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St. Anselm's Abbey School: Difference between revisions

Coordinates: 38°56′46″N 76°59′11″W / 38.94611°N 76.98639°W / 38.94611; -76.98639
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==Athletics==
==Athletics==
[[Image:AbbeyBBall.JPG|thumb|200px|left|"Pax in Sapientia"]]
[[Image:OldBBallPanthers.jpg|thumb|200px|left|The "Panthers" is the highly-visible mascot of the school.]]


St. Anselm's competes in the [[Potomac Valley Athletic Conference]] at the middle school and varsity levels in several sports each season. During the ten-year period from 1998 to 2008, the Panthers won 35 conference championships in basketball, soccer, baseball, tennis, cross country, and track and field.{{Citation needed|date=February 2009}}
St. Anselm's competes in the [[Potomac Valley Athletic Conference]] at the middle school and varsity levels in several sports each season. During the ten-year period from 1998 to 2008, the Panthers won 35 conference championships in basketball, soccer, baseball, tennis, cross country, and track and field.{{Citation needed|date=February 2009}}
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Physics teacher Dr. Herb Wood, who established this tradition more than two decades ago, grades each vehicle based on its size and dimensions, as well as its ability to keep the egg safe and intact. The student with the fewest deductions is named the winner of the coveted “Egg Drop Award”—and, more importantly, receives a perfect score on his assignment.<ref>[http://www.saintanselms.org/about_us/history/index.aspx History & Traditions]</ref>
Physics teacher Dr. Herb Wood, who established this tradition more than two decades ago, grades each vehicle based on its size and dimensions, as well as its ability to keep the egg safe and intact. The student with the fewest deductions is named the winner of the coveted “Egg Drop Award”—and, more importantly, receives a perfect score on his assignment.<ref>[http://www.saintanselms.org/about_us/history/index.aspx History & Traditions]</ref>
[[Image:OldBBallPanthers.jpg|thumb|left|Vintage Photograph from the Basketball Tournament]]



==Campus and Facilities==
==Campus and Facilities==

Revision as of 08:49, 7 March 2010

St. Anselm's Abbey School
File:Stalogo.png
Address
Map
4501 South Dakota Avenue, NE

,
20017

Coordinates38°56′46″N 76°59′11″W / 38.94611°N 76.98639°W / 38.94611; -76.98639
Information
TypePrivate, All-Male
MottoPax in Sapientia
("Peace in understanding")
Religious affiliation(s)Roman Catholic
Established1942
PresidentFr. Peter Weigand, OSB, MTS
HeadmasterLouis Silvano
Chairman of the Board of TrusteesWilliam Fennell, '66
Faculty60 (approx)
GradesForms A - VI (grades 612)
Enrollment242 (in 2007-08)
MascotPanthers
AccreditationMiddle States Association of Colleges and Schools[1]
NewspaperThe Priory Press
YearbookThe Priory Perspective
AffiliationsBenedictine
Head of Middle SchoolWilliam Lippe
Head of Upper SchoolAlex Morse
Headmaster EmeritusFr. Michael Hall OSB, Ph.D, '56
Dean of StudentsMichael McCarthy
Director of AdmissionsE.V. Downey
Websitehttp://www.saintanselms.org

St. Anselm's Abbey School is an all boys preparatory school for grades six through twelve in Washington D.C.. It is located in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Washington. The school sits on a 40-acre (160,000 m2) wooded campus in the Michigan Park neighborhood of the city's Northeast quadrant and is run by the Benedictine monks of Saint Anselm's Abbey.

History

The Abbey Crest

The school was founded in 1942 as the Priory School by Fr. Thomas Verner Moore, OSB, the superior of what was then St. Anselm's Priory. The Priory School opened on September 15, 1942 with just 18 students. Although the school began as a high school, the 7th and 8th grades (known as Form I and Form II, respectively) were added in 1955.

The school was renamed St. Anselm's Abbey School in 1961, when the monastery was elevated to the status of an abbey. A 6th grade, known as Form A, was added in 1990 following a major expansion of the school's academic building. In 2003, the school completed a $9 million athletic and performing arts complex. This included the construction of a state-of-the-art athletic facility and gymnasium, as well as the conversion of the old 1945 gym into the Devine Performing Arts Center, containing classroom space, faculty offices and a theater with seating for 500.


Academics

The school requires an entrance exam and attempts to create an academically challenging environment with a curriculum that offers classes in a wide range of subjects, including 22 AP level courses.[2] In 2004, roughly two-thirds of the graduating class achieved commendation or higher honors from the National Merit Scholar program, and the average combined SAT I score was over 1400. In 2003, roughly half of the senior class achieved the AP Scholar, AP Scholar with Distinction, or National AP Scholar level as defined by the Advanced Placement Program.

Each student who has graduated from St. Anselm's Abbey School since its founding has been accepted to and attended an accredited four-year college or university.[3] For the five-year period from 2002-2006, the five most popular destinations for St. Anselm's graduates were Georgetown University, Columbia University, the University of Maryland, College Park, the University of Chicago, and the College of William & Mary.

