Louis Riel School Division
The Louis Riel School Division (LRSD; French: Division Scolaire Louis-Riel, DSL-R) is a school division in Winnipeg, Manitoba, offering English-language and French-immersion education to its students.
Louis Riel School Division Division Scolaire Louis-Riel | |
---|---|
Location | |
900 St. Mary's Rd,
Winnipeg, MB R2M 3R3 | |
District information | |
Motto | Thriving Learners ∞ Flourishing Communities |
Established |
|
Superintendent | Christian Michalik |
School board | Louis Riel School Board |
Chair of the board | Louise Johnston |
Schools | 41 |
Budget | CA $194,359,468.00 |
Students and staff | |
Students | 15,506 (2019) |
Teachers | 1,118 |
Staff | 960 |
Other information | |
elected trustees |
|
Website | www |
It was broadly formed in 1998 with the voluntary amalgamation of the Norwood and St. Boniface School Divisions. Following the 2001 announcement by the Minister of Education, Training and Youth to reduce Manitoba's school divisions from 54 to 37, the St. Vital School Division merged with St. Boniface in 2002, officially establishing the new Louis Riel School Division.[1][2]
List of schools
Elementary and K-8 schools
School[3] | Language | Grades |
---|---|---|
Archwood School | English | K-8 |
Darwin School | English | K-8 |
Dr. D. W. Penner School | English | K-8 |
Frontenac School | English | K-8 |
General Vanier School | English | K-8 |
Glenwood School | English | K-8 |
École Guyot | French immersion | K-6 |
H. S. Paul School | English | K-8 |
Hastings School | English | K-8 |
École Henri-Bergeron | French immersion | K-6 |
Highbury School | English | K-8 |
École Howden | French immersion | K-6 |
Island Lakes Community School | English | K-8 |
École Julie-Riel | French immersion | K-5 |
Lavallee School | English | K-8 |
École Marie-Anne-Gaboury | French immersion | K-8 |
Marion School | English | K-8 |
Minnetonka School | English | K-8 |
Niakwa Place School | English | K-8 |
Nordale School | English | K-8 |
École Provencher | French immersion | K-8 |
Samuel Burland School | English | K-8 |
Shamrock School | English | K-8 |
St. George School | English | K-8 |
École St. Germain | French immersion | K-5 |
Windsor School | English | K-8 |
École Van Belleghem | French immersion | K-6 |
École Varennes | French immersion | K-8 |
Victor H. L. Wyatt School | English | K-8 |
Victor Mager School | English | K-8 |
Nordale School | English | K-8 |
École Sage Creek School | English & French | K-8 |
Middle and secondary schools
School[3] | Language | Grades |
---|---|---|
Collège Béliveau | French immersion | 7-12 |
Collège Jeanne-Sauvé | French immersion | 9-12 |
Dakota Collegiate | English | 9-12 |
École George McDowell | French immersion | 6-8 |
Glenlawn Collegiate | English | 9-12 |
J. H. Bruns Collegiate | English | 9-12 |
Nelson McIntyre Collegiate | English | 9-12 |
Windsor Park Collegiate | English | 7-12 |
Others
School/centre[3] | Language | Grades |
---|---|---|
Learning from Home School / L'École Apprendre chez soi[4] | English & French | K-12 |
Louis Riel Arts and Technology Centre | English | 11-12 Tech. & post-secondary |
René Deleurme Centre[5] | English | N-adult |
Notable alumni
List of notable people that graduated from a secondary school in the division.
- Adam Smoluk — Actor, Screenwriter, and Director
- Andrea Slobodian — Reporter[6]
- Cam Connor — professional NHL hockey player and Stanley Cup winner with the Montreal Canadiens, New York Rangers and Edmonton Oilers. Also appeared on Wipeout Canada.
- Connie Laliberte — Curler
- Corinne Peters — Curler
- Dave Richter — played 365 games as an NHL defenceman with Minnesota North Stars, Philadelphia Flyers, Vancouver Canucks, and St. Louis Blues.
- Dylan McIlrath — NHL Player
- Edward Connery —Progressive Conservative member of the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba, cabinet minister under Gary Filmon.
- Elijah Harper — Politician[7]
- Gabriel Langlois: Known as "Dancing Gabe" by Winnipeg sports fans.
- Gerald Ducharme —Progressive Conservative member of the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba, cabinet minister under Gary Filmon.
- Janet Arnott — Olympic Curler
- Jennifer Jones —professional Curler, 2014 Sochi Winter Olympics Gold Medallist
- Jim Peebles — Won the Nobel Prize in Physics
- Laurie Hawn — Member of Parliament
- Mike Ridley —professional NHL hockey player with New York Rangers, Washington Capitals, Toronto Maple Leafs and Vancouver Canucks
- Monica Goermann — Canadian National Artistic Gymnastic Team (1978–81)[8]
- Nigel Dawes — Professional hockey player.
- Obie Baizley — Progressive Conservative member of the Legislative Assembly of Manitoba, cabinet minister under Dufferin Roblin and Walter Weir.
- Reid Carruthers — World Men's Curling Champion
- Robert "Butch" Goring — professional NHL hockey player, notable for winning 4 consecutive Stanley Cup with the New York Islanders.
- "Rowdy" Roddy Piper —WWE Legend and Hall of famer
- Sami Jo Small — Canadian national women's hockey team goaltender
- Scott Koskie — Setter for the Canadian National Men's Volleyball Team (1995-2007)
- Theresa Oswald — Politician
- Tricia Mayba — Volleyball Player
- Wab Kinew — Leader of the Manitoba Opposition
See also
References
- "Louis Riel School Division". www.lrsd.net. Retrieved 2021-06-17.
- "Provincial Modernization of School Boundaries". www.edu.gov.mb.ca. Retrieved 2021-06-17.
- "Louis Riel School Division". www.lrsd.net. Retrieved 2021-06-17.
- "Learning from Home School / L'École Apprendre-chez-soi". www.lrsd.net. Retrieved 2021-06-17.
- "René Deleurme Centre". web.lrsd.net. Retrieved 2021-06-17.
- "Andrea Slobodian: Weather Anchor". GlobalWinnipeg.com. Shaw Media Inc. 2008-03-11. Retrieved 2011-12-12.
- Comeau, Pauline (1993), “Elijah”, p. 54. Douglas and McIntyre, Vancouver. ISBN 1550540823.
- "Dakota Collegiate Wall of Fame". Retrieved 28 April 2018.
External links
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