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Central Etobicoke High School

Coordinates: 43°40′44″N 79°33′19″W / 43.67889°N 79.55528°W / 43.67889; -79.55528
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Central Etobicoke High School
(formerly Westway High School)
Address
Map
10 Denfield Street

, ,
Canada
Coordinates43°40′44″N 79°33′19″W / 43.67889°N 79.55528°W / 43.67889; -79.55528
Information
School typePublic High School
Special Ed High School
Founded1969
School boardToronto District School Board
(Etobicoke Board of Education)
SuperintendentSusan Winter
Area trusteeChris Glover
School number2816 / 952842
PrincipalJohn Au
Grades9-12
Enrolment134 (2019-20)
LanguageEnglish
Colour(s)Yellow and Black   
Team nameCentral Etobicoke Eagles
Websiteschools.tdsb.on.ca/centraletobicoke/

Central Etobicoke High School (or Central Etobicoke, CEHS, formerly Westway High School) is a secondary school in Toronto, Ontario, Canada. It is located at 10 Denfield Street, bordered by Widdicombe Hill Blvd to the South and Clement Rd to the North, in the Richview neighbourhood of the former suburb of Etobicoke.[1] It is operated by the Toronto District School Board since being transferred from the Etobicoke Board of Education in 1997.

History

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Westway High School was established as a small high school in 1969 by the Etobicoke Board of Education.

As enrolment decreased in Etobicoke's public schools during the 1980s, many seriously underpopulated public schools in the area were abandoned as the children were transferred to the Catholic school system when full funding was introduced. As a result, Central Etobicoke High School was formed in 1988 at the same site and assimilated its basic level programs at Westway, Humbergrove Secondary School and Kingsmill Secondary School,[2] with both of the latter schools closed and transferred to the Metropolitan Separate School Board (now the Toronto Catholic District School Board).[3]

Clubs

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CEHS clubs include music, movie making, walking club, and story telling.

See also

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References

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  1. ^ "Central Etobicoke High School". Toronto District School Board. 2011-07-06. Retrieved 2011-07-06.
  2. ^ Alati, John. "Etobicoke's basic-level high school has just about everything but a name." Toronto Star. January 26, 1988. Neighbors p. W7. Retrieved on August 27, 2013.
  3. ^ Contenta, Sandro. "Separate board takes two schools rejects one." Toronto Star. March 8, 1988. News p. A6. Retrieved on July 23, 2013. "Humbergrove Secondary School in Etobicoke and West Park Secondary School in Toronto's west end were accepted yesterday during negotiations on the transfer or sharing of schools under Bill 30, the legislation extending full government funding to Roman Catholic high schools." and "However, it would cost up to $4 million to make the building suitable for sharing and the Toronto board will not pick up those costs."
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