Schools Subject schools – year built McAdam Elementary School (K to 5 – 1945) McAdam High School (6 to 12 – 1924) Average age of the subject infrastructure: 86 years Other schools that may be affected in the scenario planning include: Harvey Elementary School (K to 5 – 1966) Harvey High School (6 to 12 – 1980) Note: McAdam Elementary School is a two-storey metal framed structure originally constructed in 1945 and had extensive renovations/additions completed in 1982.
    [Show full text]
  • Arnprior District High School Arnprior, on St
    Canadian Nuclear Society / Société Nucléaire Canadienne Page 1 of 6 CNS Geiger Kit Donations: (sorted by province, most recent) Bert Church High School Airdrie, AB George MacDougal High School Airdrie, AB Bishop Grandin High School Calgary, AB Bowness High School Calgary, AB Chestermere High School Calgary AB Dr. E. P. Scarlett High School Calgary AB Henry Wise Wood High School Calgary AB James Fowler High School Calgary, AB John G. Diefenbaker High School Calgary, AB Lord Beaverbrook High School Calgary, AB Sir Winston Churchill High School Calgary, AB Springbank Community High School Calgary, AB Camrose Composite High School Camrose, AB Bow Valley High School Cochrane, AB Cochrane High School Cochrane, AB Centre High School Edmonton, AB St. Laurent High School Edmonton, AB Parkland Composite High School Edson, AB Grande Cache Community HS Grand Cache, AB Nipisihkopahk Secondary School Hobbema, AB Kitscoty High School Kitscoty, AB Winston Churchill High School Lethbridge, AB Centre for Learning @ Home Okotoks, AB Foothills Composite High School Okotoks, AB Onoway Jr/Sr High School Onoway, AB Lindsay Thurber Comprehensive HS, Red Deer AB Salisbury Composite High School Sherwood Park, AB Strathcona Christian Academy Secondary Sherwood Park, AB Evergreen Catholic Outreach Spruce Grove, AB Memorial Composite High School Stony Plain, AB St. Mary’s Catholic High School Vegreville, AB J.R. Robson High School Vermilion, AB Blessed Sacrament Secondary School Wainwright, AB Pinawa Secondary School Pinawa, MB Bathurst High School Bathurst, NB #
    [Show full text]
  • 2017 - 2018 Annual Report 1 Table of Contents
    2017 - 2018 ANNUAL REPORT 1 www.saintjohntheatrecompany.com TABLE OF CONTENTS: Executive Director’s Summary.........................................3 President’s Summary.........................................................5 About the Saint John Theatre Company.......................6 2017-2018 in Review..........................................................7 Summer of 2017.................................................................8 Main Stage at Imperial Theatre.......................................9 SJTC Studio Production Series........................................12 Canadian Stages.............................................................14 Live @ the BMO Music Series..........................................15 Community Education Outreach..................................16 SJTC theatre on the Road..............................................17 UNB Student Partnership.................................................18 Building Upgrades............................................................19 Public Profile.....................................................................20 Future Developments......................................................20 Appendix 1 (Events & Rentals at the BMO Studio)......21 Appendix 2 (Volunteers & Participants)........................23 Appendix 3 (Media Articles & Interviews)....................30 Appendix 4 (Social Media Data)..................................31 Appendix 5 (Donors Advertisers & Sponsors)...............32 Appendix 6 (Financials)..................................................35
    [Show full text]
  • City of Fredericton and Saint Mary's First Nation Joint Submission
    City of Fredericton and Saint Mary’s First Nation Joint Submission Infrastructure Canada Smart Cities Challenge FINAL DOCUMENT April 24, 2018 April 20, 2018 City of Fredericton / Saint Mary’s First Nation Joint Submission – Smart Cities Challenge On behalf of the City of Fredericton and Saint Mary’s First Nation, we are pleased to enter a joint submission for Infrastructure Canada’s Smart Cities Challenge. Saint Mary’s First Nation is one of six Wolastoqewiyik communities existing on the planet and solely unique to New Brunswick. The City of Fredericton is one of only a few urban cities in Canada to have a First Nations community within its boundaries. Both are nestled in the heart of the Wolastoqewiyik traditional ancestral territory – divided only by the Saint John River known to the Wolastoqewiyik as the Wolastoq. In addition to our many shared reciprocal benefits due to geographic proximity, we share a history, the land, and a collaborative spirit to learn from each other. In the spirit of Truth and Reconciliation, the City of Fredericton and Saint Mary’s have agreed to enter into a Friendship Accord; the Accord is a joint expression of interest with tangible and economic outcomes. The Accord will provide a collective approach, and will build countless mutual benefits from the creation of new start-ups driving economic growth and employment, to better land use management and cost savings in service provision, to increased community resilience overcoming barriers and social issues. Building on this, and through the Smart Cities Challenge engagement process, we have identified ‘Empowerment and Inclusion’ to be our priority focus area, as it impacts our communities at-large, and in particular the more vulnerable segments of our population.
