Meadowvale Secondary School


Meadowvale Secondary School is a part of the Peel District School Board in Mississauga, Ontario, Canada.
Two feeder schools for Meadowvale Secondary School are Edenwood Middle School and Lisgar Middle School.

Extra curricular activities

Meadowvale Secondary School offers many athletic opportunities. and not so athletic opportunities, including: Canadian football, rugby, basketball, volleyball, track and field, swimming, curling, badminton, tennis, cheerleading, and wrestling. Meadowvale recently won the junior ROPSSAA Wrestling Championship, ROPSSAA Junior Boys Tier II Soccer, Senior Girls Tier II ROPSSAA Volleyball, Senior Girls Tier II Rugby twice and ROPSSAA Curling.

In the media

Meadowvale Secondary School was used as the school for the 1988 B-movie The Brain, in which it was renamed "Meadowvale High School".
Between 1998 and 2000, Meadowvale Secondary School was the test site for a pilot program of the Youth News Network. Based on the American Channel One News, it saw the company Athena Educational Partners provide the school with free television sets and computers. In exchange, students would watch a daily newscast, which included two and a half minutes of advertising. This provoked protest from a variety of community groups, who disagreed with the idea of showing commercials in the classroom.
Former Meadowvale Secondary School student and two other former students were murdered in 2004. Convicted sex offender Douglas Moore was arrested and charged for their murders but while awaiting trial in prison he allegedly took his own life to avoid prosecution.
In June 2006, MSS was thrust into the international media spotlight when three of its former students, Fahim Ahmad, Saad Khalid, and Zakaria Amara were charged in an alleged terror plot. A fourth student was charged later.

IBT Program

In 2013, Meadowvale started the IBT program. This regional program enhances student's thinking and gives them a better understanding of the real world, helping them out in Post-Secondary.

Notable alumni