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Miss Edgar's and Miss Cramp's School (ECS) is an independent school for girls that is located in Westmount, Quebec. It is situated near other QAIS schools, including Selwyn House School and The Study. The school teaches students from Kindergarten up to Grade 11.
Miss Edgar's and Miss Cramp's School | |
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School type | Independent day school |
Motto | Non Nobis Sed Urbi Et Orbi (Latin for 'Not for ourselves alone, but for the city and the world')[1] |
Founded | 1909 |
Head of School | Margaret Dorrance[2] |
Grades | Kindergarten – Grade 11 |
Gender | Girls |
Enrollment | 300 |
Language | English and French |
Colour(s) | Green and White |
Website | www |
The annual tuition fees for attending the school range from $24,000 to $29,300.[3] The school also receives subsidies from the provincial government for middle and senior school, which means all students in those sections must have a certificate of eligibility allowing them to attend government-funded English schools in Quebec in accordance with Bill 101.[4][5] Students without the certificate can attend the non-subsidized junior school section and qualify for the certificate after three years as long as they and any of their siblings have never previously attended a French school.[6][7] In September of 2024, ECS officially announced it would become a fully independent school as of September 2025, and certificates of eligibility for high school students will no longer be required. [8]
History
editMiss Edgar's and Miss Cramp's School was founded in 1909 by Maud Edgar and Mary Cramp. Maud Edgar, who served as the headmistress, was the daughter of the historian and feminist Matilda Ridout Edgar and the lawyer and politician James David Edgar.[9] The school has always been an all-girls school and began its life in a home on Guy Street in Downtown Montreal. There were 70 girls at the outset, including 15 boarders. The school's initial goals were to equip their pupils with a broad understanding of literature, languages, ethics, fine arts, as well as science and mathematics. The most novel feature of the curriculum was the organization of literature and history.
Forty years later, the school relocated to a building on Cedar Avenue, on the slope of Mount Royal. By then there were approximately 150 girls attending, which included 17 boarders. The school continued to grow in size for another 16 years, and after observing a larger property at the corner of Mount Pleasant and Montrose Avenue in 1964, the school undertook a major fundraising campaign to make the move possible. The official opening took place in November 1964. At that point, ECS became a dedicated day school.
Today, the school is located at 525 Mount Pleasant Avenue, the property bought in 1964. The school's motto is Non Nobis Sed Urbi Et Orbi, which translates from Latin to English as "not for ourselves alone, but for the city and the world".[1] The school anthem was written by Isabelle Adami.
School organization
editECS is divided into three "schools": junior school (K-grade 5), middle school (grade 6-grade 8) and senior school (grade 9 - grade 11).
Today the school has approximately three hundred students in total from kindergarten to grade 11. There are about 20 students in each grade. Grade 4 and up is divided into two classes. In total, the students are divided into three house groups.
Entrepreneurial Platform (EP)
editECS' Entrepreneurial Platform (EP) is a program that teaches students, starting from Kindergarten, to identify challenges and develop solutions with an entrepreneurial mindset. Projects are aligned with the United Nations Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs), relating to issues such as poverty, inequality, and climate change.[10][better source needed]
Music
editECS has both vocal and instrumental extra-curricular activities. Open to middle and senior school students are: Vocal Jazz, Senior Choir, Junior Jazz Band, Senior Jazz Band and Symphonic Ensemble. For the junior students there is a junior choir and an annual junior school musical in addition to their regular music classes.
Every year, both the vocal and instrumental groups each go on a music trip. Previous destinations include Costa Rica, Mexico, Boston, Prague, Orlando, Washington, Philadelphia and New York City.
ECS' Vocal Jazz has been generating musical sound with Selwyn House School's Jazz Band for years now, and won several medals this year in Orlando, Florida, during Spring Break.
Athletics
editECS actively participates in friendly competition for sports. They have a soccer, rugby, basketball, swimming, badminton, curling, golf, tennis, football, track and field, halo, cross country, squash, ski, hockey team and others. ECS is an elite athletic school.[citation needed]
Notable alumni
edit- Gretta Chambers, journalist and former Chancellor of McGill University
- Carole Corbeil, art critic and author
- Bianca Farella, rugby player
- Jessica Mulroney, fashion stylist
- Myfanwy Pavelic, portrait artist
- Barbara Pentland, composer
- Lilias Torrance Newton, painter
References
edit- ^ a b "Non Nobis Sed Urbi Et Orbi". www.ecs.qc.ca. Retrieved 30 March 2020.
- ^ "Our Head of School". www.ecs.qc.ca. Retrieved 22 October 2024.
- ^ "Tuition & Fees". www.ecs.qc.ca. Retrieved 14 September 2024.
- ^ "English Eligibility". www.ecs.qc.ca. Retrieved 30 March 2020.
- ^ "Private Schools". Retrieved 1 June 2020.
- ^ English Eligibility | Miss Edgar's and Miss Cramp's School
- ^ Eligibility for English-Language Education - Lower Canada College
- ^ English Eligibility | Miss Edgar's and Miss Cramp's School
- ^ McLean, Maud J.; Stamp, Robert (1998-08-15). My Dearest Wife: The Private and Public Lives of James David Edgar and Matilda Ridout Edgar. Dundurn. p. 9. ISBN 978-1-55488-235-9.
- ^ ECS launches a new platform designed to give girls entrepreneurial skills | Montreal Gazette