    [Show full text]
  • A. Scholarships
    A. Scholarships St. Thomas University recognizes academic excellence through a generous scholarship program. The university offers a wide range of entrance awards to highly qualified students admitted on the basis of their high school records, as well as numerous scholarships-in- course to continuing students who have achieved academic distinction at St. Thomas. Entrance Scholarships The Entrance Scholarship program is highly competitive and is designed to attract out- standing scholars to the St. Thomas University campus. Except when otherwise specified, the entrance awards are open to candidates for full-time admission to the first year of the Bachelor of Arts program who are applying on the basis of their high school records. 1. Selection Criteria In selecting entrance scholarship recipients, the primary criterion considered by the Entrance Scholarship Selection Committee is the academic record. The Committee reviews the following: • admission average • Grade 12 program: courses and levels • rank in graduating class • program and performance in grade 11 Note: The admission average is calculated on the senior-level academic English grade and the grades on four other Grade 12 academic courses drawn from our list of approved admissions subjects. For details, please consult Section One, Admissions and Registration. At mid year, the admission averages for scholarship purposes is calculated on the overall average of final grades on Grade 11 academic subjects, as well as final first-semester results or mid-year results (for non-semestered schools) on Grade 12 academic subjects. Other factors considered include: • a reference letter from a teacher, principal or guidance counsellor • scores on standardized tests In addition to the academic selection criteria, the following criteria are considered in award- ing some entrance scholarships: • leadership qualities • extracurricular activities • financial status 2.
    [Show full text]
  • Summary Statistics 2015-2016
    Summary Statistics School Year 2015-2016 Prepared by Policy & Planning Division Department of Education and Early Childhood Development May 2016 Summary Statistics School Year 2015-2016 Prepared by Policy & Planning Division Department of Education and Early Childhood Development May 2016 CNB 7989 Table of Contents ________________________________________________________________ Summary . 1 Number of Schools, Enrolment, Educators and Pupil/Educator Ratio, September 30, 2015 Table 1. 3 ________________________________________________________________ Schools . 5 Schools by District and Level of Instruction, September 30, 2015 Table 2 . 7 Summary of Schools by Level and Language of Instruction, September 30, 2015 Table 3. 7 ________________________________________________________________ Enrolment . 9 Enrolment by School District by Grade, September 30, 2015 Table 4 . 11 Enrolment by School District, Grade and Gender, September 30, 2015 Table 5. 12 Enrolment in French Immersion by School District, Grade and Gender, September 30, 2015 Table 5a. 13 Enrolment by School District, by Age and Gender, September 30, 2015 Table 6 . 14 Enrolment by Grade, Age and Gender, September 30, 2015 Table 7 . 15 Enrolment by School District and Language of Instruction, September 30, 2015 Table 8 . 16 Enrolment in French Immersion by School District by Grade, September 30, 2015 Table 9 . 17 ________________________________________________________________ Classes . 19 Number of Classes by School District and Grade: Kindergarten to Grade 8, September 30, 2015 Table 10 . 21 Number of French Immersion Classes by School District and Grade: Kindergarten to Grade 8, September 30, 2015 Table 10a. 22 Number of English only Classes by School District and Grade: Kindergarten to Grade 8, September 30, 2015 Table 10b. 23 Number of Combined Classes by School District and Grade Combination, September 30, 2015 Table 11 .
