J.M. Olds Collegiate

J.M. Olds Collegiate is a high school located in Twillingate, Newfoundland and Labrador, Canada. It currently has an enrollment of approximately 110 students and 12 teachers. It operates under the Newfoundland and Labrador English School District, formerly the Nova Central School District.[1][2]

J.M. Olds Collegiate
Address
P.O. Box 460 / Main Street
Twillingate, NL, A0G 4M0
Canada
Contact
Tel (709) 884-5931
Fax (709) 884-5281
Information
School Board NLESD
Principal Jean Link
Vice Principal Stephen Earle
School type Public
Grades 7 - 12
Language English
Enrollment 114

History

The school is named after Dr. John McKee Olds who was born on March 27, 1906 and died September 6, 1985. Mr. Olds practiced medicine in the town of Twillingate for over 49 years. The school was originally called Central High but was renamed to J.M. Olds Collegiate on March 22, 1980.[3]

Academics

J.M. Olds Collegiate follows the standard Newfoundland and Labrador curriculum, offering both basic, or general courses and academic courses in senior high. The standard junior high curriculum includes English, Mathematics, General Science, French, German, Physical Education, Social Studies, Art and Music classes as well as other electives like Industrial Arts and Home Economics. The academic senior high school curriculum offers English, Math (academic and advanced), Canadian Geography, World Geography, Communications Technology, General Science, Biology, Chemistry, Physics, French, Art and Design, Fabrication, Human Dynamics, Applied Music and other electives.

Athletics

The school has junior and senior volleyball, basketball, softball, and hockey teams, the Combines. The boys softball team has won two provincial banners[4] and the boys volleyball team won a provincial banner at the school in 2008. The girls 3A Softball team won a provincial banner in 2008 in St. Mary's.[5] Former student Travis Randell was drafted by the Halifax Mooseheads in Drummondville, Quebec in 2007.[6] The school also has a weight room with free weights (dumbbells, barbells), machines and cardio equipment for strength and conditioning.

See also

References

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.