Father Michael Goetz Secondary School
Father Michael Goetz Secondary School (sometimes referred to as Goetz or abbreviated as FMG; Goetz pronounced as "Gates") is a Catholic school located in Mississauga, Ontario, Canada. Founded by Ed King, it was established in 1987 (in its original location on Hollymount Drive) and in 1990 moved to the south of the city centre. The school was named after King's friend, Father Michael Goetz.[2] Father Michael Goetz is the closest high school to the city centre. Father Michael Goetz is known for its exceptional sports teams, as well as the city's best technological education programs, including computer science, computer engineering, construction technology and automotive technology. Father Michael Goetz offers two SHSM (Specialist High Skills Major) programs, one for Information and Communications Technology (ICT) and the other for Arts and Culture. StudentsThe school has one of the highest populations of English-as-a-second-language students in the school district.[3] AcademicsStudents go through four years of schooling and the school offers a range of subjects at different levels of difficulty.[3] The curriculum includes 13 areas of study for the 2020-2021 year in the arts, business, languages, science, mathematics, and technology.[4] 2007 Censorship rowIn January 2007 a row broke out when the award-winning novel Snow Falling on Cedars by David Guterson was pulled from library shelves and classrooms, despite being used in the Grade 11 curriculum, after one parent objected that it contained sexually explicit text. The context in question contains a few explicit passages, including a married couple's first sexual encounter, as well as sexual relations between two youths. According to the Mississauga News, "a representative of Random House in Canada said the company hadn't heard any complaints about the book this side of the border. In the U.S., though, it has been the subject of controversy and bans, not just for the sexual content but also for its violence and exploration of racial issues." The book was restored in February following a review by a committee of trustees and curriculum experts. Many critics of the board's move argued that the content pales compared to media images to which high school students are exposed to on a daily basis.[5] AthleticsThe school is a member of the Region of Peel Secondary School Athletic Association.[6] The girls basketball team was recognized as "high school team of the year" in 2007, after going undefeated over the previous four seasons with a 46–0 record.[7] HistoryThe school was founded by Ed King, who was also the first principal. As the school was being planned and built, the first year of classes (1986) took place on a campus at Etobicoke before being moved at Christmas of the same year to a new temporary campus (1986-1990) located on Hollymount Dr in Mississauga. Due to the large population, the school also took over a second shared campus on Rathburn Dr also in Mississauga. They were to stay there until the school building's construction was completed. It was open for the 1990–91 school year.[2] Due to a school population of over 2600 students from 1990–91 until the 2007–2008 school year, a new school was created and the population was split using a new boundary. All students going into grades 11, 12 and 13 were allowed to finish their high school years at Father Michael Goetz, while student in grades 9 and 10 in the new boundary were moved to the new school (St. Francis Xavier Secondary School). In 2002, the school began an expansion that resulted in a new wing being added. "Monolith"During the first term of the 1994–1995 school year, a group of students anonymously published and distributed Monolith, a photocopied monthly newsletter mostly detailing the publishers' grievances with teachers and administration at the school as well as some overall observations regarding growing up in the mid-nineties. The Halloween issue was distributed by costumed, masked students in the cafetorium and included complimentary condoms, as a protest against a biased sex education at the school. The final, Christmas issue was distributed in the school's public restrooms. Some of the students responsible were found and suspended early in the second term. The suspensions proved controversial, with articles published in The Mississauga News and some of the suspended students appearing on CityTV's Speakers' Corner. Incidents
Notable alumni
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