Lynn Valley Elementary School

Lynn Valley Elementary School (usually referred to as "Lynn Valley Elementary") is a public school in Lynn Valley section of the District of North Vancouver, British Columbia, Canada. The school, part of School District 44 North Vancouver, serves children in kindergarten through seventh grade.

A total of 349 students attended Lynn Valley in 2020. The large increase was due to the closing of a nearby Elementary School (Fromme). Most of the students elected to attend Lynn Valley.[1] As of 2018, the principal is Mrs. Chanin Smyth and its Vice Principal is Mrs. Kendra Arkinstall.[2]

Having completed 100 or more student environmental education projects, the school is a "Green School" within the Green Schools Project of the SEEDS Foundation.[3]

School support services

The Lynn Valley Elementary Parents Advisory Council that runs special projects to the school. In the 2007-2008 school year, the PAC planned to fund three artistic performances, the "Learning through the Arts" program and new computers for students.[4] The school has a "Learning Assistance Center" that "provides concentrated assistance in skills development to those students who are considered by their teachers to be capable of a higher level of competence, but who, for various reasons, have not acquired the necessary skills."[5]

The Lynn Valley School Planning Council represents parents, teachers and the school administration in developing annual school plans for improving student achievement. The council is composed of three parents (elected by a community vote), a teacher (nominated by the staff), and the school principal and vice principal.[5] The school's Learning Assistance Centre has a teacher who provides "concentrated assistance in skills development to those students who are considered by their teachers to be capable of a higher level of competence, but who, for various reasons, have not acquired the necessary skills", according to the student handbook.[5] Lynn Valley Elementary has a school counselor and a "School Based Resource Team" for students "experiencing on going difficulties with academics, social, emotional or behavioral issues". The team consists of the student's teacher, the school Learning Assistance Centre teacher, the school counselor, a primary and intermediate staff representative, the principal and vice-principal.[5]

History

The 1920s Lynn Valley Elementary School building, at 3203 Institute Road (now the Community History Centre) has been called "the District of North Vancouver’s finest historic public building" by the North Vancouver Office of Culture and Arts. The "Edwardian Baroque"-style building was designed by local architects Henry Blackadder & Alexander Sinclair Wemyss MacKay.[6]

Educator and author John Goodlad, a student-teacher at the school in the 1940s, wrote that it was "a joy" to work there. Edwin Cohan, the teacher with whom Goodlad was assigned to work, and Stanley Morrison, the principal, "almost raucous in their bantering of one another", Goodlad wrote. They "set a tone of caring and civility that permeated the whole school, affecting adults and children alike. Parents came and went as I had not seen before, knowing that they were welcome and would be listened to."[7]

In 2004, the school celebrated its 100th birthday.[8] A new school building was constructed for $4.6 million (Canadian)[9] and ready by December 2004. In the following two years, the school experienced a large turnover of employees, with new administrators, teachers, office staff and special education aides.[10]

In May 2006, the Community History Centre opened in the former Lynn Elementary School building at 3203 Institute Road (northwest corner of Mountain Highway and Lynn Valley Road). The centre houses the local cultural commission offices, archives reading room, collections, storage, education resource centre and a public meeting room.[11] By March 2006, before most school libraries in the district, Lynn Valley Elementary's school library had replaced its card catalog with computer searching, and checkout functions were also computerized.[12]

A Student Council was established in the fall of 2005.[10]

gollark: It's mostly those sea-y dragons anyway.
gollark: Some day, I want to have enough dragons of each kind to just fill the AP whenever I want.
gollark: Xenowyrms, cool!
gollark: Preferably a chrono though.
gollark: Basically any.

References

  1. "School Information". British Columbia Ministry of Education. Retrieved 2007-12-31.
  2. "Lynn Valley Elementary School". Profile Canada. Retrieved 2007-12-31 – via 2167835_Lynn_Valley_Elementary_School_North_Vancouver_BC.
  3. "GREENSCHOOLS Program (British Columbia)". SEEDS Foundation. Archived from the original on 2007-04-03. Retrieved 2008-07-29.
  4. "Lynn Valley Parent Advisory Council". North Vancouver School District. Archived from the original on January 10, 2006. Retrieved 2007-12-31.
  5. "Lynn Valley Elementary Handbook". North Vancouver School District. Archived from the original on January 10, 2006. Retrieved 2007-12-31.
  6. "Community History Centre to open May 27" (PDF). North Vancouver Museum and Archives. Retrieved 2007-12-31.
  7. Goodlad, John I., "Romances With Schools: A Life in Education", Google Books Web site, accessed December 31, 2007
  8. Web page titled "April, 2004 Lynn Valley Parent Advisory Council Minutes April 15th, 2004" at the North Vancouver School District Web site, accessed December 31, 207
  9. "NEW NORTH VANCOUVER ELEMENTARY SCHOOL GOING GREEN", news release, June 21, 2007, British Columbia Ministry of Education Web site, accessed December 31, 2007
  10. "Draft: Lynn Valley Elementary School Plan 2006/2010", North Vancouver School District Web site, accessed December 31, 207
  11. Web page titled "North Shore Heritage: News" at the North Shore Preservation Society Web site, accessed December 31, 207
  12. "Lynn Valley Elementary Bulletin" (school newsletter), March 2006, accessed December 31, 2007

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