Two
public school boards operate
elementary schools in Woburn, the
secular Toronto District School Board (TDSB), and the
separate Toronto Catholic District School Board (TCDSB). TDSB and TCDSB elementary schools include: •
Bellmere Junior Public School is a one-storey school designed by architect,
John Andrews, who also designed the University of Toronto's Scarborough College and The Arab Pavilion for Montreal's Expo '67. The school opened in 1965 as a K-8 school and gained junior status in 1968. In the 1970s, Bellmere had a huge fire in four of its classrooms and the library. A blazing fire burned through Bellmere's rooms and created an enormous disaster. Fortunately, no one was injured. The library was moved into the gym and a new gymnasium and classrooms were built on the site of the fire. Bellemere is a feeder school for J.S. Woodsworth. • Cedarbrook Public School (TDSB) •
Churchill Heights Public School, also known as
Churchill Heights Junior Public School was built and opened to students in September 1957 by the Scarborough Board of Education, as a Kindergarten to Grade 8 school to serve the post-war communities in the Curran Hall area. In 1971, with the opening of Henry Hudson Senior Public School, Churchill Heights became a Kindergarten to Grade 6 school. In addition, the school has been the home for Scarborough's
gifted programme for exceptional students, when classes for gifted students were created, which made Churchill Heights a dual-track school. It is a feeder school for
Woburn Collegiate Institute for the gifted program, as Churchill Heights is where the majority of the students in Woburn originate from, although the regular programs beyond grade 6 are at Henry Hudson, and there is therefore a strong partnership between the two schools. Before 1963, it was aligned with
West Hill Collegiate Institute. Some examples of the partnership of these two schools are the Robotics and PEG programs, which have Churchill Heights students participating on Woburn teams, and Woburn mentors helping Churchill teams. Howeber, some Churchill Heights gifted graduates also attended
St. John Paul II Catholic Secondary School as well. Churchill Heights has notable programs such as the Programming Enrichment Group (PEG), Lego Robotics and its music program with various awards.
Ed Robertson and
Steven Page of the
Barenaked Ladies attended this school. • Cornell Junior Public School (TDSB) • George B. Little Public School (TDSB) • Golf Road Junior Public School (TDSB) • Heather Heights Junior Public School (TDSB) • Henry Hudson Senior Public School (TDSB) • St. Barbara Catholic School (TCDSB) • St. Richard's Catholic Elementary School (TDSB) • St. Thomas More Catholic School (TCDSB) • Tecumseh Senior Public School (TDSB) •
Tredway Woodsworth Public School is located on 112 Sedgemount and is named after a prominent Scarborough pioneer. The school opened in September 1956 as
William Tredway Public School with ten classrooms and one Kindergarten room. In September 1969, William Tredway became a junior school when
J.S. Woodsworth Senior Public School opened with 628 students in attendance, named after
James Shaver Woodsworth. William Tredway and JS Woodsworth combined in 2015 to become Tredway Woodsworth Public School and now operates from Kindergarten to Grade 8. • Willow Park Junior Public School (TDSB) •
Woburn Junior Public School opened in September 1964 as a successor to Woburn Public School (S.S.#6) with a student population of 200. The original school was built in 1863 and closed in 1956 with the building demolished in 1963 to make way for the present
Woburn Collegiate Institute. is a public secondary schools in Woburn. In addition to elementary schools TDSB also operates two
secondary school in Woburn,
Cedarbrae Collegiate Institute, and
Woburn Collegiate Institute. TDSB is the only school board to operate a public
secondary school. The French-based public secular school board,
Conseil scolaire Viamonde, and it separate counterpart,
Conseil scolaire catholique MonAvenir also offer schooling to applicable residents of Woburn, although they do not operate a school in the neighbourhood. Along with
primary and
secondary education institutions, Woburn is also home to the Progress Campus of
Centennial College, a
post-secondary college. ==Recreation==