Â鶹ÊÓƵ’s co-op program gives students the chance to explore their career options in a real-world setting.
Delivered through a Grade 11 course, co-op encourages students to investigate specific postsecondary choices based on their skills, interests and personal characteristics. The highlight of this course is a placement with a local organization connected to students’ career goals. Placements are 90- or 130-hours, so students can balance the co-op commitment their other academic priorities.
Co-op students experience the realities and opportunities of the workplace and examine factors that affect success, while refining their job-search and employability skills. Each student also develops a portfolio with a focus on their targeted destination and creates an action plan for future success.
By the end of the course, each student will have not only gained practical experience in an occupation of interest, but will have further developed valuable skills, such as teamwork, initiative and organization.
Â鶹ÊÓƵ co-op partners have included:
Bell Media
Children's Aid Foundation of Canada
Claremont Retirement Home
Core Physiotherapy and Wellness
Crestwood Lower School
Crown Attorney’s Office
Dress for Success
Holland Bloorview Kids Rehabilitation Hospital
Mount Sinai Hospital
OE Design and Build Ltd.
Scotia McLeod
Strategic Objectives
"Overall, this course has been a great experience. I’ve been able to learn a lot about myself and my own interests as well as what it's like being a part of the workforce."
Ben Jones '25 Co-Op Student
at Claremont Retirement Home
Making Connections
Â鶹ÊÓƵ students share what they've learned on placement at the annual Co-Op Fair in the Spring and in Co-Op Corner, published in our newsletter Life @ Â鶹ÊÓƵ.
We acknowledge with gratitude the Ancestral lands upon which our main campus is situated. These lands are the Ancestral territories of the Haudenosaunee Confederacy, Mississaugas of the Credit First Nation, Anishinabek and the Wendake. The shared responsibility of this land is honoured in the Dish with One Spoon Treaty and we strive to care for the land, the waters, and all creatures in the spirit of peace. We are responsible for respecting and supporting the enduring presence of all First Nations, Métis and Inuit peoples. When away from this campus we vow to be respectful to the land by protecting and honouring it. We will create relationships with the people and the land we may visit by understanding the territories we enter and the nations who inhabit them.