Forest Hill Collegiate Institute
Forest Hill Collegiate Institute | |
---|---|
Address | |
730 Eglinton Avenue West , , Canada | |
Coordinates | 43°42′11″N 79°25′17″W / 43.702976°N 79.421266°W |
Information | |
School type | High School |
Motto | Non Nobis Solum Not For Ourselves Alone |
Founded | 1948 |
School board | Toronto District School Board |
Superintendent | Uton Robinson LC1, Executive Ron Felsen LN06 |
Area trustee | Shelley Laskin Ward 8 |
School number | 5508 / 910641 |
Principal | Yvette Duffy |
Grades | 9-12 |
Language | English |
Area | Forest Hill |
Colour(s) | Blue and gold |
Mascot | Freddy the Falcon |
Team name | Forest Hill Falcons |
Newspaper | FHCI Golden Falcon |
Website | www |
Forest Hill Collegiate Institute (FHCI) is a public high school in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It is located in the Forest Hill neighbourhood. Having about 900 students and 55 teachers, it is part of the Toronto District School Board. Prior to 1998, it was within the Toronto Board of Education (TBE).[1]
The school takes pride in its wide range of clubs, committees, teams and student spirit.[2]
The motto for the school is Non nobis solum ("Not for Ourselves Alone").
History
[edit]The history of Forest Hill Collegiate began in January 1948 when the first Grade 9 classes attended Forest Hill Village Public School. The school received its own building when it first officially opened on September 29, 1949 by the Forest Hill Board of Education.[3] This post-war modern school is designed by architects Page and Steele.[4]
In 1992, Forest Hill C.I. underwent major renovations and was completed in March 1994. Page and Steele provided by the renovations and design.[5]
Student leadership
[edit]Student Council
[edit]The Student Council executive is selected in spring by an election for the next year following election campaigns and assemblies. Executives positions include President, Vice-President, Treasurer/Secretary, Social Representative, Sports Representative, Grade Representatives and Junior Vice-President. The Student Council carries out and plans activities such as Hillstock.[citation needed]
School Prefects
[edit]Selection for the school Prefect positions is held in the spring for the following year. Teachers vote on who will be selected. Twenty-five to thirty-five student Prefects are typically chosen. They host events such as grade 8 orientation days, concerts, curriculum information nights, commencement, etc. They also come early to school and stay late for events such as the annual Pancake Breakfast and the Parent/Teacher Interviews. The names of each year's Prefects are engraved on wood plaques and can be found in the music hallway.[citation needed]
Music Directorate
[edit]The Music Directorate is a student group that manages music-related activities. Positions include president, vice-president, treasurer, secretary, band representative, strings representative, vocal representative, stage crew manager, student council liaison and members at large.[citation needed]
Production Crew
[edit]A team of students that put together productions key to the school such as Storm, Celebration of Music, Hillstock and many more. The team gives an opportunity for people interested in the "behind the scenes" aspects to learn about lights, stage and sound. Positions of the executive team include President, Head of Stage, Head of Sound and Head of Lights.[citation needed]
Clubs
[edit]The school has many student-run clubs and activities such as Athletic Council, Black Student Alliance, GO Club, COPE Council, Peer Mentors and Peer Tutors, Sports Management Club, Chess Club, the Politics and History Club, DECA FHCI Business and Entrepreneurship Club, Debate Club, Jewish Culture Club, Math Club, Science Club, Cubing Club, Law and Politics Club, Movie Club, Anime Club, Gender Sexuality Alliance Club, Art Club, Dragon Club, and the FHCI Transit Planning Committee etc.[citation needed]
Co-operative program
[edit]FHCI offers a cooperative program that allows students in grades 11 and 12 to gain work experience. Each student that participates in this program receives 2.0 credits out of 4.0 for one semester. Students are able to choose the field in which they want to work and in turn get matched by the supervising faculty member. Students put both working hours and class hours into the program.[6]
Events
[edit]School events include:
- Hillstock, a celebration for students and staff to celebrate the end of a school year. Students usually receive yearbooks on this day. It is tradition that the Student Council and Prefects plans Hillstock and manage its operations,
- Prom takes place on the last Thursday of May, with Hillstock occurring the day after,
- Commencement (graduation) takes place on the Thursday before the week of Thanksgiving in October,
- United Way Week and The Funky Dance Marathon,
- One musical production per semester featuring Strings, Band and Vocal ensembles. The winter concert called "Celebration of Music" is held in December and the spring concert called "Sounds of Spring" is held in May.
