Britannia Community Secondary School is a public community secondary school located in the Grandview–Woodland neighbourhood on the east-side of Vancouver, British Columbia. The school educates its students using a district-wide block schedule program that alternates four blocks every two days. Students are subject to eight different blocks in total.
Britannia Community Secondary School | |
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Address | |
1001 Cotton Drive , , Canada | |
Coordinates | 49°16′34″N 123°04′17″W / 49.276203°N 123.07145°W |
Information | |
School type | Public, high school |
Motto | Latin: Per Vias Rectas (Through The Right Way) |
Founded | 1908 |
School board | School District 39 Vancouver |
Superintendent | Helen McGregor |
Area trustee | tba |
School number | 03939004 |
Principal | Sonia Blair |
Grades | 8-12 |
Enrollment | 758[1] (November 1, 2018) |
• Grade 8 | 116 |
• Grade 9 | 162 |
• Grade 10 | 146 |
• Grade 11 | 167 |
• Grade 12 | 141 |
• Grade 13 | 10 |
Language | English |
Area | Grandview–Woodland |
Colour(s) | Red, Green, and White |
Team name | Bruins |
Feeder schools | Britannia Community Elementary Seymour Elementary Strathcona Elementary MacDonald Elementary Lord Nelson Elementary Grandview Elementary Queen Victoria Annex |
Website | britannia |
The school was founded in 1908 as the second high school to be constructed in the city, and is now the oldest remaining secondary school.[2] The first classes were held in the Admiral Seymour Elementary School building in September 1908. The school moved to the then partially completed Britannia building in 1910. The school colours of red, green, and white and the school motto "Per Vias Rectas" were adopted at this time. During the 1966-67 school year, a new wing was constructed and now houses the school office. In 1974, Britannia Secondary became Britannia Elementary-Secondary School. Britannia celebrated its centennial in 2008.
Situated in the Commercial Drive area of Vancouver, Britannia is a part of a larger community site which includes an elementary school, public library, skating rink, fitness facility and swimming pool. Britannia is also host to many other programs in academics, fine arts, leadership and academic tutoring and support. Nearly 200 courses are offered at the school including 19 International Baccalaureate (IB) Diploma Programme courses and a Hockey Canada Skills Academy. Britannia athletic teams compete in the Vancouver Secondary School Athletics Association as part of BC School Sports and are known as the Bruins. Notable Britannia alumni include an Order of Canada recipient, a former Premier of British Columbia, and a former Supreme Court of Canada justice.
History
editBritannia, the second high school to be constructed in Vancouver is now the oldest remaining secondary school. The first classes were held in the Admiral Seymour building in September, 1908. The school moved to the then partially completed Britannia building in 1910. The school colours of red, green, and white and the school motto "Per Vias Rectas", which means "straight forward", were adopted at this time.
In September 1955, the gymnasium and cafeteria were added to the 'old building'. It was also at this time that Grades 8 and 9 students were first admitted for enrolment. During the 1966-67 school year, a new wing was constructed providing additional Science, Technology Education, Home Economics, and Business Education classrooms. The new wing now also houses the school office. The new wing was connected to the old building by a walkway which most students call "the Skywalk."
In 1974, Britannia Secondary became Britannia Elementary-Secondary School. The elementary section opened its doors on January 9, 1975 to 16 staff and 370 students making a combined student enrollment of approximately 1800. This was also the year of incorporation of the Britannia Community Center Society and the year that Britannia became a community school. Britannia celebrated its centennial in 2008. Britannia alumni assisted in the planning of the celebration.
Enriched courses
editBritannia offers an International Baccalaureate (IB) Diploma Programme for grades 11–12 and a Venture program for grades 8–10. Britannia and Sir Winston Churchill Secondary School are the only two public secondary schools in Vancouver to offer the programme. The programme offers some course content which is at the first-year university level.
The Venture program, which is based on the mini school concept, prepares students intending to enter IB in grade 11 to gain leadership skills, develop teamwork and offers a more enriching educational experience than regular classes.
Alternative programs
editBritannia offers many alternative programs including the Britannia Hockey Academy, which was the first sport-focused academy in the Vancouver school system, and is licensed by the Hockey Canada Skills Academy. Other alternative programs in Britannia are for some students with academic difficulty, and/or have a first nations heritage.
Facilities
editBritannia Secondary is unique in having community centre facilities within the complex. The school is situated on a 16-hectare (40-acre) site. The Britannia Community Centre boasts an ice rink, swimming pool, several gyms, a weight room and fitness centre, and Britannia Secondary students often use these facilities in physical education classes and in extracurricular activities.
Britannia also has a library within the community centre that is a Vancouver Public Library. Despite this, britannia added a library to the third floor of the building and students are encouraged to use this instead of the public library. However, students can still use the public library if they have a library card.
