Example | Meaning |
I had a nice teacher, she had blonde hair, blue eyes, she was young. Probably twenty-one, twenty-two. 'Cause in those days you could go to grade-twelve, grade-thirteen and then go to one year teachers'-college in North-Bay. |
A fifth year of secondary school, taken by students intending to apply for university (as opposed to students in vocational streams, whose secondary school programs are only four years long). |
Um, and then some of the older students just didn't like grade-nine students. They had grade-nine with grade-thirteen. And we'd have to pass them and we'd have these little briefcases (laughs). |
A fifth year of secondary school, taken by students intending to apply for university (as opposed to students in vocational streams, whose secondary school programs are only four years long). |
Okay, that's- I think that's all for photographs. Oh, when I was in grade-thirteen we had to apply for- we were encouraged to apply for our social-insurance card. |
A fifth year of secondary school, taken by students intending to apply for university (as opposed to students in vocational streams, whose secondary school programs are only four years long). |
Example | Meaning |
Speaker: ... Kathy how many graduates would we have had out of high-school. S-- say grade twelve- Speaker 2: Um- Speaker: Eighty- Speaker 2: I would say- Speaker: Ninety? Speaker 2: Yeah probably. Speaker: And then grade thirteen would have been about fifty- Speaker 2: A little less, yeah. Speaker: So, you-know, th-- the high-school was still fairly packed like it wasn't like it was back in the fifties or sixties, but it was s-- still a busy place. |
A fifth year of secondary school, taken by students intending to apply for university (as opposed to students in vocational streams, whose secondary school programs are only four years long). |
I-mean, you-know, the reality when I came out of high-school was there was not a lot of job opportunity around th-- this area because of the state the mines were in and that-sort-of-thing and of my grade thirteen graduating class. There's probably only about three or four people left in Kirkland, you-know, out of a sixty person graduating class, you-know, th-- the reality was everyone ended up in Ottawa or Kitchener or Toronto or-whatever 'cause that's where the jobs were then. |
A fifth year of secondary school, taken by students intending to apply for university (as opposed to students in vocational streams, whose secondary school programs are only four years long). |
Example | Meaning |
Speaker: Wasn't a wasn't a big deal, they didn't make as big a deal back then for grade-twelve graduation, wasn't like grade-thirteen, and I did. Interviewer: Oh. Speaker: I didn't- I did the ah five-year course but I never did thirteen. Interviewer: Oh. Speaker: I just did the five-year course up until grade-twelve. Interviewer: Oh. So then you were part- so you didn't go to the grade-thirteen graduation? Speaker: No. Interviewer: Oh. |
A fifth year of secondary school, taken by students intending to apply for university (as opposed to students in vocational streams, whose secondary school programs are only four years long). |
Speaker: (inc) grade-twelve grad. We didn't even get cap-and-gown (laughs). Interviewer: Oh. Speaker: Which they have at daycare now, but anyway (laughs). Speaker: Back then you had to have thirteen. Interviewer: Wow. Speaker: You had to- in Kirkland-Lake, if you weren't taking your O-S-S...G-H-D with the H for "Honours" you didn't get it (laughs). Interviewer: Oh no- oh! Speaker: They only did it for grade-thirteen. I know, King-George does it, they they do it now for grade-eight and you're staying in the same school (laughs). Cap-and-gown and you're staying in the same school, what (laughs)? |
A fifth year of secondary school, taken by students intending to apply for university (as opposed to students in vocational streams, whose secondary school programs are only four years long). |
Example | Meaning |
My sister had come over here in grade-eleven and twelve and boarded to finish her eleven and twelve and then she went to Lindsey for grade-thirteen. |
A fifth year of secondary school, taken by students intending to apply for university (as opposed to students in vocational streams, whose secondary school programs are only four years long). |
011> Or you could wade out, you could wade down through the snow and get on it you-know? And then when summer came, we- we'd sometimes- that's the school I went to. Um- isn't that the Wilberforce-school? Interviewer: Wil-- Wilberforce-Consolidated-Continuation-School. Speaker: Yup, went right up to grade-thirteen at one time. Interviewer: Wow. Speaker: I went to ten there. And then I was part of the- the ah f-- but I was going into grade-eleven. I was fortunate- I was the youngest in my family. My sister had come over here in grade-eleven and twelve and boarded to |
A fifth year of secondary school, taken by students intending to apply for university (as opposed to students in vocational streams, whose secondary school programs are only four years long). |
Interviewer: So what have you- so you finished high-school and then where did you go to teacher's college then? Speaker: It was the last year, they called it normal-school and I went to Peterborough and ah boarded there for the year. If you had grade-thirteen, like your full c-- full year, you went one year to- to normal-school. And that was the year they changed their mind and started c-- the next year it was called teacher's-college. Fifty-two, fifty-three was the last year it was called normal-school. |
A fifth year of secondary school, taken by students intending to apply for university (as opposed to students in vocational streams, whose secondary school programs are only four years long). |
Example | Meaning |
It was a good school and a wonderful principal that I had and my wife ah, was a better student than me, she went to grade-thirteen there and ah, went to teachers college and as in those days you could teach with one year teacher's college but she finished ah, a Bachelor-of-Arts by the time she was forty. |
A fifth year of secondary school, taken by students intending to apply for university (as opposed to students in vocational streams, whose secondary school programs are only four years long). |
... yeah it was a good school. My sisters went there too, my sisters went to grade-thirteen in the old high-school because they were gone before it was closed. |
A fifth year of secondary school, taken by students intending to apply for university (as opposed to students in vocational streams, whose secondary school programs are only four years long). |