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A collegiate institute is a school either of secondary education or higher education. The definition varies regionally, and has been largely unused outside of Canada since the early 20th century. ==Canada== In Canada, collegiate institute has a specific meaning. In 1871, the province of Ontario set up two parallel secondary education systems.〔(''The Cyclopædia of education'' by Henry Kiddle, Alexander Jacob Schem. Published by E. Steiger, 1876. p. 668. )〕 Collegiate institutes offered arts and humanities education, including Greek and Latin, for university-bound students. High schools offered vocational and science programs for those planning to enter the workforce upon graduation. This system was later adopted by other provinces including Manitoba, Alberta, and Saskatchewan. It was quite quickly realized that this division did not work very well. Over time, high schools responded to students' needs and increasingly offered the arts courses that were essential for the workforce. At the same time, as universities began teaching science and engineering, so did the collegiate institutes. Within a decade, the distinctions between the two systems were greatly blurred, and eventually the two systems were merged in to a single secondary school system. Most new Ontario schools were from then on named either high schools or secondary schools, but the term collegiate institutes is still used for new schools from time to time. Most cities, the oldest and most established high schools are still known as collegiate institutes. Most cities in Ontario have a collegiate institute near the centre. In some cases, a more academic focus has been retained, and collegiate institutes are thus sometimes regarded as better than "standard" high schools. Many of Ontario's most prominent high schools are collegiate institutes, such as Toronto's Marc Garneau Collegiate Institute, Lisgar Collegiate Institute and Glebe Collegiate Institute in Ottawa, as well as Monarch Park Collegiate, Jarvis Collegiate Institute, William Lyon Mackenzie Collegiate Institute, Riverdale Collegiate Institute, North Toronto Collegiate Institute, York Mills Collegiate Institute, Danforth Collegiate and Technical Institute, Malvern Collegiate Institute, Richview Collegiate Institute, Humberside Collegiate Institute and Etobicoke Collegiate Institute in Toronto. In the case of Marc Garneau Collegiate Institute, Maclean's magazine ranked it as the top secondary school in Canada due to its TOPS Program. Almost every high school in the city of Toronto is a "collegiate institute". Despite this, many of the suburbs around Toronto have secondary schools, like Bayview Secondary School in Richmond Hill, Ontario and high schools like Pickering High School in Pickering, Ontario. A noteworthy example in particular is Woodbridge College in Woodbridge, Ontario. Woodbridge College maintains themselves as not being a "collegiate institute", and retains the name from their days as a private academy (As a side result of this, Woodbridge College is also one of the few public high schools in Ontario to enforce uniforms.). In western Canada, far fewer schools are known as collegiate institutes, most having been closed or renamed in the decades since the separate systems were abolished. In Saskatoon and Regina, however, the term ''collegiate'' is still used to mean ''high school''; all public high schools and some Catholic high schools there are "Collegiates," including those recently built or recently opened. Outside of Saskatoon, some remain such as Lethbridge Collegiate Institute in Lethbridge, Alberta, and Mennonite Brethren Collegiate Institute in Winnipeg, Manitoba. 抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)』 ■ウィキペディアで「collegiate institute」の詳細全文を読む スポンサード リンク
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