Upper Canada College is where tradition, excellence and innovation meet. An IB World School, UCC delivers transformational learning experiences built upon a rigorous academic program and unparalleled co-curricular opportunities. Expert faculty, cutting-edge facilities and a best-in-class financial assistance program enable students to find their passions and realize their potential. Our graduates become leaders in a world that requires global-mindedness, critical thinking and commitment to service.
UCC is one of the oldest and most storied schools in Canada. Its alumni include a who's who of Canadian political, business, and cultural life. Its history is, in many ways, the history of independent schooling itself; to attend is to become a part of a Canadian cultural tradition, one that retains a prominent place in Canadian education. The school leads in the provision of financial assistance, with a robust program of scholarships and bursaries intended to attract the brightest students in Canada and from around the world.
From the review: Upper Canada College (UCC) is one of the oldest and most storied schools in Canada. Its alumni include a who's who of Canadian political, business, and cultural life. Its history is, in many ways, the history of independent schooling itself; to attend is to become a part of a Canadian cultural tradition, one that retains a prominent place in Canadian education. The school leads in the provision of financial assistance, with a robust program of scholarships and bursaries intended to
Read The Our Kids Review of Upper Canada College
Gallery showcasing school life and general photos of Upper Canada College.
Gallery showcasing specific locations and facilities found at Upper Canada College.
Some private schools offer International Baccalaureate (IB) programming. The "Diploma Programme" is offered to students in the final two years of high school, while the "Primary Years Programme" (ages 3 to 12) and "Middle Years Programme" (ages 11 to 16) serve as preparation for the diploma program.
Program | offered |
---|---|
Primary Years | |
Middle Years | |
Diploma program | |
Career-related program |
Focus |
---|
Academic |
DIBELS Testing: This school does not use DIBELS testing to assess reading progress.
Subject | offered |
---|---|
Evolution as consensus theory | |
Evolution as one of many equally viable theories | |
Evolution is not taught |
Subject | offered |
---|---|
Biology | |
Chemistry | |
Ecology | |
Geology | |
Meteorology | |
Physics | |
Physiology | |
Zoology |
Subject | offered |
---|---|
Canadian lit | |
American lit | |
European (continental) lit | |
World (non-Western) lit | |
English lit | |
Ancient lit |
Subject | offered |
---|---|
Chinese-Cantonese | |
Chinese-Mandarin | |
French | |
German | |
Greek | |
Italian | |
Japanese | |
Hebrew | |
Latin | |
Russian | |
Spanish | |
ESL |
Subject | offered |
---|---|
Acting | |
Dance | |
Drama/Theatre | |
Graphic Design | |
Music | |
Visual Arts |
Expressive | |
Disciplined |
Subject | offered |
---|---|
Computer science | |
Robotics | |
Web design |
Flexible pacing style | offered |
---|---|
Subject-streaming (tracking) | |
Multi-age classrooms as standard | |
Ability-grouping (in-class) as common | |
Frequent use of cyber-learning (at-their-own-pace) | |
Regular guided independent study opportunities | |
Differentiated assessment |
Upper Canada College offers no/limited support for students with learning difficulties or special needs.
Subject Ttype | offered |
---|---|
Learning strategy and study counselling; habit formation | |
Extra support and minor accommodations for children experiencing subclinical difficulties |
Subject Ttype | offered |
---|---|
Accommodations | |
Modifications | |
Extra support |
Read our guide to special needs schools and special education
Curriculum delivery: Acceleration and enrichment (There is an equal emphasis on acceleration and enrichment.)
Program | offered |
---|---|
Custom subject enrichment (special arrangement) | |
Custom curriculum compacting (special arrangement) | |
Guided independent study (custom gifted arrangement) | |
Cyber-learning opportunities (custom gifted arrangement) | |
Formalized peer coaching opportunities (specifically for gifted learners to coach others) | |
Custom subject acceleration (special arrangement) | |
Career exploration (custom gifted arrangement) | |
Project-based learning (custom gifted arrangement) | |
Mentorships (custom gifted arrangement) |
In grade Gr. 12, Upper Canada College students perform an average of 1 hour of homework per night.
