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Harvard-Westlake School

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Harvard-Westlake School
Location
Map
,
United States
Information
TypeIndependent college-preparatory high school
MottoPossunt Quia Posse Videntur
(They can because they think they can)
EstablishedHarvard School for Boys: 1900; 124 years ago (1900)
Westlake School for Girls: 1904; 120 years ago (1904)
Fully Merged as Harvard-Westlake: 1991; 33 years ago (1991)
PresidentRichard B. Commons
Associate Head of SchoolLaura Ross[1]
Teaching staff212.0 (FTE) (2015–16)[2]
Grades712
Gendercoeducational
Enrollment1,598 (2015–16)[2]
Student to teacher ratio7.5∶1 (2015–16)[2]
Color(s)  Red
  Black
  White
Athletics conferenceCIF Southern Section
Mission League
NicknameWolverines
AccreditationWASC, NAIS, CAIS
2013 SAT average688 verbal/critical reading
703 math
707 writing[3]
NewspaperThe Chronicle
YearbookVox Populi
Websitewww.hw.com Edit this at Wikidata
Middle School
Address
Map
700 North Faring Road

Los Angeles
,
California

United States
Information
Grades79
Enrollment727 (2015–16)[2]
Campus size12 acres (49,000 m2)

The former Administration Building, Middle School (demolished summer 2008)
Upper School
Address
Map
3700 Coldwater Canyon Avenue

,
California

United States
Information
Grades1012
Enrollment871 (2015–16)[2]
Campus size22 acres (89,000 m2)

Ted Slavin Field, Upper School

Harvard-Westlake School is an independent, co-educational university preparatory day school consisting of two campuses located in Los Angeles, California, with approximately 1,600 students enrolled in grades seven through twelve. Its two predecessor organizations began as for-profit schools before turning non-profit, and eventually merging. It is not affiliated with Harvard University despite being named after it.

The school has two campuses, the middle school campus in Holmby Hills and the high school, or what Harvard-Westlake refers to as their Upper School, in Studio City.[4] It is a member of the G30 Schools group.[5]

History

Harvard School for Boys

The Harvard School for Boys was established in 1900 by Grenville C. Emery as a military academy, on the site of a barley field located at the corner of Western Avenue and Sixteenth Street (now Venice Boulevard) in Los Angeles, California.[6][7] Emery was originally from Boston, and around 1900 he wrote to Harvard University to ask permission to use the Harvard name for his new secondary school, and received permission from the university's then-President, Charles W. Eliot.[8][7] In 1911, it secured endorsement from the Episcopal Church, becoming a non-profit organization. In 1937, the school moved to its present-day campus at the former Hollywood Country Club on Coldwater Canyon in Studio City after receiving a $25,000 ($530,000 in current dollar terms) loan from aviation pioneer Donald Douglas.[7] In the late 1960s and early 1970s, the Harvard School gradually discontinued both boarding and its standing as a military academy, while expanding its enrollment, courses, classes, teachers, and curriculum.[9]

Westlake School for Girls

The Westlake School for Girls was established in 1904 by Jessica Smith Vance and Frederica de Laguna in what is now downtown Los Angeles, California, as an exclusively female institution offering both elementary and secondary education. It was so-named because it was near Westlake Park, now known as MacArthur Park.[7] At the time, the school was a for-profit alternative to the already-established Marlborough School, which had been established as a non-profit before the turn of the century.

It moved to its present-day campus located on North Faring Road in Holmby Hills, California, in 1927.[7] The school was purchased by Sydney Temple, whose daughter, Helen Temple Dickinson, was headmistress until 1966, when Westlake became a non-profit institution. The Temple family owned the school until 1977, with Dickinson serving in an ex officio capacity. In 1968 Westlake became exclusively a secondary school.[9]

Merger

As both schools continued to grow in size towards the late 1980s, and as gender exclusivity became less of a factor both in the schools' reputations and desirability, the trustees of both Harvard and Westlake effectuated a merger in 1989. The two institutions had long been de facto sister schools, and interacted socially. Complete integration and coeducation began in 1991.[9]

Cheating scandal

In 2008, six sophomores were expelled and more than a dozen other students faced suspensions as a result of a cheating scandal.[10][11]

Campuses

Currently, the school is split between the two campuses, with grades 7–9, the Middle School, located at the former Westlake campus in Holmby Hills and grades 10–12, the Upper School, located at the former Harvard campus in Studio City.[12]

The Middle School completed a four-year modernization in September 2008, replacing the original administration building,[13] the library, and the instrumental music building. The campus now features a new library, two levels of classrooms in the Academic Center, the new Seaver Science Center, a turf field, a new administration office, a putting green, a long jump pit, and a large parking lot. Another significant addition of the project was the Bing Performing Arts Center which features a two-level, 800-seat theater, a suite of practice rooms, a few large classrooms for band, orchestra, and choir classes, a black box theater, a dance studio, and a room with atomic pianos for composing electronic music.[citation needed]