- Pink Day, in support of anti-bullying. Toronto Police Chief Bill Blair attended the school's Pink Day assembly as his last appearance before stepping down.
Notable alumni
[edit]- Robert Bateman, artist/naturalist
- Ralph Benmergui, radio and television host
- Neve Campbell, actress
- Noah Cappe, host of "The Bachelor Canada" television show and the television show "Carnival Eats"
- Ken Daniels, Sportscaster & Current Detroit Red Wings play-by-play announcer
- Drake (Aubrey Graham) (born 1986), rapper and actor
- Sharon Fichman (born 1990), Canada's no.1 ranked doubles tennis player, dual Israeli citizen[7]
- Rainbow Sun Francks, Canadian actor
- Shenae Grimes, actress (90210)
- Lisi Harrison, author
- Kenny Hotz and Spencer Rice of Kenny vs. Spenny, Canadian comedy reality TV duo
- Mia Kirshner (born 1975), actress, writer, and social activist
- Michael Landsberg, M.S.M., television personality
- Lorne Michaels (born Lorne David Lipowitz, 1944), C.M., Canadian-American Saturday Night Live Executive Producer and writer, comedian, and actor
- Joe Mimran, founder of Club Monaco and Joe Fresh, fashion designer and entrepreneur; regular on The Dragon's Den
- Vladimir Kuljanin, Canadian National Basketball Team, NC Wilmington
- Howard Lindzon, author and founder of StockTwits[8]
- Sophie Milman, Juno Award-winning jazz singer
- David Rakoff writer, comedian, and contributor to Public Radio International's This American Life
- Dani Reiss, billionaire businessman, CEO of Canada Goose[9]
- Dan Senor, columnist, writer, and political advisor[10][11]
- Bernard "Barry" Sherman, former billionaire Chairman and CEO of Apotex Inc.
- Howard Shore, composer, three-time Academy Award winner for The Lord of the Rings
- Dan Signer, television writer-producer
- Gail Simmons, Judge on the television show Top Chef and host of its spin-off "Top Chef: Just Desserts"
- Tara Strong, voice actress and actress.
- Syrus Marcus Ware, artist, activist, and scholar. Co-founder of Black Lives Matter-Canada.
See also
[edit]References
[edit]- ^ "Secondary Schools." () Toronto Board of Education. November 12, 1997. Retrieved on July 23, 2013.
- ^ "Rapper Drake finally graduates from high school, 11 years later - The Globe and Mail". The Globe and Mail. 19 October 2012.
- ^ "Elementary Schools: D to F – For King and Country".
- ^ http://sextondigital.library.dal.ca/RAIC/PDFs/Volume27/vol27_no05_OCR_600dpi_PDFA1b_compressed.pdf [bare URL PDF]
- ^ "Bondfield: Forest Hill Collegiate School". Archived from the original on 2016-12-21.
- ^ Cooperative Education. "Forest Hill Collegiate Institute Website". Retrieved September 24, 2013.
- ^ Sharon Fichman and her quest for court glory - Post City Magazines - August 2013 - Toronto, Ontario
- ^ Fillion, Rubina Madan (2013-03-08). "The Best Tweets for Your Money". Barron's. Retrieved 2013-05-08.
- ^ Strauss, Marina (August 8, 2014). "Casual-chic workaholic strives for authenticity at helm of Canada Goose". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved January 16, 2024.
- ^ Joanna Slater (July 30, 2012). "With roots in Canada, a key advisor helps Romney push for the presidency". The Globe and Mail. Retrieved 2014-05-25.
- ^ "AIPAC Policy Conference 2015". AIPAC Policy Conference. Retrieved 15 May 2015.