Demographics
editThe Britannia student body comes from a catchment area that includes the neighbourhoods of Strathcona, the Downtown Eastside, and most of Grandview–Woodland. Their area has the highest concentration of Canadian Aboriginal in Vancouver. The Britannia student body also include those from outside the catchment area, as well as outside the district through open enrolment. In 2010, the school had a student body of 748 students in grades 8–12. 28% of the Britannia student population are Canadian Aboriginal, while 4% are ESL students and 2% are non-residents. The school has a student population with at least 38 different languages spoken including Cantonese, Vietnamese, Mandarin and Tagalog. Approximately 30% of Britannia students live in households that receive income assistance or have marginal cost of funds, and 26% of students were identified as having special needs. The school has the Fraser Institute rating of 5/10. The Britannia graduation rate is 97%.
Sonia Blair serves as principal, a position she has held since 2024, with Kelly Egilsson and Dale Ambrose as vice principals. The staff consists of 3 administrators, 53 full and part-time teachers and 26 support staff members. The school as an average class size of 22.9, which is lower than the district average class size of 24.8.
Athletics
editProvincial championships | Provincial runners-up | ||
---|---|---|---|
Sport | Year(s) | Sport | Year(s) |
Sr Football | 1967 Tie | Sr Football | 1970,1971 |
Girls AA volleyball | 1969, 1970, 1971 | Boys AA basketball | 2009 |
Wrestling | 1975, 1976 1977, 1978 |
Girls AA basketball | 2011 |
Boys table tennis | 1982, 1983, 1984 1985, 1988, 1989 1991 |
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Girls table tennis | 1982, 1988, 1989 1990, 1991, 2015, 2017, 2019 | ||
Junior boys ultimate friesbee | 2006 | ||
Boys AA basketball | 2008, 2010 | ||
Girls AA basketball | 2012 |
Britannia is predominately an AA school in terms of athletics according to the BC School Sports. The school had a dominant football team in the 1970s, winning the Shrine Bowl Provincial Championships once, and being runners-up three times. In 1974, Britannia hosted their first basketball tournament called the Bruin Invitational Basketball Tournament. Since then, the tournament is hosted annually and it has been a great success to Britannia.
On March 8, 2008, The Britannia Senior Boys Basketball team won the British Columbia AA Provincial Basketball Tournament by beating the Windsor Dukes 81-73. That was the first time any public school from East Vancouver has won a B.C. boys senior high basketball title.[3] The next season, Britannia's senior boys team made the 'AA' Provincial final again, but lost to Southern Okanagan Secondary School from Oliver. The following 2010 basketball season saw the Britannia Senior Boys Basketball team return to the AA Provincial Basketball final and defeated the basketball team from RC Palmer Secondary to reclaim the title of AA Provincial Champion.
On March 10, 2012, the Britannia Senior Girls Basketball team also made school history by capturing its first B.C. girls basketball title after a silver medal finish the year before in 2011. Britannia's senior girls team beat Lambrick Park 69-61 in the AA Provincial basketball final after a fourth quarter surge that saw the Bruins outscore the Pride 21-4. This tops an incredible feat that has 5 consecutive Britannia basketball teams medal at the AA Provincial Championships since 2008.
Britannia has teams for badminton, basketball, cross country, soccer, table tennis, track and field, ultimate frisbee, and volleyball.
Notable alumni
editBritannia has produced Premiers, Supreme Court Justices and philanthropists over its 102-year history. Notably, in the past three years, Britannia has produced two Loran Scholars (the largest undergraduate scholarship in Canada, at $80,000), one TD Canada Trust Scholarship recipient ($70,000), and over twenty Beedie Luminaries Scholars ($40,000), the most of any secondary school in Canada.
Year of Graduation | Name | Description | |
---|---|---|---|
1930 | Tong Louie | noted businessman for the establishment of London Drugs (a retail chain of stores) and philanthropist and Order of Canada recipient | |
1939 | Barbara Howard | track and field athlete | |
1948 | Dave Barrett | former Premier of British Columbia | [4] |
unknown | Frank Iacobucci | former Supreme Court of Canada Justice | [5] |
1997 | Amber Hall | former Women's National Basketball Association player. | [6] |
1971 | Barry Houlihan | former BC Lions player | |
unknown | Angelo Branca | former Supreme Court of British Columbia judge |
References
edit- ^ "School Information".
- ^ "News and Stories Search".
- ^ Howard Tsumura (2008-03-20). "Britannia Bruins boys make B.C. hoops history". The Province. Archived from the original on 2008-10-27. Retrieved 2008-10-22.
- ^ Hawthorn, Tom (2018-02-03). "Dave Barrett: The Man Who Changed a Province". The Tyee. Retrieved 2020-04-26.
- ^ Canada, Supreme Court of (2001-01-01). "Supreme Court of Canada - Biography - Frank Iacobucci". www.scc-csc.ca. Retrieved 2020-04-26.
- ^ "Alumni". HOME OF THE BRITANNIA BRUINS. Retrieved 2020-04-26.
External links
edit- Britannia Secondary
- Vancouver School Board—Britannia Secondary
- History of Britannia Secondary
- Britannia Community Centre
- Britannia Centennial