The Dufferin-Peel Catholic District School Board (DPCDSB, known as English-language Separate District School Board No. 43 prior to 1999[3]) is the separateschool board that oversees 153 Catholic school facilities (125 elementary schools, 26 secondary or high schools and 2 continuing education schools or adult learning centers)[4] throughout Peel Region (Mississauga, Brampton, Caledon) and Dufferin County (including Orangeville). It employs roughly 5,000 teachers; about 3,000 at the elementary level, and the remaining 2,000 at the secondary school and continuing education level.[citation needed]
Its headquarters is on Matheson Boulevard West in Mississauga.[5] The board was previously known as the Dufferin-Peel Separate School Board (DPSSB) before 1998.
History
The Dufferin-Peel Catholic District School Board is the successor to the Dufferin-Peel Separate School Board (French: Conseil des écoles séparées catholiques de Dufferin & Peel), which was established in 1969 by the merger of eight small separate boards.
As of 1986 the Dufferin-Peel Separate School Board was Ontario's second largest Catholic school board.[6] On January 1, 1998, the DPSSB was renamed to DPCDSB and its French schools within the board became part of the Conseil scolaire de district catholique Centre-Sud.
By 1999 the district had a co-operative transportation service with the Peel District School Board. During that year its school operation costs were $4.65 ($7.86 when adjusted for inflation) per square foot. The funding guidelines by a ministry[clarification needed] were $5.20 ($8.79 when adjusted for inflation).[7]
Around the time of the DPSSB's existence, the board operated six francophone schools.
School bus transportation
In addition to local transit systems Brampton Transit and MiWay (Mississauga Transit) there are a number of transportation providers under contract for the DPCDSB:[8]
Father Francis McSpiritt Catholic Elementary School
Georges Vanier Catholic School
Good Shepherd Catholic Elementary School
Guardian Angels Catholic Elementary School
Holy Cross Separate School
Holy Family Catholic Elementary School
Holy Spirit Catholic Elementary School
Lester B. Pearson Catholic School
Mary Fix Catholic School
Metropolitan Andrei Separate School
Our Lady of Fatima Catholic School
Our Lady of Good Voyage School
Our Lady of Lourdes Catholic Elementary School
Our Lady of Mercy Elementary School
Our Lady of Peace Separate School
Our Lady of Providence School
Pauline Vanier Catholic Elementary School
Queen of Heaven Elementary School
Sacred Heart Elementary School
San Lorenzo Ruiz Elementary School
St. Agnes Elementary School
St. Aidan Elementary School
St. Albert of Jerusalem Elementary School
St. Alfred Separate School
St. Alphonsa Catholic Elementary School
St. Andrew Elementary School
St. Angela Merici Catholic Elementary School
St. Andre Bessette Catholic Elementary school
St. Anne Elementary School is temporarily closed for reconstruction, with regular-track students at St. Ursula and Extended French students at St. Aneglia Merici Catholic.
St. Anthony Elementary School
St. Barbara Elementary School
St. Basil Elementary School
St. Benedict Elementary School
St. Bernadette Elementary School
St. Bernard of Clairvaux Catholic Elementary School
St. Bonaventure Catholic Elementary School
St. Brigid Elementary School
St. Catherine of Siena Separate School
St. Cecilia Catholic Elementary School
St. Charles Garnier School
St. Christopher Separate School
St. Clare Separate School
St. Cornelius Elementary School
St. Daniel Comboni Catholic Elementary School
St. David of Wales Separate School
St. Dominic Separate School
St. Edith Stein Elementary School
St. Edmund Separate School
St. Elizabeth Seton School
St. Evan Catholic Elementary School
St. Faustina Elementary School
St. Francis Xavier Elementary School
St. Francis of Assisi Catholic School
St. Gerard Separate School
St. Giovanni Scalabrini Catholic Elementary School
Blessed Trinity Elementary (repurposed for continuing education)
Our Lady of the Airways Elementary (sold to the City of Mississauga)
Mother Mary Ward Elementary (sold on open market to independent school)
St. Dunstan Elementary (repurposed for IL site and adult education)
St. Gabriel Elementary (repurposed for continuing education)
St. Gertrude Elementary
St. James Elementary (repurposed as a regional elementary school)
St. Mary's Elementary (Port Credit) (leased to a child care operator)
St. Michael Elementary (sold to the City of Mississauga)
Controversies
Enrolment of non-Catholics
As with other school boards, Catholic high schools are funded by the provincial government, making them open to any students who wish to attend, while elementary schools do not have to enrol non-Catholic students. Critics argue that the practice of fully funding separate schools exclusively for the Roman Catholic faith is discriminatory to other religions (the United Nations has twice criticized the province for this policy)[citation needed]. Supporters of the current Catholic education system point out that it has existed, in one form or another, since Confederation, and that the Constitution Act, 1867 enshrines the right to government-funded religious education to all Catholics. The opposition argues that this is an appeal to tradition, and point to other provinces in Canada which amended the constitution to abolish Catholic school funding. It is up to the school principal whether or not non-Catholics are enrolled.[9]
“Black Boys” book
The board encountered controversy in 2019 when a book, titled The Guide for White Women Who Teach Black Boys, was shown on the principal's desk. This sparked various online debates on the internet. The book, written by American researchers and published in 2017, provides help and advice for teachers to create learning environments in which black students feel nurtured and engaged.[10]
^"About Us". Dufferin-Peel Catholic District School Board. Retrieved November 2, 2022.
^"Contact". Dufferin-Peel Catholic District School Board. Retrieved 17 December 2016.
^"U.S. college honors education director for Dufferin-Peel." Toronto Star. April 15, 1986. Neighbors Section p. W.15. Retrieved on May 20, 2013. "Brian Fleming, director of education of the Dufferin-Peel Separate School Board, will be honored by his alma mater, Niagara University in Lewiston, N.Y., as administrator of the year." and "As director of the second largest Catholic school board in Canada, Fleming was[...]"