Bluefield High School (Prince Edward Island)

Bluefield High School (BHS) is a Canadian secondary school in Hampshire, Prince Edward Island for students from the Mid-part of Queens County, including the town of Cornwall. [1]

Bluefield High School
Address
Map
924 Colville Road

, ,
Canada
Coordinates46°16′56″N 63°17′35″W / 46.282343°N 63.293184°W / 46.282343; -63.293184
Information
School typePublic High school
MottoTomorrow's Education Today
Founded1978
School boardPublic Schools Branch
SuperintendentJane McMillan
AdministratorLenette MacDougal
Jeannie Lane
PrincipalStephen Wenn
Grades10–12
Enrolment700 (2011)
LanguageEnglish
Area98,001 square-feet
Colour(s)
   
   
Blue and White
MascotBobcat
Team nameBluefield Bobcats
Websitebluefield.edu.pe.ca

The school is administratively part of the Public Schools Branch.[1] Its official colours are blue and white and the mascot is a Bobcat. The sports teams from BHS are called the Bluefield Bobcats.

History and characteristics

edit
  • In 2000, a new $2 million addition to Bluefield High School was opened by students, staff, parents, Eastern School District representatives and government officials. The new addition at Bluefield was 15,000 square feet (1,400 m2). It consists of seven classrooms, one special education area, a sick room, an art room, two work rooms, a general office area and a new main entrance area. The Honourable Jeffrey E. Lantz, Minister of Education, also participated in the official opening.[2]
  • In 2007, Bluefield was one of three Island schools, and one of ten Canadian schools, to receive a $40,000 HP grant to improve teaching by using technology. The grant was used to enhance teaching math and science at Bluefield. A team of five Bluefield teachers applied for the grant earlier that year.
  • In 2010, BHS put on an open house of readings at the Confederation Centre Art Gallery by the Creative Writing Group of Bluefield High School led by Yvette Doucette.

The high school offers both French and English languages.[3]

Facilities

edit

The school's $40,000 HP grant in 2008 allowed the school to install some of the following features:

  • A large library and resource centre with an adjoining seminar and meeting rooms.
  • The cafetorium with a large stage, prop area, and sound and lighting room.
  • Band and music room.
  • A kitchen.
  • Trades training spaces for carpentry, welding, motor vehicle repair and applied technology.
  • SmartBoards and accompanying technology for classrooms.
  • One classroom has a wall made of thick see-through glass.
  • Two computer labs.
  • A 7,000-square-foot (650 m2) gymnasium and an auxiliary gym above it.

School sports

edit

Sports at Bluefield High Include:

 
The high school's Athletic Logo.

Sports tournaments

edit

The Snowbird Classic

edit

A basketball tournament hosted in December by Bluefield High which draws schools competing from across P.E.I., New Brunswick and Nova Scotia.

The annual teams are the Bluefield Bobcats, the Rural Raiders, the Colonel Gray Colonels, the Three Oaks Axemen, the Tantramar Titans and the Sackville Kingfishers.

Bluefield Invitational Hockey Tournament

edit

In 2012 Bluefield High School and the school's Parent Advisory Council decided to have a fundraising hockey tournament in rinks in Kensington, Montague and Charlottetown. The round-robin tournament featured four female teams and five male teams from the high schools of Evangeline High, Kinkora High, Bluefield High, Colonel Gray Sr. High, Montague High and Souris High.

This was the first time that high school hockey has been played on PEI since 1989 when Bluefield won the provincial title. Funds went to support the Breakfast Program, band, Jo-bo Fitness and sports teams at Bluefield.[4]

Clubs at Bluefield

edit
  • Outdoor Adventure Club
  • Yearbook Committee
  • Chess Club
  • Science Club
  • Junior Achievement
  • Rotary Youth Parliament
  • SADD
  • PURPLE
  • Art Club
  • Nap Club
  • Anime Club
  • Travel Club
  • Drama Club
  • Improv Club

Notable alumni

edit

See also

edit

References

edit
  1. ^ "New School Board".
  2. ^ "PEI Government".
  3. ^ "School spirit". Archived from the original on 2012-03-24.
  4. ^ "High School Hockey". Archived from the original on 2013-12-03. Retrieved 2012-03-27.
edit