The district operated elementary and secondary schools that served students from the St. Lawrence School Board and the South Centre School Board areas. The Richelieu Valley School Board operated its own elementary schools but secondary students from that board attended South Shore.[2] In 1967 the board of education of the school district had nine members.[3]
One of the Working papers on English language institutions in Quebec of 1982, by Alliance Québec, stated that the district was one of the first in North America to create a language immersion program targeting Anglophone students.[4]
History
The school board was formed in 1965.[5] It went into effect on July 1, 1967. The district had 23 schools when it opened on September 5 of that year, and at that time it had over 450 teaching employees and over 9,000 students.[3]
In 1992 all areas of the Richelieu Valley and the South Shore were incorporated into the board's territory. The board was dissolved in 1998.[6]
When it opened in 1967, the district served schooling in all grade levels in the school boards of Chambly-Richelieu, Greenfield Park, Lacolle, Longueuil, Pinehurst-East Greenfield, Rougemont, St. Hubert, St. Hyacinthe, St. Johns, and St. Lambert. In the St. Hilaire and Richelieu Valley school boards the district served grades 7 through 12. In the Candiac school board it only served grades 8 through 12.[3]
Schools
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In the early 1960s the school board did an experimental program on students in the school by putting English children in classrooms where only French was used.[10]
^Schachter, Susan, Alliance Québec. Working papers on English language institutions in Quebec. Alliance Québec, 1982. p. 126 (Section: '"Immersion": The South Shore Protestant Regional School Board').
^ abMacLeod, Roderick and Mary Anne Poutanen. A Meeting of the People: School Boards and Protestant Communities in Quebec, 1801-1998 (Volume 15 of Studies on the History of Quebec/Études d'histoire du Quebec Series). McGill-Queen's Press (MQUP), 2004. ISBN0773527427, 9780773527423. p. 333.
^MacLeod, Roderick and Mary Anne Poutanen. A Meeting of the People: School Boards and Protestant Communities in Quebec, 1801-1998 (Volume 15 of Studies on the History of Quebec/Études d'histoire du Quebec Series). McGill-Queen's Press (MQUP), 2004. ISBN0773527427, 9780773527423. p. 3.