Remnants of the former Middle School campus include the Marshall Center, which houses a gymnasium, weight room, and wrestling room, a 25-yard (23 m) swimming pool and diving boards, an outdoor basketball court, and a tennis court. Reynolds Hall, an academic building which is home to history, foreign language, and visual arts classes, began a modernization effort in June 2014 to be completed by September 2015. The building was named Wang Hall in honor of two parents who donated approximately $5 million to fund the project.[14][15]

The Upper School features the Munger Science Center and computer lab; the Rugby building which houses the English department, 300-seat theater, costume shop, and drama lab; the Seaver building, home to the foreign language and history departments as well as administrative offices and the visitor lobby; Chalmers, which houses the performing arts and math departments, book store, cafeteria, sandwich window, and student lounge; Kutler, which houses the Brendan Kutler Center for Interdisciplinary Studies and Independent Research[16][17] and the Feldman-Horn visual arts studios, dark room, video labs, and gallery.[18]

Saint Saviour's Chapel

The athletic facilities include Taper Gymnasium, used for volleyball and basketball as well as final exams; Hamilton Gymnasium, the older gymnasium still used for team practices and final exams; Copses Family Pool, a 50-meter Olympic size facility with a team room and stadium for viewing events for the aquatics program; and Ted Slavin Field, which features an artificial FieldTurf surface and a synthetic track and is used for football, soccer, track & field, lacrosse, and field hockey.[19] In 2007, lights were added to Ted Slavin Field.[20] The school also maintains an off-campus baseball facility, the O'Malley Family Field, in Encino, California.[21]

The Upper School campus also features the three-story Seeley G. Mudd Library and Saint Saviour's Chapel, a vestige from Harvard School for Boys' Episcopal days.[22]

In 2017, Harvard Westlake paid more than $40M for Weddington Golf & Tennis, a 16-acre country club located less than a mile from the Upper School campus, with plans to build a Community Athletics Center on the location.[23] Their draft construction plan is still under review by the Los Angeles City Council.

Tuition

For the 2020–2021 school year is $41,300, with a new student fee of $2,000. Other expenses—which include books, transportation, meals, and class activities—typically average $2,500 to $5,000 (the latter for those who take advantage of the school's comprehensive bus service).[24]

Harvard-Westlake provided $11 million in financial aid in 2018.[25] That year, approximately 20% of the student body received financial aid, which averaged $27,000 for each student that received financial aid.[26]

Academic achievement

For the HW Class of 2019, average SATs were 716 (verbal) and 745 (math). Among the 292 seniors, there were 27 National Merit Semifinalists. Out of the approximately 1400 graduates between 2014 and 2018, twenty or more matriculated at the following universities: Barnard (20), Brown (33), Colgate (20), Columbia (37), Cornell (36), Duke (20), Emory (24), Georgetown (21), Harvard (45), Johns Hopkins (23), Kenyon (22), New York University (83), Northwestern (31), Stanford (38), Tulane (25), U. Cal Berkeley (42), U. of Chicago (43), U. of Michigan (70), U. of Pennsylvania (42), U. of Southern Cal (92), Wash U. St. Louis (50), Yale (22), Lipscomb University. [27]

For the 2019–2020 school year, Niche ranked Harvard-Westlake the best private high school in Los Angeles, the 2nd best private high school in California, and the 6th best private school in the United States.[28]

Athletics

Harvard-Westlake fields 22 varsity teams in the California Interscholastic Federation Southern Section, as well as teams on the junior varsity, club, and junior high levels. 60% of HW students participate in interscholastic sports.

Harvard-Westlake maintains a strong e-sports presence with a two year streak from 2018–2020 as 2nd strongest League of Legends team in California.[29]

Notable alumni

Notable faculty

References

  1. ^ "Faculty/Staff Directory".
  2. ^ a b c d e "Search for Private Schools – School Detail for HARVARD-WESTLAKE SCHOOL". National Center for Education Statistics. Institute of Education Sciences. Retrieved January 28, 2019.
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  4. ^ "Our Campuses". Retrieved May 5, 2018.
  5. ^ "Move over G8—this is G20 > Harvard Westlake Chronicle". Archived from the original on October 28, 2007. Retrieved May 19, 2007.
  6. ^ Cooper, Suzanne Tarbell; Lynch, Don; Kurtz, John G. (August 19, 2018). West Adams. Arcadia Publishing. ISBN 9780738559209 – via Google Books.
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  17. ^ Pool, Bob (September 23, 2012). "Harvard-Westlake building reflects standout student's interests". Los Angeles Times.
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  19. ^ Branson-Potts, Hailey (November 4, 2014) "Harvard-Westlake School's plan for parking structure upsets neighbors" Los Angeles Times
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Further reading