    [Show full text]
  • NBTAP School Champions
    NBTAP SCHOOL CHAMPION School Primary - NBTAP School Champions Secondary - NBTAP School Champions Bathurst High School Shirley Riordon Belleisle Regional High School Dagen Bendixen Bernice MacNaughton High School Stephen Harris Lindsay Dominie Blackville School Amy Breau Bonar Law Memorial High School Vickilyn Carter Caledonia Regional High School Heather Lean CamBridge Narrows High School Todd Wilson CampoBello Island Consolidated School Daphne Carten CanterBury High School Jeff Tompkins Carleton North High School Derek Tracey Central New Brunswick Academy Susan Elliott Centre scolaire communautaire La fontaine Jessica Brideau Centre scolaire communautaire Samuel-de-Champlain Nathalie Losier Chipman Forest Avenue School Jill Yates Cité des Jeunes A.-M. Sormany Marc Carrier Julie Francoeur Dalhousie Regional High School Colleen Harquail École Aux quatre vents Denis Morin RoBert MacDonald École Carrefour Beausoleil Marie-Hélène Ferguson École Clément-Cormier Nicole Feisst École Grande-Rivière Leila Delage École l’Odyssée Anne Chiasson Michelle Daigle École Marie-Esther Marie-Josée Duguay École Marie-Gaétane Leila Delage École Mathieu-Martin Desneiges LeClair Losier École Mgr-Marcel-François-Richard Gaston Doucet École Régionale de Baie-Sainte-Anne Marie-Hélène Ferguson École Étoile de l'Acadie Renée Gallant École Secondaire Népisiguit Etienne Godin École Sainte-Anne Denis Gervais Fredericton High School Daryl Tapley Fundy High School Heather Malco Grand Manan Community School Danielle Materniak Hampton High School Krista Hovey HarBour View
    [Show full text]
  • Spring 2013 New Brunswick Home Economics Association
    NBHEA Spring 2013 New Brunswick Home Economics Association INVITATION NBHEA 95TH CONFERENCE MAY 4TH 2013 Creative Connections: Exploring the Possibilities The members of the Board of Directors and the NBHEA Conference Committee invite you to join them to the AGM to celebrate NBHEA’s 95th annual conference at the Centre communautaire Ste-Anne, 715 Priestman Street Fredericton (across from the Chalmers Hospital) on May 4th, 2013. As our theme, Creative Connections: Exploring Possibilities suggests, the president will take this opportunity to present Claudette Bradshaw with an Honorary NBHEA Membership at lunchtime. Let’s all come to show our appreciation of a person who has made creative connections with Home Economist in the early 70’s when she started to work at the Boys and Girls Club in Moncton and is still allowing our NBHEA members to explore numerous possibilities in 2013. A friendly reminder to those who will choose to stay overnight at the City Motel May 3rd, do not forget to mention that you are with the NBHEA when you make your reservation. If 10 rooms are confirmed for our group, this will allow the Board to have access to the meeting room free of charge. Come meet old friends, former classmates, colleagues and take the opportunity to make new friends as we get together for a day of educational activities. Looking forward to seeing you on May 4th in Fredericton. Keep this newsletter with the program of the day and all the annual reports and bring it with you at the Annual General Meeting. - 1 - 95th NBHEA Conference - May 4th,
    [Show full text]
  • Arnprior District High School Arnprior, on St
    Canadian Nuclear Society / Société Nucléaire Canadienne Page 1 of 6 CNS Geiger Kit Donations: (sorted by province, most recent) Bert Church High School Airdrie, AB George MacDougal High School Airdrie, AB Bishop Grandin High School Calgary, AB Bowness High School Calgary, AB Chestermere High School Calgary AB Dr. E. P. Scarlett High School Calgary AB Henry Wise Wood High School Calgary AB James Fowler High School Calgary, AB John G. Diefenbaker High School Calgary, AB Lord Beaverbrook High School Calgary, AB Sir Winston Churchill High School Calgary, AB Springbank Community High School Calgary, AB Camrose Composite High School Camrose, AB Bow Valley High School Cochrane, AB Cochrane High School Cochrane, AB Centre High School Edmonton, AB St. Laurent High School Edmonton, AB Parkland Composite High School Edson, AB Grande Cache Community HS Grand Cache, AB Nipisihkopahk Secondary School Hobbema, AB Kitscoty High School Kitscoty, AB Winston Churchill High School Lethbridge, AB Centre for Learning @ Home Okotoks, AB Foothills Composite High School Okotoks, AB Onoway Jr/Sr High School Onoway, AB Lindsay Thurber Comprehensive HS, Red Deer AB Salisbury Composite High School Sherwood Park, AB Strathcona Christian Academy Secondary Sherwood Park, AB Evergreen Catholic Outreach Spruce Grove, AB Memorial Composite High School Stony Plain, AB St. Mary’s Catholic High School Vegreville, AB J.R. Robson High School Vermilion, AB Blessed Sacrament Secondary School Wainwright, AB Pinawa Secondary School Pinawa, MB Bathurst High School Bathurst, NB #
    [Show full text]
  • Prince Edward Island
    AIMS 4TH ANNUAL HIGH SCHOOL REPORT CARD (RC4) New Brunswick Anglophone High Schools In our efforts to expand the comprehensiveness of the school report cards, we have an additional dimension in our framework this year: school-assigned grades in math and language arts. As New Brunswick (regrettably) has phased out the use of standardized testing for the Anglophone high schools, future Report Cards will see this breadth of data decline. That change is already having an impact in this Report Card, as insufficient data is available for several schools on the last round of examinations, forcing us to leave them out of the final overall rankings for the first time; Moncton High School and Sir James Dunn Academy being just two examples. Harvey High School earned the highest grade (B+) among the New Brunswick Anglophone schools. Harvey High did particularly well on the contextually adjusted scores, earning an A. Fredericton High School had the province’s second-highest ranking, earning a B. Several schools made considerable improvements over the past year, including Dalhousie Regional High School, Sussex Regional High School, Oromocto High School, John Caldwell School and J.M.A. Armstrong/Salisbury Middle School, which all improved from a C+ to a B, and Southern Victoria High School, which improved from a D to a C. Several schools declined in performance over the past year. Notably, Saint John High School fell from a B+ to a B; Cambridge-Narrows School fell from a B+ to a C+; and Sugarloaf Senior High School fell from a B to C+ as did Tantramar Regional High School, Riverview High School, and North & South Esk Regional High School.
