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Woburn Collegiate Institute

1963 establishments in OntarioEducation in Scarborough, TorontoEducational institutions established in 1963Gifted educationHigh schools in Toronto
Schools in the TDSBUse mdy dates from May 2021
Woburn Collegiate Institute (2)
Woburn Collegiate Institute (2)

Woburn Collegiate Institute (Woburn CI, WCI, or Woburn) is a non-semestered, English-language public secondary school on Ellesmere Road in the Woburn neighbourhood of the Scarborough district of Toronto, Ontario, Canada operated by the Toronto District School Board. From its inception in 1963 until 1998, it was operated by the Scarborough Board of Education. It has 919 students as of September 2019. The school motto is "Studium Eruditionis Crescat", which is Latin for "Let the Zeal for Learning Flourish".

Excerpt from the Wikipedia article Woburn Collegiate Institute (License: CC BY-SA 3.0, Authors, Images).

Woburn Collegiate Institute
Ellesmere Road, Toronto Scarborough

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Geographical coordinates (GPS)

Latitude Longitude
N 43.777777777778 ° E -79.228333333333 °
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Address

Woburn Collegiate Institute

Ellesmere Road 2222
M1G 3M3 Toronto, Scarborough
Ontario, Canada
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Phone number
Toronto District School Board

call+14163964575

Website
woburnci.ca

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linkWikiData (Q8028969)
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Woburn Collegiate Institute (2)
Woburn Collegiate Institute (2)
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Nearby Places

Scarborough, Toronto
Scarborough, Toronto

Scarborough (; 2021 Census 629,941) is a district of Toronto, Ontario, Canada, atop the Scarborough Bluffs in the eastern part of the city. Its borders are Victoria Park Avenue to the west, Steeles Avenue to the north, Rouge River and the city of Pickering to the east, and Lake Ontario to the south. It borders Old Toronto, East York and North York in the west and the city of Markham in the north. Scarborough was named after the English town of Scarborough, North Yorkshire. Scarborough, which was settled by Europeans in the 1790s, has grown from a collection of small rural villages and farms to become fully urbanized with a diverse cultural community. Incorporated in 1850 as a township, Scarborough became part of Metropolitan Toronto in 1953 and was reconstituted as a borough in 1967. Scarborough rapidly developed as a suburb of Toronto over the next decade and became a city in 1983. In 1998, Scarborough and the rest of Metropolitan Toronto were amalgamated into the present city of Toronto. The Scarborough Civic Centre – the former city's last seat of government – is occupied by municipal government of Toronto offices. Since the end of the Second World War, Scarborough has been a popular destination for new immigrants in Canada. As a result, it is one of the most diverse and multicultural areas in the Greater Toronto Area, being home to various religious groups and places of worship. It includes a number of natural landmarks, including the Toronto Zoo, Rouge Park and the Scarborough Bluffs. The northeast corner of Scarborough is largely rural with some of Toronto’s last remaining farms, earning Scarborough its reputation of being greener than any other part of Toronto.