Education in Toronto
is the most populous city in Canada and the provincial capital of Ontario. The city is home to a number of elementary, secondary, and post-secondary institutions. In addition to those institutions, the city is also home several specialty and supplementary schools, which provide schooling for specific crafts, or are intended to provide additional educational support.
Four publicly funded school boards provide elementary and secondary schooling to residents of the city, from Junior Kindergarten to Grade 12. The four school boards operate as either English or French first language school boards, and as either secular or separate school boards. In addition to publicly funded schools, elementary and secondary education is also provided by private religious school boards, independent religious schools, or independent secular institutions, such as college-preparatory schools.
Toronto is also home to a number of post-secondary institutions. There are six universities in Toronto with degree-granting authority, five of which are public university, while the other is a private seminary. In addition there are four degree- and diploma-granting colleges based in the city. Other post-secondary institutions based outside the city have also established satellite campuses, or share facilities with Toronto-based institution. Other forms of post-secondary institutions in Toronto include private vocational schools.
Elementary and secondary education
Public education
Four school boards in Toronto provide public elementary, secondary, and adult education. The four school boards operate as either English or French first language school boards, and as either secular or separate school boards.The number of school boards based in Toronto, and the kinds of institutions that they operate are a result of constitutional arrangements found in the Constitution of Canada. Separate schools in Ontario are constitutionally protected under Section 93 of the Constitution Act, 1867, and is further reinforced by Section 29 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms. French language schools in Toronto are constitutionally protected under Section 23 of the Canadian Charter of Rights and Freedoms.
In 1980 there were 7 French schools in Metropolitan Toronto. Maurice Bergevin, the vice principal of the Etienne Brule School, stated that a study from Montreal in 1971 noted that if francophones in Toronto had the same proportion of schools that anglophones had in Montreal, there would be 31 francophone schools in Metropolitan Toronto. According to a 1971 Canadian federal census, Toronto had 160,000 francophones. The number of French first language schools in Toronto has since grown to 26. These do not include English school board's French immersion programs, which was intended for students whose first language was not French.
Several alternative schools in Toronto are also operated by Toronto's public school boards. The oldest is ALPHA Alternative School, which opened in 1972. The first conference for publicly funded alternative schools in the Greater Toronto Area happened in Nov, 2012. Ontario's Ministry of Education distance education program, the Independent Learning Centre, is also headquartered in Toronto.
Secular
The following public school boards operate secular schools in Toronto:- Conseil scolaire Viamonde, French first language school board
- Toronto District School Board, English first language school board
- Metropolitan Toronto School Board
- Board of Education for the City of York
- East York Board of Education
- Etobicoke Board of Education
- North York Board of Education
- Scarborough Board of Education
- Toronto Board of Education
Separate
- Conseil scolaire catholique MonAvenir, French first language school board
- Toronto Catholic District School Board, English first language school board
Private education
Independent
Toronto is also home to a number of private/independent elementary, secondary, and university-preparatory schools, including:in Toronto. Founded in 1829, it is the oldest independent school in Ontario.
- A.R.S. Armenian School
- Abelard School
- Arrowsmith School
- Bayview Glen School
- Beach School
- Bishop Strachan School
- Blyth Academy
- Bond Academy
- Branksome Hall
- Brighton School
- Crescent School
- Crestwood Preparatory College
- Dragon Academy
- Giles School
- Greenwood College School
- Halton High School
- Hudson College
- Kingsway College School
- Linden School
- Lycée Français Toronto
- Metropolitan Preparatory Academy
- Montcrest School
- Nile Academy
- Toronto French School
- Toronto Prep School
- Toronto Waldorf School
- University of Toronto Schools
- Upper Canada College
- WillowWood School
- The York School
Religious schools
Christian
- Bishop Strachan School
- Crawford Adventist Academy
- De La Salle College
- Havergal College
- Hawthorn School for Girls
- North Toronto Christian School
- Royal St. George's College
- St. Clement's School
- St. Michael's College School
- Whitefield Christian Schools
Hindu
- Sathya Sai School of Canada
Islam
- Abu-Huraira Islamic School
- Al Ashraf Islamic School
- Al Azhar Islamic School
- Al-Azhar Academy Of Canada
- As-Sadiq Islamic Schools
- Alashraf Islamic School
- Amanah Islamic Academy
- Baitul Mukarram Academy
- Islamic Community School
- Islamic Foundation Islamic School
- ISNA Islamic School
- Iqra Islamic School
- Madinatul-Uloom Academy Of Canada
- Madrasatul-Banaat Islamic School
- Mariyah Islamic School
- Salahedin Islamic School
- Tayyibah Islamic academy
- Um al-Qura Islamic School
Jewish
- Associated Hebrew Schools
- Bais Yaakov
- Bialik Hebrew Day School
- Bnei Akiva Schools of Toronto
- Bnos Bais Yaakov
- Eitz Chaim Schools
- Leo Baeck Day School
- Netivot HaTorah Day School
- Robbins Hebrew Academy
- Tanenbaum Community Hebrew Academy of Toronto
- The Toronto Cheder
- Tiferes Bais Yaakov
- Yeshiva Darchei Torah
- Yeshiva Yesodei HaTorah
- Yeshivas Mishkan HaTorah
- Yeshivas Nachalas Tzvi
- Yeshivas Ner Yisroel
- Yeshivas Zichron Shmaryahu
Defunct institutions
Before 1987, a number of private Roman Catholic high schools were operated by several religious orders across Toronto. In 1987, a number of these schools joined the public Metropolitan Separate School Board after the funding was announced beginning in 1985. They included:
- Brebeuf College School and Presentation Brothers )
- Father Henry Carr Catholic Secondary School
- Francis Libermann Catholic High School
- John J. Lynch High School
- Loretto Abbey Catholic Secondary School
- Loretto College School
- Michael Power High School
- Neil McNeil High School
- Notre Dame High School
- St. Basil-the-Great College School
- St. Joseph's College School
- St. Joseph's Commercial School
- St. Joseph High School
- St. Joseph's Morrow Park Catholic Secondary School
Post-secondary education
Universities
There are six universities located in Toronto. Four universities are located downtown, OCAD University, Ryerson University, Université de l'Ontario français and the University of Toronto. The University of Toronto also operates two satellite campuses, the University of Toronto Scarborough, located in the eastern portion of the city, and the University of Toronto Mississauga, located in the neighbouring city of Mississauga. The other two universities, Tyndale University, and York University, are based in an area of the city known as North York. York University maintains two campuses in North York, with plans to build another in the neighbouring city of Markham. Four of the five aforementioned universities are public degree-granting institutions. Tyndale is a private university and a Protestant seminary, and is the only private institution in Toronto with degree-granting authority.In addition to these six institutions, the city is also home to the University of Guelph-Humber, a collaborative institution between the University of Guelph, and Humber College. Guelph-Humber is not an independent institution and does not have the ability to issue its own degrees. Guelph-Humber acts as a satellite campus for its parent institutions, and its graduates are awarded degrees/diplomas from either the University of Guelph or Humber College.