SK | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Upper Canada College | 0 mins | 15 mins | 15 mins | 30 mins | 30 mins | 45 mins | 45 mins | 60 mins | 60 mins | 60 mins | 60 mins | 60 mins | 60 mins |
Site Average | 7 mins | 14 mins | 17 mins | 22 mins | 28 mins | 33 mins | 39 mins | 50 mins | 55 mins | 69 mins | 80 mins | 97 mins | 105 mins |
Lettered or numbered grades | SK to Gr. 12 |
Prose (narrative)-based feedback | SK to Gr. 12 |
Academic achievement reporting | SK to Gr. 12 |
Habits and behaviour reporting | SK to Gr. 12 |
Parent-teacher meetings | SK to Gr. 12 |
Competitive sports: 23
Recreational sports: 16
Upper Canada College offers 25 clubs and extracurricular programs.
SK | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | |
Day | $40,750 | $42,400 | $44,100 | ||||||||||
Boarding (Domestic) | $73,700 | $75,400 | |||||||||||
Boarding (International) | $79,400 | $81,100 |
Grade range that need-based aid is offered: | 5 to 12 |
Percentage of grade-eligible students receiving financial aid | 19% |
Average aid package size | $15,000 |
Percentage of total enrolment on financial aid | 20% |
Total aid available | $6,000,000 |
This school works with Apple Financial Inc. for processing financial applications
Financial assistance is offered to Canadian families on the basis of need. The Financial Assistance Review Committee (FACS) makes recommendations to UCC based on the information provided by you in the Parents’ Financial Statement. This includes, but is not limited to the parents/guardians’ gross family income; net income (after taxes and other deductions); assets and liabilities; and information about dependents and other expenditures.
A limited number of one-time Entrance Scholarship awards are available to top applicants beginning at Grade 7. Eligibility is based on the applicant's performance on all admission criteria: report cards, interview, entrance test and co-curriculars. These scholarships represent about two per cent of all financial assistance awarded annually.
Grades | Gender | Living Arrangement | Enrolment | |
---|---|---|---|---|
Group 1 | SK to Gr. 12 | All boys | Day | 1180 |
Group 2 | Gr. 8 to Gr. 12 | All boys | Boarding | 88 |
Total enrolment | 1,268 |
Average class size | 20 to 25 |
% of international students (total enrolment) | 3% |
Number of different nationalities within student population | 24 |
Five-day boarding program offered | No |
% in boarding (grade-eligible) | 11% |
SK | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 | |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Day Enrollment | 20 | 20 | 20 | 40 | 44 | 66 | 88 | 130 | 135 | 164 | 160 | 146 | 136 |
Boarding Enrollment | 5 | 12 | 16 | 25 | 30 |
Assessment | Required | Grades |
---|---|---|
Interview | SK - 11 | |
SSAT | ||
SSAT (out of province) | ||
Entrance Exam(s) | 3 - 11 | |
Entrance Essay |
Day students: December 01, 2024
Boarding students: Rolling
Offer mid-year entry: No
Application fee: $300
Registration fee: $10,000
Deposit: $2,000
After exploring UCC and its programs either virtually or in person, prospective families must go to UCC's website, create an account, submit their application and pay the application fee. They will then be guided through submitting birth certificates, report cards and other documents, if applicable, as well as further interviews and assessments depending on the year the student is entering.
Once decisions are issued, families will receive registration instructions that include, but are not limited to, the following:
Registration of new day students:
Parents or guardians must confirm Registration by completing the online registration within 7 days of the date of offer (as indicated in the emailed letter of offer). The Initial Registration Fee of $10,000 and the first instalment of $2,000 are applicable for all payment plans and must be forwarded to the College within 7 days of the date of offer.
