St. John's-Kilmarnock School | |
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Address | |
2201 Shantz Station Road , , Canada | |
Coordinates | 43°30′39″N 80°22′59″W / 43.5107°N 80.3831°W |
Information | |
Type | Independent boarding |
Motto | Latin: Accendere Flamma Donum Dei (To Stir Into Flame the Gift of God) |
Religious affiliation(s) | Anglican Church |
Established | 1972 |
Founder | Bishop of Niagara, J.C. Bothwell |
School board | Board of Governors |
Head of School | Cheryl Boughton |
Grades | JK–12 |
Enrollment | 540 |
Student to teacher ratio | 17:1 |
Area | 36 acres |
Houses | Brock, Brant, Simcoe, Tecumseh |
Color(s) | Kilmarnock Gold & Blue |
Nickname | Eagles |
Newspaper | The Aquiline Friday File |
Annual tuition | $78,800 (boarding) $21,290 to $33,140 (day) |
Affiliation | |
Website | www |
St. John's Kilmarnock School (often called SJK School or SJK) is an independent school in Waterloo Region, Ontario, operating under the International Baccalaureate program.[1] The School is located on a beautiful 36-acre natural campus offering enriched educational programming for students from Junior Kindergarten to Grade 12 through its International Baccalaureate (IB) curriculum. SJK is proud to be the only accredited IB World Continuum School in Southwestern Ontario. At SJK, students discover their passions and unique gifts through meaningful, student-centered learning opportunities. SJK students build confidence through risk-taking, overcoming challenges, and stepping outside their comfort zones. Their specialist teachers provide personalized support, community building, and genuine care. Project-based learning, design-thinking, and collaboration equip SJK students with skills that will make them successful globally-minded citizens. SJK students graduate as confident, well-rounded individuals fully prepared for post-secondary education and life beyond SJK. Our graduates earn 100% university admission rates and many go on to elite post-secondary programs in a range of disciplines including STEM, business, and the arts.
The school is divided into four houses named after historical Canadian figures: Brock, Brant, Simcoe, and Tecumseh.[2] Aside from its main structure, the Breslau campus has a number of sports facilities and playing fields, a chapel, a dining hall, a library, a pond and corresponding boathouse, and an extensive network of forested trails.[3]