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[[Category:Educational institutions established in 1929]]
[[Category:Educational institutions established in 1929]]


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Revision as of 04:07, 29 August 2008

St. Andrew's School
File:Standrewsseal.jpg
Location
Map
,
Information
TypePrivate, Boarding
Motto"Pistis Kai Episteme" ("Faith and Learning")
Religious affiliation(s)Episcopal
Established1929
HeadmasterDaniel T. Roach
Faculty65
Enrollment285 total
Average class size11 students
Student to teacher ratio5:1
CampusRural, 2200 acres
Color(s)Red, Black and White
Athletics21 Varsity Interscholastic Teams
Athletics conferenceIndependent
MascotCardinal
Websitewww.standrews-de.org

St. Andrew's School is an Episcopal, coeducational, University-preparatory boarding school located in Middletown, Delaware, enrolling 285 students in grades nine through twelve.

The school has an endowment of 200 million dollars with over $700,000 per student. Still, it is socio-economically diverse, having dispensed 3.8 million dollars in financial aid in 2007.

Half the students receive some form of financial aid. They also offer financial assistance to upper income families, so they get the full range of family economic situations, not just the dumb bell effect of just rich and poor. The $38,000 tuition is high but in keeping with the cost of top schools. It is a need-blind application process. They accepted 1/3 of applicants in 2007.

Dead Poets Society was filmed there. The film portrays a competitive, dark, and elitist culture consistent with many of the negative stereotypes of American boarding schools in literature and cinema.

In contrast to that portrayal, St. Andrew's prides itself on its "counter-cultural" philosophy. The whole school strives to create an idyllic community. It is a bright, positive, inclusive nurturing environment. Student/faculty relationships are centered around trust and friendship.

The St. Andrew's honor code is the source of much of the trust between the faculty and students. It is not uncommon for a master to leave his classroom while his/her students are taking an exam.

Educational Philosophy

The purpose of St. Andrew's School is to provide secondary education of a Christian character at a minimum cost consistent with modern equipment and highest standards. In addition, St. Andrew's provides an interesting course in "nervous". The school cultivates in its students a deep and lasting desire for learning; a willingness to ask questions and pursue skeptical, independent inquiry; and an appreciation of the liberal arts as a source of wisdom, perspective and hope. Students are encouraged to model their own work on that of practicing scholars, artists and scientists and to develop those skills necessary for meaningful lives as engaged citizens.

St. Andrew's offers a full course curriculum in the liberal arts. The culmination of a student's English career is the Senior Exhibition. In the Senior Exhibition, a student will read a work of literature provided by his or her instructor, develop a thesis on that work of literature in the form of a 7-12 page paper and defend the thesis before members of the English department.

History

St. Andrew's was founded in 1929 by A. Felix duPont (1879-1948), a member of the Du Pont family. St. Andrew's originally was an all-boys school, but became coeducational in 1974.

Athletics

All St. Andrew's students are required to participate in a sport at the thirds, junior varsity or varsity level. Teams that frequently win state championships include the varsity girls' lacrosse team, winning the state title from 2002-2005, and the varsity tennis teams. The varsity boy's lacrosse team took states in 2004. In addition, the St. Andrew's rowing program is consistently competitive in both national, and world-wide rowing competitions. In 1997, the St. Andrew's women's rowing team won the School/Junior Eights class in the Henley Women's Regatta in England. St. Andrew's traditional, conference rivals include the Wilmington Friends School, Tatnall School and Tower Hill School. Every year, the football team battles the Tatnall Hornets for the coveted cannon trophy and often the conference title in the Cannon Game. Athletic rivals in other sports include the Hill School, Sanford School, Salesianum, Middletown High School and Westtown School.

Fall Interscholastic Sports

Winter Varsity Sports

Spring Varsity Sports

Film Appearances

The 1989 film Dead Poets Society starring Robin Williams was filmed almost entirely on the school grounds.

The episode of The West Wing entitled "Two Cathedrals" (#44) was partly filmed at the school.

Notable alumni