Registration of New Boarding Students:
Parents or guardians must confirm Registration by completing the online registration within 10 days of the date of offer (as indicated in letter of offer). The Initial Registration Fee of $7,500 and the first instalment of tuition and boarding fees must also be forwarded to the College within 10 days of the date of offer. The second instalment of fees for new boarding students and new international boarding students will vary according to the chosen payment plan.
This is the percentage of applicants typically accepted into the school. So if 50 students are admitted out of 100 applicants, the school has an overall acceptance rate of 50%.
Student Entry Points
This shows approximately how many openings there are likely to be in each grade in a typical year, as well as the estimated acceptance rate for each grade level.
Student Type | SK | 1 | 2 | 3 | 4 | 5 | 6 | 7 | 8 | 9 | 10 | 11 | 12 |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
Day Acceptance (Acceptance rate) | 18 | 0 | 0 | 20 - 22 | 0 | 22 - 24 | 18 - 22 | 40 - 50 | 0 | 18 - 22 | 0 | 0 | 0 |
Boarding Acceptance (Acceptance rate) | 0 | 8 - 11 | 8 - 11 | 8 - 11 | 0 |
Average graduating class size | 156 |
Students accepted into post-secondary studies upon graduation | N/A |
Percentage of students who attend post-secondary institutions outside of Canada | N/A |
Students who attended a Ivy+ school Number of students in the past 5 years that that attended one of Harvard, Yale, Princeton, University of Pennsylvania, Dartmouth, Brown, Columbia, Cornell, Stanford, University of Chicago, Oxford or Cambridge (UK) | 47 |
Western University | 15% | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
University of Toronto | 11% | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
Queen's University | 11% | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
McGill University | 8% | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
University of Waterloo | 3% |
Upper Canada College Graduates’ Post-Secondary Studies:
Aggregate of All Schools’ Post-Secondary Studies:
Career planning | N/A |
Internships | N/A |
Mentorship Program | |
University counseling |
What Upper Canada College says:
Alumnus | Grad Year | Accomplishment |
---|---|---|
Robertson Davies | 1932 | One of Canada's most internationally celebrated novelist, playwright, journalist, and essayists |
David Gilmour | 1968 | Journalist and Governor General's Award for English language fiction winning novelist |
Stephen Leacock | 1887 | Celebrated writer, humourist and economist. The most widely read English-speaking author in the world between 1910 and 1925. |
Peter C. Newman | 1947 | Peabody award-winning journalist and former editor of Macleans and the Toronto Star. Noted chronicler of the "Canadian Establishment" |
Foster Hewitt | 1921 | Legendary broadcaster and Hockey Hall of Fame inductee |
Galt MacDermot | 1947 | Grammy Award winning musician and co-author of the Broadway musical Hair |
Geraint Wyn Davies | 1975 | Stage, film and television actor (Forever Knight) |
Leonard Dick | 1982 | Emmy Award, Golden Globe, and Writers Guild Award winning producer and writer of Lost, House, The Good Wife and many other sitcoms |
Michael Snow | 1948 | Internationally recognized modern artist, with public works featured prominently throughout Toronto. Exhibited around the world, including at MoMa. |
Timothy Eaton | 1852 | Founder of the now-defunct Eaton's department store |
William George Gooderham | 1867 | Owner of Gooderham Worts Distilleries and president of the Bank of Toronto |
Tom Szaky | 2001 | Co-founder of TerraCycle, an innovative recycling company |
Vivek Rao | 1986 | Youngest faculty member ever to join UofT's cardiac surgery division. Second youngest Chair of cardiac surgery ever in Toronto's University Health Network. Made Canada's Top 40 under 40. |
Michael Ignatieff | 1965 | Leader of the Liberal Party of Canada and Her Majesty's Loyal Opposition. Noted Harvard historian and journalist. Gemini Award winner. Lionel Gelber Prize winner. Shortlisted for Booker Prize. |