    [Show full text]
  • ASD-W Academic School Calendar 2021-2022
    Anglophone West School District School Directory - 2021 - 2022 Fredericton Education Center Oromocto Education Center Woodstock Education Center 1135 Prospect Street, Fredericton, NB 17 Miramichi Road, Oromocto, NB 138 Chapel Street, Woodstock, NB E3B 3B9 Phone: (506) 453-5454 E2V 2P6 Phone: (506) 357-4113 E7M 1H3 Phone: (506) 325-4546 Andover Elementary School Florenceville Elementary School Keswick Valley Memorial School Nashwaaksis Middle School 9 School Street, Perth Andover, NB E7H 4T4 P.O Box 431, 8470 Main Street, Florenceville- 20 Route 617, Burtt’s Corner, NB 324 Fulton Avenue, Fredericton, NB Phone:(506) 273-4761 Bristol, NB E7L 4J8 Phone: (506) 392-5109 E6L 2X3 Phone: (506) 363-4717 E3A 5J4 Phone: (506) 453-5436 Assiniboine Avenue Elementary Florenceville Middle School Kingsclear Consolidated New Maryland Elementary School 55 Assiniboine Ave, Oromocto, NB E2V 1Y2 8794 Main Street, Florenceville-Bristol, NB 3188 Woodstock Road, Fredericton, NB 75 Clover Street, New Maryland, NB Phone : (506) 357-4069 E7L 3G2 Phone: (506) 392-5115 E3C 1K9 Phone: (506) 453-5414 E3C 1C5 Phone: (506) 453-5420 Our Mission Barkers Point School Forest Hill Elementary Leo Hayes High School Oromocto High School 39 Carmen Ave, Fredericton, NB 548 Forest Hill Road, Fredericton, NB 499 Cliffe Street, Fredericton, NB 25 Mackenzie Avenue, Oromocto, NB E3A 3W9 Phone: (506) 453-5402 E3B 4K6 Phone: (506) 453-5408 E3A 9P5 Phone: (506) 457-6898 E2V 1K4 Phone: (506) 357-4015 EXCITED * INVOLVED * PREPARED Bath Community School Fredericton High School Lincoln Elementary
    [Show full text]
  • Aims 5Th Annual High School Report Card (Rc5)
    AIMS 5TH ANNUAL HIGH SCHOOL REPORT CARD (RC5) New Brunswick Anglophone High Schools Last year we pointed out that New Brunswick had abandoned its leading edge approach to testing for Anglophone high schools, and that future Report Cards would see the breadth of data decline for New Brunswick’s Anglophone schools as a result. The future has arrived. With objective provincial exam results not longer available the rankings have changed significantly. Fortunately, AIMS has again been able to secure a rich post-secondary achievement indicator to measure the academic performance of New Brunswick’s Anglophone students after graduation Upper Miramichi Regional High School in Boiestown earned top marks among the New Brunswick Anglophone schools, with one of the few ‘A’s awarded in all jurisdictions. Upper Miramichi did particularly well on the contextually adjusted scores, earning an ‘A+’. Grand Manan Community School made a notable improvement to an ‘A’ from a ‘C’ to earn second place in the rankings. Last year’s second place school, Fredericton High School, fell to third place this year, despite moving up a grade level from a ‘B’ to a ‘B+’. Several schools made considerable improvements over the past year, including Miramichi Valley High School, Blackville School, Petitcodiac Regional School, North & South Esk Regional High School, and Riverview High School, which all improved from a ‘C+’ to a ‘B+’. Three schools saw their performance decline to a ‘D’ over the past year: Cambridge-Narrows School and Bonar Law Memorial School fell from a ‘C+’ to a ‘D’; while Simonds High School dropped from a ‘C’ to a ‘D’.
    [Show full text]