The school was founded in September 1974 in cooperation with the Sisters of St. John the Baptist, St Charles BorromeoRoman Catholic Church and the Metropolitan Separate School Board to serve the predominantly Italian-Canadian community in the Dufferin-Lawrence neighbourhood with 180 students and nine teachers inside two portables and one portapak. The permanent three-storey building was erected in 1976 and the first addition was built in 1979. In 2005, the school constructed a 10,000 sq. ft. auditorium designed by Global Architects Inc. Today the school serves over 1000 students serving the Lawrence Heights neighbourhood. The population is diverse and student body consists of Italians, Portuguese, Filipinos, White, Hispanic, Eastern Asians, Jews, and many others. Due to overpopulation of the school, with the school building being medium-sized and students teaching classes in 20 portables, the school's grade 9 students were relocated to the former Bathurst Heights Secondary School in 2006 until 2011 when the school moved to the old Sir Sanford Fleming Academy as the students of that school was renamed to John Polanyi Collegiate Institute in the old Bathurst building. The campus became known as Beatrice Campus, named after Beatrice Portinari. In 2011, the Toronto Catholic District Board received provincial funding to reconstruct Dante Alighieri Academy's outdated facilities. This culminated when Villa Charities, the owner of the Columbus Centre and the TCDSB announced a joint venture in December 2012 to build a new joint-use 400,000 sq. ft. school building expected to open in 2019. The announcement has met with controversy and opposition within the community protesting against the proposed demolition of the 1980s apartment building being redeveloped. As a result, the province rejected the proposed plan and the TCDSB severed ties with Villa Charities. However, the replacement Dante school is expected to be built on the nearby Regina Mundi property with the existing Dante building converted into an elementary school.
Academics and programs
Dante Alighieri is home to the board's Deaf And Hard Of Hearing program consisting of 30 students. The school also offers various programs such as arts, technological studies, English, Mathematics, science and guidance.