Harold Ballard | 1921 | Owner of the Toronto Maple Leafs, Hamilton Tiger-Cats, and Maple Leaf Gardens. Hockey Hall of Fame inductee. |
Colin Greening | 2005 | Current NHL hockey player for the Ottawa Senators |
Conn Smythe | 1909 | Owner of the Toronto Maple Leafs, founder of Maple Leaf Gardens, and coach of the 1928 Winter Olympics gold medal winning team. Namesake to the NHL's Conn Smythe Trophy |
Stuart Lang | 1970 | Member of the Canadian Football League Edmonton Eskimos and winner of four Grey Cups |
Stephen Clarkson | 1954 | Leading Canadian political scientist and Member of the Order of Canada. |
George Grant | 1936 | Internationally renowned Canadian philosopher and theorist. Had a major influence on subsequent Canadian scholars and political culture. Considered one of Canada's most original thinkers. |
Ted Rogers | 1951 | Visionary entrepreneur and Canada's ninth wealthiest man. Founder and Chairman of Rogers Communications. |
Galen Weston | 1958 | Chairman of George Weston Limited and Canada's second wealthiest man. Grandson of George Weston and father of Galen Weston Jr., also UCC graduates |
David Thomson | 1975 | Chairman of Thomson Reuters. Canada's wealthiest man, and sixth wealthiest in the world. Son of Kenneth Thomson, also a UCC graduate |
Harry Crerar | 1904 | Military General, and Canada's leading field commander during World War II |
Michael Wilson | 1955 | Federal Minister of Finance and Canadian Ambassador to the US. Co-architect of NAFTA. Chairman of Barclays Capital Canada. Order of Canada recipient. Chancellor of UofT. |
John Godfrey | 1961 | Federal Minister of State for infrastructure and communities. Editor of the Financial Post. Oxford graduate |
Bill Graham | 1957 | Leader of the Opposition and Interim Liberal Party of Canada Leader. Foreign Affairs Minister, National Defense Minister |
John Black Aird | 1941 | Founder of Aird & Berlis LLP and 23rd Lieutenant Governor of Ontario |
Robert Prichard | 1967 | President of the University of Toronto, President and CEO of Torstar, Chairman of Bank of Montreal. Officer of the Order of Canada and Member of the Order of Ontario. |
George Connell | 1947 | President of the University of Toronto, President of the University of Western Ontario. Officer of the Order of Canada. |
Charles Watchter | 1993 | Emmy Award winning executive producer of "Jamie Oliver's Food Revolution" |
Michael MacMillan | 1974 | Founder and executive chairman of Alliance Atlantis Communications. Academy Award winner. Member of the Order of Canada. |
Jim Cuddy | 1974 | Juno award–winning musician Jim Cuddy is one of Canada’s best-loved singer/songwriters and a founding member of Blue Rodeo |
Doug Bassett | 1958 | Founder of CFTO-TV. President of the CTV Television Network. Member of the Canadian Association of Broadcasters Hall of Fame. |
Patrick Graham | 1984 | Journalist for Harper's, the New York Times Magazine, and television correspondent for CBC |
John Stackhouse | 1981 | Editor-in-Chief of The Globe and Mail |
Brian Stewart | 1960 | Award winning Senior Correspondent for the CBC's "The National" . Distinguished Senior Fellow at the Munk School of Global Affairs at UofT. Member of the Order of Ontario. |
James Greig Arthur | 1962 | World's leading mathematician in representation theory and creator of the General Trace Formula |
Timothy Endicott | 1979 | Dean of Law at Oxford University. Legal scholar and philosopher. |
Mark Cohon | 1985 | Commissioner of the Canadian Football League (CFL). Director of corporate and game development for MLB. VP of business development for the NBA. Chair of the Ontario Science Centre. |
Barney Williams | 1996 | Silver medal winning Olympic rower (Athens 2004) and Oxford University graduate |
Michael Evans | 1984 | Chairman of Goldman Sachs Asia. Gold medal-winning Olympic rower (Los Angeles 1984). |
Tom Wright | 1971 | Commissioner of the Canadian Football League (CFL). President of Adidas Canada. Director of Operations for UFC Canada |
Sir Henry Pellat | 1876 | Financier, Major General, and builder of Toronto's Casa Loma |
