Summit Middle School
Address
1450 Parkway Boulevard

, ,
V3E 3L2

Canada
Coordinates49°17′46″N 122°48′23″W / 49.296161°N 122.806378°W / 49.296161; -122.806378
Information
School typeCoeducational public middle school
Motto"A Journey To Success"
FoundedSept 1998
School boardSchool District 43 Coquitlam
SuperintendentPatricia Gartland[1]
School number04343114
PrincipalCheryl Woods
Vice-PrincipalJames Morton
Grades6-8
Enrollment750 students
Average class size25 students
LanguageEnglish
AreaCoquitlam/Westwood Plateau
Colour(s)  Orange

  Green
  Red
  Blue
  Purple

  Yellow
MascotSun
ArchitectKMBR
EngineerBush Bohlman & partners
Websitesd43.bc.ca/summit

Summit Middle School is a grade 6 to 8 public middle school within School District 43 Coquitlam, British Columbia.

Construction

Construction of Summit started in 1997, as part of the NDP's cost-cutting initiative for new schools. Built to meet demand for school space created by a boom in the school-aged population, Summit was one of the first two schools to utilize new low-cost construction techniques testing the processes, which were used on later schools in British Columbia. These cost 15% less per square meter of space than traditionally constructed schools.[2] Summit Middle was completed by TASK construction management on August 14, 1998, ten and one half months from building excavation to occupancy, and was initially designed to hold 650 students. The total cost for the Summit Middle was $8,500,000.[3]

The school's building envelope began being remediated in April 2015, and work was completed in December 2015.[4] This was done in order to resolve issues with high moisture content inside the walls and to bring the building up to current industry performance standards. Existing stucco walls were demolished and replaced with a Fibre Cement assembly. Additionally, the windows were replaced with double-glazed aluminium windows and the south and west sides of the building received solar heat resistant glass.

Academics

The school participates in the BC government's Foundation Skills Assessment exam in grade 7, as well as maintaining its own academic honour roll and offering a yearly award called the "Summit Award". In the 2006/2007 school year, Summit Middle had a participation rate of 100% in the FSA's.[5] The school also offers math contests to willing students, akin to the national Euler Contest (7th grade) and Pythagoras Contest (6th grade students). In 2003, the school was selected to be part of NASA's "Odyssey of the Mind" educational program, and was visited by the program's founder Samuel Micklus.[6] The school also had a student win one of the Junior Achievement of B.C.'s 2000 Awards for academic excellence.[7] In 2017 the school added a course called Coding and Design. In this course students will learn how to code on programs such as Make Block.

Athletics

Summit has a wide variety of sports teams and activities, including badminton, basketball, volleyball, track and field and swimming. The school's team is the Summit Suns, with their mascot the Sun. In September 2007, the school won national acclaim when one of its students, Jisoo Keel, won the Maple Leaf Junior Tour's Girls national championship title in Whistler during a tightly contested golf match.[8]

Notable alumni

References

  1. "Superintendent of Schools - School District No. 43 (Coquitlam)".
  2. Suzanne Fournier (1997-08-15). "Economics 101: Expensive schools off the curriculum". The Province.
  3. "Project Profile: Education". TASK Construction Management Inc.
  4. "Summit Middle School Building Envelope Remediation 2015" (PDF). School District 43. Iredale Group Architecture. Retrieved 2015-08-05.
  5. "Foundation Skills Assessment" (PDF). BC Ministry of Education. 2006–2007.
  6. Blais, Simone (2003-11-03). "Odyssey of the Mind founder to visit Summit Middle School". Coquitlam Now. p. 15.
  7. "Kudos". The Vancouver Sun. 2000-07-08. pp. C8.
  8. "Keel collects national title". Coquitlam Now. 2007-09-05. p. 35.
  9. Calgary Herald: B.C. teen lands in middle of Charlie Sheen circus 10 August 2012
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