Grand Erie Launches Technology and Innovation Hubs to Prepare Students for Future Careers
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If you’ve watched your child light up while building with LEGOs, coding a simple game, or figuring out how something works, you know there’s brilliance waiting to be unleashed. The Grand Erie District School Board has taken notice—and they’re doing something about it. This is exactly the kind of forward-thinking approach that helps children see their potential rather than their limitations.
TL;DR
Grand Erie District School Board is launching Technology and Innovation Hubs at three secondary schools in September 2026.
The hubs cover eleven high-demand sectors including health care, skilled trades, manufacturing, green industries, and computer technology.
Students can access courses in robotics, 3D printing, coding, and digital media while preparing for all four Ontario post-secondary pathways.
The initiative builds on the success of the existing Innovation Hub at North Park Collegiate.
Parents can learn more at www.granderie.ca/technology-hubs.
Eleven Sectors. Three Hub Schools. One Bright Future.
The Grand Erie District School Board is expanding future-focused learning opportunities for secondary students through its new Technology and Innovation Hubs, launching in September 2026. The initiative connects students to real-world career pathways in high-demand sectors including health care, skilled trades, manufacturing, green industries, and computer technology.
Grand Erie’s Technology and Innovation Hubs will be located at Cayuga Secondary School in Haldimand County, North Park Collegiate and Vocational School in Brantford and Brant County, and Simcoe Composite School in Norfolk County. Each Grand Erie student will have a designated hub school they may choose to attend.
These hubs are designed to provide students with enhanced technology and hands-on learning to explore both traditional skilled trades and emerging technology fields. Programming supports all four Ontario post-secondary pathways: apprenticeship, college, university, and the workplace.
“These Technology and Innovation Hubs are designed to provide students with enhanced technology and hands-on learning to explore both traditional skilled trades and emerging technology fields,” says JoAnna Roberto, Director of Education. “We’ve seen tremendous success with the Innovation Hub at North Park Collegiate, and the demand to expand similar opportunities to Haldimand and Norfolk counties was the next step.”
The research on neuroplasticity tells us that children’s brains are remarkably adaptable when given the right challenges and environments. These hubs provide exactly that kind of enriching, skill-building environment where students can discover their strengths.
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Quote: These Technology and Innovation Hubs are designed to provide students with enhanced technology and hands-on learning to explore both traditional skilled trades and emerging technology fields. We’ve seen tremendous success with the Innovation Hub at North Park Collegiate, and the demand to expand similar opportunities to Haldimand and Norfolk counties was the next step.
Attribution: JoAnna Roberto, Director of Education, Grand Erie District School Board
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From Robotics to Digital Media
The hubs will offer both hard-technology courses, such as construction and manufacturing, as well as soft-technology fields like computer programming, design, and digital media. The Innovation Hubs provide dynamic STEAM-focused learning spaces that may include robotics, 3D printing, coding, and creative problem-solving experiences for students.
These environments are designed to inspire curiosity, collaboration, and innovation across grade levels. Rather than waiting for children to fit into predetermined boxes, this approach meets them where their interests and talents naturally lead.
What makes this initiative particularly powerful is how it aligns with what we know about developing skills: when children engage in hands-on learning that connects to real-world applications, they build both technical abilities and the confidence that comes from seeing tangible results.
Key Takeaways:
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Three Hub Schools Launching: Grand Erie's Technology and Innovation Hubs open September 2026 at Cayuga Secondary School, North Park Collegiate, and Simcoe Composite School.
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Eleven Career Sectors: Students can explore health care, skilled trades, manufacturing, green industries, and computer technology through hands-on learning.
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Multiple Post-Secondary Pathways: Programming supports apprenticeship, college, university, and workplace routes—meeting each child where their strengths lead.
Expanding Opportunity Across the Region
The expansion from one successful Innovation Hub to three hub schools represents a significant step toward making future-focused education accessible to more students across the Grand Erie district. This kind of regional approach ensures that geography doesn’t determine whether a child can access innovative learning opportunities.
For parents, this means more options for helping their children discover pathways that match their interests and strengths. Rather than a one-size-fits-all approach, these hubs acknowledge that different children have different gifts—and that’s exactly what this world needs more of.
As these hubs prepare to launch in September 2026, families can explore the available sectors and start thinking about which pathways might align with their child’s developing skills and interests.
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Every child has unique strengths waiting to be discovered—and programs like these Technology and Innovation Hubs are exactly the kind of opportunities that help reveal them. When we give young people chances to explore real-world skills and career pathways, we’re not just preparing them for jobs we’re showing them that their differences and interests are assets, not limitations.
The system doesn’t always move fast enough to catch up to what our children are capable of. But when schools create environments where curiosity thrives and skills develop through hands-on practice, children experience what it’s like to build something real. That’s when confidence follows.
If you’re ready to help your child discover their strengths and build skills that last a lifetime, the Learning Success All Access Program offers a free trial that includes a personalized Action Plan—and you keep that plan even if you decide it’s not the right fit.
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