Hal Jackman | 1950 | Lieutenant Governor of Ontario, philanthropist, and financier. Chancellor of the University of Toronto, chairman of National Trust Company and The Empire Life Insurance Company. Member of the Order of Canada. |
Gordon Cheesbrough | 1971 | Prominent Canadian investment banker. Chairman and CEO of Scotia Capital Markets. Co-founder of Blair Franklin Capital Partners |
Ernest McCulloch | 1943 | Pioneering biologist and the co-discoverer of the existence of stem cells. Lasker award winner, member of the Orders of Canada and Ontario, and Canadian Medical Hall of Fame inductee |
Alexander Roberts Dunn | 1848 | First Canadian to receive the Victoria Cross, the highest honour recognizing gallantry in the face of the enemy awarded in the British Commonwealth |
John Robert Cartwright | 1912 | Chief Justice of the Supreme Court of Canada |
Andrew Heintzman | 1986 | Noted author and venture capitalist. President of Investico Capital, an environmental investment company. Co-founder of Shift magazine and editorial board member for The Walrus. |
David R. Beatty | 1959 | Noted international businessman and diplomat with extensive board experience, serving on 29 boards (and Chairing 5). Honorary Consul General for Papua New Guinea. University of Toronto professor |
Brendan Fraser | 1987 | Hollywood actor |
Nicholas Campbell | 1970 | Canadian film and television star. Two-time Gemini winner |
John Fraser | 1963 | Editor of Saturday Night Magazine and master of Massey College. Member of the Order of Canada. Chaired the Canadian Journalism Foundation until 2008. Multiple award winner for journalism. Published worldwide. |
Jeffrey Kofman | 1977 | Peabody Award winning ABC news correspondent, reporting for World News with Diane Sawyer, Nightline, and Good Morning America. Toured Iraq and Afghanistan as an embedded reporter. Two-time Emmy winner |
John William Bosley | 1964 | Speaker of the Canadian House of Commons |
Conrad Black | 1962 | Notorious newspaper magnate and accomplished historian. At one point controlled the third-largest media empire in the word as Chairman and controlling shareholder of Hollinger International. (Did not graduate). |
Greg P. Meredith | 1976 | Chairman and CEO of HSBC Bank USA. Professional NHL hockey player (Calgary Flames) |
Andy Chisholm | 1977 | Chief Strategy Officer for Goldman Sachs (Global) |
Blake Hutcheson | 1980 | Canadian real estate icon: has been called the Warren Buffet of Canadian real estate. President and CEO of Oxford Properties Group. |
James Cockburn | 1833 | Father of Confederation and first Speaker of the Canadian House of Commons |
Alan Macnaughton | 1921 | Speaker the Canadian House of Commons. Canadian Senator |
Michael Cassidy | 1954 | Leader of the Ontario New Democratic Party. Federal Member of Parliament |
Matthew Cartwright | 1979 | Current US Democratic Congressman. Assigned to Committee on Natural Resources and Committee on Oversight and Government Reform |
Norm Kelly | 1959 | Federal Member of Parliament and Toronto's Deputy Mayor (and unofficial acting mayor). Governor General's Award winner for historical writing. Also taught history at Upper Canada College |
Andrew Hutchison | 1956 | Primate of the Anglican Church of Canada (Archbishop) |
Rocco Rossi | 1981 | President and CEO of Prostate Cancer Canada. CEO of the Heart and Stroke Foundation of Ontario. National Director of the Liberal Party of Canada. Princeton graduate |
James George | 1936 | Ambassador and environmental activist. Rhodes Scholar. Served as Canada's ambassador to Iran and the Gulf States |
Jameel Jaffer | 1990 | Deputy legal director of the American Civil Liberties Union. Litigated Freedom of Information Act request on U.S. torture of prisoners. Served as law clerk to the Supreme Court of Canada. |
John Graham | 1955 | CIA spy on Cuba after the missile-crisis. Canadian ambassador and diplomat |
Daniel Lang | 1936 | Canadian Liberal Senator |
Modris Eksteins | 1961 | Renowned and award-winning historian of Germany. Rhodes Scholar. |
Terry Grier | 1954 | President of Ryerson University. Transformed Ryerson from a college to a university. NDP Member of Parliament |
Allan Lamport | 1923 | Mayor of Toronto, member of the Order of Canada |
