About Us
Our motto: I was born for greater things
Thomas A. Blakelock High School is located in beautiful southwest Oakville and first opened its doors in 1957.
Our mission: The T. A. Blakelock HS community works together to inspire high achievement through quality programs, a supportive school environment and healthy relationships.
Our vision: Empowering students to achieve greater things.
We have a very diverse, multicultural population of just over 1,000 students and a long tradition of academic excellence complemented by a large and successful French Immersion program, four outstanding Specialist High Skills programs (Arts & Culture, Energy, and Information Communication Technology, and Health Care) and a wide variety of outstanding co-curricular experiences for students in the areas of Athletics, Arts, Drama, Music, and Technological Learning.
Our “TAB Reimagined” initiative incorporates four overarching themes: Physical Plant, Distributive Leadership, Instructional Strategies, and Program.
The leadership of the school is both shared and distributive. A School Effectiveness Council supports the work of teacher-led school improvement teams in such areas as Learning, Community Connections, Safety and Well-Being, Equity and Human Rights and Student Voice and Leadership. Our school has an extremely active Student Council which, by consulting regularly with other student leadership organizations and the school administration, ensures student voice is at the forefront of our key decisions influencing students’ overall learning experience.
Welcome to our school! Go Tigers!
About Thomas A. Blakelock
Our school is named after Thomas A. Blakelock, a prominent citizen of Oakville who served the community in a variety of roles. He came to Canada in 1906, later founded a lumber company with his brother, and held the positions of Councillor, Deputy Reeve, and Mayor of Oakville. He served as an MPP from 1929-1944 and was Building Commissioner for the Oakville Board of Education, personally overseeing the construction of our high school in the mid-1950s. He died in 1974 at the age of 91.