Toronto Board of Education

Board of Education for
the City of Toronto
(District 15)
Location
155 College Street
Toronto, Ontario, Canada
M5T 3M7
District information
Established1904
ClosedDecember 31, 1997
Chair of the boardDavid Moll
District IDTBE
Former headquarters of the Toronto Board of Education, briefly used as the headquarters of the TDSB.

The Toronto Board of Education (TBE; commonly known as School District 15), officially known as the Board of Education for the City of Toronto, is the former secular school district serving the pre-merged city of Toronto. The board offices were located at 155 College Street.[1] Following a referendum in 1900, the Toronto Board of Education was created in 1904 from the merger of the Toronto Public School Board, the Collegiate Institute Board, and the Technical School Board.[2][3]

As of December 1996, the TBE operated 169 schools and had over 4,800 teachers and principals and about 78,000 full-time students and over 250,000 continuing education and adult students.[4]

At one time the board operated educational programs for Francophone students. The Conseil des écoles françaises de la communauté urbaine de Toronto (CEFCUT) assumed control of French-language education in the Toronto area on 1 December 1988.[5]

In 1998 the TBE merged into the Toronto District School Board (TDSB). At that point, 155 College Street became solely used as the board headquarters of the TDSB.[1] The building was subsequently sold to the University of Toronto and the TDSB moved its headquarters to 5050 Yonge Street, formerly the headquarters of the North York Board of Education.

  1. ^ a b "City of Toronto Council and Committees School Board Lands." (Archive). City of Toronto. March 26, 1999. Retrieved on July 23, 2013. "The TDSB administrative capital management strategy identifies the former Toronto Board of Education's facility at 155 College Street as the main headquarters of the new School Board, for its sole use."
  2. ^ "1904 Toronto Board of Education Created | Radical Reform". www.1845rr1945.ca. Retrieved 2018-10-29.
  3. ^ Prentice, Alison; Heaps, Ruby (1991). Gender and Education: An Historical Reader. Toronto: Canadian Scholars' Press. p. 206.
  4. ^ Home page. (Archive) Toronto Board of Education. December 28, 1996. Retrieved on July 23, 2013.
  5. ^ Behiels, Michael D. La francophonie canadienne: renouveau constitutionnel et gouvernance scolaire (Issue 12 of Collection Amérique française, ISSN 1480-4735). University of Ottawa Press, 2005. ISBN 2760306003, 9782760306004. p. 133. "Le Conseil des écoles françaises de la communauté urbaine de Toronto (CEFCUT), le 1er décembre 1988, s'établit dans un climat beaucoup moins acrimonieux qu'à Ottawa-Carleton. Jusqu'en 1987, les conseils scolaires de Toronto, North York et Scarborough ainsi que leurs CCLF gèrent les classes et les écoles de langue française qui accueillent près de 1700 élèves."