Alan Tonks | 1961 | Mayor of Toronto and Liberal MP |
John Thomson | 1961 | Chairman of Toronto-Dominion Bank Financial Corporation. Vice Chairman of IBM. 20th Chancellor of The University of Western Ontario. |
Galen Weston, Jr. | 1992 | Executive Chairman and President of Loblaws Companies Limited |
Shafiq Qaadri | 1982 | Ontario Member of Provincial Parliament for Etobicoke North. Medical doctor and popular writer on Andropause. |
Avi Lewis | 1986 | Award winning journalist and documentary filmmaker. Host of CBC's "On the Map" and Al Jazeera's "Fault Lines". |
Ben Dunkelman | 1930 | Israeli war hero and commander of the 7th Brigade, one of Israel's most celebrated armored brigades. Also known as Benjamin Ben-David. |
Brian Conacher | 1961 | All-Star NHL hockey player. Was on the 1967 Stanley Cup winning Leafs team. Olympian. |
John Ridpath | 1955 | Award-winning professor, historian, and philosopher. Was a noted proponent of Objectivism, serving on the board of directors of the Ayn Rand Institute. |
John Julius Cooper | 1947 | British historian, travel writer and television personality. Member of the British House of Lords. |
Edward Blake | 1851 | 2nd Premier of Ontario. Leader of the Liberal Party of Canada. Founder of Blake, Cassels & Graydon LLP (law firm). |
Tom Clark | 1971 | Host of CTV's "Power Play". Chief political correspondent for Global News. Host of Global's "The West Block". Substitute anchor for CTV's National News. |
Oliver Aiken Howland | 1863 | 31st Mayor of Toronto. Member of the Order of St. Michael and St. George. |
George Stewart Henry | 1892 | 10th Premier of Ontario |
Sir Arthur Edward Grasett | 1906 | Canadian born Lieutenant-General in the British Army. Field Commander during WWII. Military Cross; Knight Commander of the Order of the British Empire; Companion of the Order of the Bath. |
Thomas Symons | 1947 | Founding president and chancellor of Trent University. Chairman of the Ontario Human Rights Commission. Companion of the Order of Canada. Order of Ontario. Governor General's Award for Canadian Studies |
John Strathearn Hendrie | 1875 | 11th Lieutenant Governor of Ontario. |
Andrew Saxton | 1982 | Conservative Member of the Canadian Parliament for North Vancouver |
Walter L. Gordon | 1922 | Canada's Minister of Finance. President of the Privy Council. Chancellor of York University. Companion of the Order of Canada. Commander of the Order of the British Empire. |
Bruce Matthews | 1927 | Commander of the 2nd Canadian Infantry Division during the Second World War. Major General. President of Argus Corporation. President of the LIberal Party of Canada. |
Alexander Gordon McKay | 1942 | Award-winning Canadian academic and scholar of Virgil. Officer of the Order of Canada. President of the Royal Society of Canada. |
Arnold Cantwell Smith | 1932 | Canadian diplomat and the first Commonwealth Secretary-General. Rhodes Scholar. Officer of the Order of Canada. |
Joseph Tyrrell | 1878 | Discoverer of dinosaur bones in Alberta. Canadian geologist, cartographer, and mining consultant. |
William Johnston Tupper | 1881 | 12th Lieutenant Governor of Manitoba. |
William Morley Kilbourn | 1944 | Author, historian, and noted chronicler of Toronto. City councillor. Harvard Professor. Member of the Order of Canada. Founder of many philanthropic organizations and boards. |
Jeff Dennis | 1976 | Noted serial entrepreneur, best-selling author ("Lessons from the Edge"), public speaker, and public company director. |
Sir Charles Kingsmill | 1873 | Admiral. Considered the father of the Royal Canadian Navy. |
Humphrey Hume Wrong | 1909 | Canadian ambassador to the United States. Key architect of the North Atlantic Treaty, (later giving rise to NATO). Professor of history at University of Toronto. |
Lewis Wallbridge | 1834 | Chief Justice of Manitoba. |
Eugène-Étienne Taché | 1849 | Noted architect and engineer. Designer of the Quebec Parliament Building. Designed Quebec's coat of arms and motto, "Je me souviens". |
Alumni Highlights
Samuel James McKinney is the 19th principal of Upper Canada College and began his tenure on July 1, 2016.
