drawoh:
"There are no technology oriented high schools in Toronto."
That's technically correct- there is no whole high school with the title "school of science" or "school of technology" or something similar. In contrast, there are three (3) "School of the Arts" high schools, and one program in a mixed high school that is so extensive that counts (the Claude Watson program at Earl Haig CI). That's in the megacity of Toronto, which has a population of 2.5 million. There are numerous art-focused programs in other schools which are quite strong.
Our daughter has been working away to get ready for next year's auditions for one of those schools she has her heart set on, but if she doesn't get in there, she has several others to choose from as potential optional attendance. The local default high school has a music program, but not in her specialty (strings).
However, there are PLENTY of high schools (collegiate institutes generally) with science/math specialist/enrichment/acceleration programs in Toronto - 19 of them in fact. My son goes to one of them. They fall into two broad categories: seven Centres of Innovation for Skills and Technologies (lovely word-soup there, about as meaningless as "STEAM"), and 12 "MST" programs like the science math robotics program my son attends. His program is in a high school which is populated largely by students who grow up in the subsidized housing near the school, but students from all across Toronto apply to go to its SMR program as my son did. The siting of this award-winning program in what would otherwise likely be a very disadvantaged school was not done by accident, and our experience so far (2 out of 4 yrs in) is that it is working brilliantly, and not just for our son either. These programs vary greatly in their focus, philosophy of education (i.e. enrichment vs acceleration etc.), admission process (i.e. exam vs application) and the like, as we discovered when we attended information nights for the three of them our son was considering.
Details are here:
There is also the opportunity to do a semester at the Ontario Science Centre in Toronto in a TDSB program run there since the 1980s:
Ontario also fully funds the Catholic school system here all the way through the end of high school- an artifact of Canadian confederation 150 yrs ago. The Catholic system has a very similar structure and very similar programs, has the same core provincial curriculum, and you don't need to be a Catholic to attend (many Muslim students attend for instance).
Some people hate all of this, viewing it as elitist, as an excuse to not have specialist programs available at all schools (a practical impossibility from the point of view of both staffing and cost), or as a kind of "private school within the public system" whose benefits overwhelmingly go to students already born into privilege, i.e. having well educated and comparatively well to do parents. In practice, what you see is that these programs are positively swamped with the children of recent immigrants, many of whom immigrated with their parents. It's a compromise of course, and far from perfect. But it at least gives kids like my son a chance to be in a program where he fits in rather than feeling like an outsider, which was his entire middle school experience.
Havi