Balmoral Hall School

Balmoral Hall School is a private school for girls in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada.

Balmoral Hall School
The modern Balmoral Hall School uniform
Address
630 Westminster Avenue

, ,
R3C 3S1

Canada
Coordinates49°52′54″N 97°09′24″W
Information
School typeIndependent all-girls day/boarding school
MottoMeliora Petens
(Seeking better things)
Founded1901
PrincipalMrs. Joanne Kamins
GradesChild Care - Grade 12
Enrollment500 (maximum)
LanguageEnglish
Colour(s)Green, Gold, Black
Team nameBH Blazers
Websitewww.balmoralhall.com

History

Balmoral Hall was founded in 1901 as Havergal College, located at 122 Carlton Street. The name was changed in 1917 to Rupert's Land College.[1] Sir James Aikins gave his home, known as Aikins House, to the United Church of Canada upon his death in 1929. In his will, he requested it be used as a girls' school and bestowed further funding to be used to that end. The school was named Riverbend School and opened in September 1929 at Balmoral Hall's present site.[1] In 1950, due to declining enrollment at both schools, Rupert's Land College amalgamated with the Riverbend School at its site on Westminster Avenue. The school was christened Balmoral Hall School, after Balmoral Castle, and classes began in September 1950.[1]

The two schools' mottos, Ad Meliora, or "To Better Things," and Alta Petens, "Seeking New Heights," were combined to form the school's new motto, Meliora Petens, which meant "Seeking Better Things."[1]

In 1955, the Senior School Wing was opened, and in 1967 the school expanded to include the Richardson Building, which housed a new gymnasium as well as new science labs and facilities.[1]

Since then, there have been several other expansions which brought new computer and science laboratories and classrooms, as well as athletic facilities, a theatre and a communications technology centre.[1]

Curriculum

Balmoral Hall School adheres to the educational guidelines set out by the Province of Manitoba. Additionally, the school is accredited by the (CAIS). From Kindergarten through Grade 5, the school follows the International Baccalaureate Primary Years Programme (PYP).

Beginning in Grade 6, the school teaches to its proprietary Capstone curriculum. CAPSTONE is a student-centred curriculum, with a strong focus on STEAM subjects (Science, Technology, Engineering, Arts and Math).[2]

The CAPSTONE education model is designed to dovetail seamlessly with Advanced Placement courses offered in Grade 11 and Grade 12, which in turn may assist students in their post-secondary education by providing course credits as well as marks of academic distinction on their transcripts.[3]

Boarding

Balmoral Hall School offers a live-in residence for students from around the world. Up to 90 students at a time may live and study at Balmoral Hall.

The boarding program offers an additional component to the schools' curriculum for international students, in that residents have the opportunity to immerse and take part in many Canadian cultural activities. Students also take part in athletic activities both at school and at the Winnipeg Winter Club.

Students have come to BH from:

· Canada · USA · Mexico · Japan · Russia · The Philippines · New Zealand · Sweden · Nigeria · Hong Kong · Taiwan · China[4]

Athletics

Balmoral Hall's school team is called the Blazers.[5]

BH Blazers Hockey

Balmoral Hall School has a varsity prep hockey team that plays in the Junior Women's Hockey League (JWHL) 18 Balmoral Hall hockey players have been named to the Canada Women's National Ice Hockey Team (U22 and U18) rosters since the Blazer Hockey program's inception in 2006.

Over 63 Senior players have been drafted to teams in the NCAA and CIS university leagues, often on scholarship.[6]

Other sports offered at Balmoral Hall include:

  • Soccer
  • Volleyball
  • Basketball
  • Badminton
  • Ultimate Frisbee
  • Curling
  • Track and field[7]

Notable alumnae

gollark: This is a new level of craziness. An Australian prime minister claimed that their laws were more important than the laws of mathematics, but they're trying to beat simple logic.
gollark: I think they voted to not have one, but I don't know how that's actually meant to work.
gollark: Less awful than hard brexit I mean.
gollark: We could at least get a less-awful solution, but the MPs said no, so yaaaay.
gollark: There is basically no chance of Brexit working out in a way that more than 10% of people actually want.

References

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