Principal McKinney was formerly the deputy headmaster and head of senior school at St. Peter’s College in Adelaide, South Australia. “Saints,” as it is known in Australia, is a 168-year-old boys’ school that has produced 42 Rhodes Scholars and three Nobel Laureates. With a student population of more than 1,400 boys, including 90 boarders, Saints offers both the IB Diploma and the South Australian Certificate of Education.
The son of schoolteachers, Principal McKinney was born and raised in the Niagara region and attended St. Catharines Collegiate before receiving his bachelor of arts from Carleton University in Ottawa in 1990. He furthered his education in Australia, receiving a graduate diploma in education from the University of Adelaide in 1993 and a master’s of education from Edith Cowan University in Western Australia in 2003. More recently, he has undertaken study at the Harvard University Graduate School of Education Principals’ Centre and resilience training through the University of Pennsylvania Positive Psychology Centre.
In appointing Principal McKinney, UCC is also welcoming his wife, Rose, and their three boys, Jack ’17, Connor ’19 and Charles ’20. Also a teacher, Rose has taught in the Junior and Middle schools at Pulteney Grammar School in Adelaide since 2007.
Message from Principal McKinney:
From our founding in 1829, Upper Canada College has been educating the next generation of leaders and innovators, inspiring them to make a positive impact on their world. In our nearly 200-year history, the school has undergone incredible transformation. Alongside the historical landmarks many associate with UCC — the ivy-covered walls, iron front gates, majestic clock tower — stand modern facilities and adaptable learning spaces equipped with the latest technology.
Our approach to boys’ education has similarly evolved. The College’s foundational focus on a liberal education is now delivered through the International Baccalaureate (IB) Programmes, globally recognized as the gold standard for university preparatory programs. In addition, our commitment to needs-based financial assistance has expanded substantially, offering more than $5 million annually to boys of the highest potential, enabling a diverse learning community that reflects our city and nation.
These innovations have shaped what is only a part of the UCC difference. We are not just about academic heights reached, championships won, or brilliant theatrical performances — although these are integral to what makes the College the outstanding place it is. What’s equally important is how our boys take forward the transformational learning experiences that are a hallmark of a UCC education.
Grounded in our vision to inspire boys to be their best selves is our commitment to fostering a vibrant school community that reflects the pluralism and promise of Canada. We offer an extraordinary range of opportunities for growth and discovery, as well as the support needed for boys to thrive among a network of dedicated faculty and staff, and lifelong friends.
I encourage you to learn more here, then visit us and experience the UCC difference.
We look forward to welcoming you.
July 23, 2020
Looking ahead: Fall 2020 at UCC
A message from Principal Sam McKinney to our community as UCC prepares to enter the next phase of its Continuous Learning Plan (CLP).
Read full article
June 29, 2020
Stellar scholarships for members of UCC's class of 2020
Four UCC students have earned major scholarships to Canadian universities, based on academic performance and co-curricular pursuits.
Read full article
May 21, 2020
Connection and real-world context hallmarks of Blues Degree
The Blues Degree is giving this year’s graduating class a chance to bond, learn valuable skills, and gain insights into life beyond UCC.
Read full article
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