Yup. That’s what I did.
Did you enter U of T in the fall of '79?
As Spoons notes, in our day (class of '79) there were two options: four year grade 12 diploma and five year grade 13 diploma. All grade 13 stream courses (advanced courses) would qualify for both four year and five year diploma, whereas four year grade 12 diploma courses (general courses) would only qualify for the four year diploma and not the five year diploma.
BTW, aside from taking classes rather than spares, another way of completing five years in four was to take summer school courses and correspondence courses. It was really just a scheduling problem – there were more than enough classroom hours to complete 5 in 4, but it could get a bit messy trying to complete the prerequisites simply due to scheduling issues. For example, in my last high school, grade 13 English was offered only in the fall semester, and its prerequisite grade 12 English was only offered in spring semester.
I did, yes. Did you start U of T in '79 too?
Yup. Loved it.
Loved it too. U of T was a great place to learn and study.
We probably crossed paths sometime during those days. Whether at Sig Sam or Robarts, or at Hart House–heck, Hart House practically became a second home, and I drank more coffee in the Tuck Shop, Arbor Room, and the Great Hall than you can imagine.
Fun times and great memories of an outstanding university, as I am sure you will agree.
Ahh yes, that makes more sense, it’s starting to come back to me now. I’m not sure the 4-year option was available at my HS but the one down the road.
I stand corrected on whether a grade 13/5th year was actually mandatory as it was possible to avoid it…although for my parents it was.
I am 3/4 a credit short of having an Ontario grade 12 but I do have my Grade 13. I fast tracked a bit too fast…
100%! In the pre-internet days, it greatly expanded my universe. I can’t say enough good about it.
Never heard that one…same general region, in the mid-90s, we had minor niners.
Not much on the grade 9 “gummer” on the internet:
http://www.odps.org/glossword/index.php?a=term&d=4&t=5913
http://www.theglobeandmail.com/news/toronto/ontario-teens-charges-in-hazing-shed-light-on-new-age-of-zero-tolerance/article1202269/ (one of my highschools)
http://lingodictionary.com/slang-definition/43607/slang-definition-of-gummer
I wonder if it might be county (Halton) specific?
How about Coffee Crisp? It’s a candy b… I mean a chocolate bar you can’t get in the United States. Therefore, it’s rare and exotic to me, and whenever I’m in Canada I make sure to pick up a few.
It’s nothing special, really, and the name is misleading, because it doesn’t taste like coffee. Would Canadians regard the Coffee Crisp as one of their own things? A lesser Canadianism, so to speak? Are you even aware that this product is unavailable outside your country?
There is a whole list of confectionary items that are not available in the US, including my personal favourite - Wunderbar
Mmmmmm… Wunderbar… drool…
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Smarties. Also, Vikings eating chocolate bars!
Wunderbar!
The traffic light question upthread made me think of what happened to me in Whitehorse, YK last summer (I’m from Ontario). I was crossing the road at a pedestrian crossing so I pressed the button and waited. The red light across the street turned to flashing yellow, so of course I’m standing there waiting for it to go green. Stopped cars honked their horns so I confusedly ran across - truck drives by with the driver yelling “Learn how to cross the fuckin road!!” - I was so confused, why would I step onto the road on a yellow light? Turns out you’re supposed to. Flashing yellow means “Go” for the pedestrians up there.
I wouldn’t have known that either.
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Motor vehicle fatalities per 100,000 drivers: Ontario 6.2, Yukon 15.4
Looks like the Yukon government has good reason to warn pedestrians with yellow “be afraid, be very afraid” signals.