The school's curriculum emphasizes classics and is somewhat idiosyncratic. Grades are called "forms," in accordance with the British school system. In addition to six years of science and five years of a spoken language, three years of Latin are required. Ancient Greek is also offered as an elective for students in the Upper School, as is Arabic for students in fifth and sixth forms. As in many other religious schools, theology is also a required course each year.

The school is accredited by the Middle States Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools and is a member of the National Association of Independent Schools.

In a December 2006 online discussion, Challenge Index creator Jay Mathews said, "Saint Anselm's Abbey in NE D.C. has one of the highest ratings in the country, far above most private schools I know."[4]

The Baltimore Sun has called St. Anselm's "one of the country's premier college preparatory schools."[5]

Class sizes are small, 15-20 per class, and the school's student-to-faculty ratio is approximately 5:1. Classes are smallest in the Upper Division (Forms V and VI), and graduating classes are typically made up of 35 or fewer students.

Athletics

File:OldBBallPanthers.jpg
The "Panthers" is the highly-visible mascot of the school.

St. Anselm's competes in the Potomac Valley Athletic Conference at the middle school and varsity levels in several sports each season. During the ten-year period from 1998 to 2008, the Panthers won 35 conference championships in basketball, soccer, baseball, tennis, cross country, and track and field.[citation needed]

St. Anselm's is home to the longest-running high school basketball tournament in the Washington, D.C. metropolitan area. The St. Anselm's Invitational, founded by former basketball coach Bob Dwyer and former headmaster Fr. Hugh Monmonier, OSB, has been a tradition at the school since 1948.

Another traditional athletic rivalry is the Bishop Ansgar Nelson Memorial Soccer Cup, an annual competition held between the varsity boys' soccer teams of St. Anselm's Abbey School and its sister school, Portsmouth Abbey School of Portsmouth, RI. The competition rotates each year between the two schools.

Student life

The school has clubs and associations, many unique to the school. These include the Cultural Student Organization, Investment Club, Fides Fellowship of St. Benedict, Mythology Club, Latin Club, Greek Club, It's Academic, Chamber Orchestra, Jazz Band, Fencing Club, Biology/Forensics Club, and French Club. In 2008, the school's Model UN team took the honor of "Best School" at Catholic University's annual conference in Washington.[citation needed]

Traditions

The House System

At the very start of a young man's St. Anselm's experience, he is assigned to become a member of one of four Houses named for important figures in the school’s history: Alban House, named for Fr. Alban Boultwood, the first Abbot of St. Anselm’s Abbey; Austin House, named for Fr. Austin McNamee, the school’s founding Headmaster; Main House, named for Fr. John Main, the school’s fifth Headmaster; and Moore House, named for Fr. Thomas Verner Moore, founder of the monastery and school. The four houses compete each year for the House Championship, winning points for their performance in intramural athletics and their participation in extracurricular and community service activities.

St. Anselm’s Invitational Basketball Tournament

Each year, St. Anselm’s Abbey School hosts to the Washington region’s longest-running interscholastic basketball tournament, the St. Anselm’s Invitational. The tournament was established in 1948 by longtime basketball coach Bob Dwyer and Fr. Hugh Monmonier, OSB, who later became the school’s third Headmaster. The post-season tournament traditionally begins on a Friday afternoon in late February, when the entire student body, faculty and staff join parents, friends and alumni in the gym to cheer on the varsity Panthers. The three-day event concludes on Sunday evening with the championship game, and the winning team’s name is inscribed on the Dwyer Trophy (named after the tournament’s founding coach), which is held by the winning school until the following tournament.

Egg Drop

Each spring, Form IV students must complete a unique assignment as part of their Physics class: construct a vessel which, when dropped from the roof of the athletics complex, can hold an egg and keep it from breaking while hitting a target area on the sidewalk below. Students must construct their entries using only a single predetermined material, which changes each year and is revealed less than a month before the Egg Drop.

Physics teacher Dr. Herb Wood, who established this tradition more than two decades ago, grades each vehicle based on its size and dimensions, as well as its ability to keep the egg safe and intact. The student with the fewest deductions is named the winner of the coveted “Egg Drop Award”—and, more importantly, receives a perfect score on his assignment.[6]

File:OldBBallPanthers.jpg
Vintage Photograph from the Basketball Tournament


Campus and Facilities

File:Stanselmsabbey.JPG
The Abbey Church, St. Anselm's Abbey
File:P4171847.JPG
The St. Anselm's Academic Building
File:AbbeyGym03.jpg
The Athletic Complex featuring the Brian Murphy Basketball Court

The school's campus is approximately forty beautiful acres set atop a hill in Washington, D.C. and includes the monastic building of St. Anselm's Abbey, an academic building, and an athletics/performing arts complex. The campus is also home to several tennis courts, athletic fields, batting cages, a cemetery and extensive woodland areas.

The academic building underwent a large renovation in 2008. A large lecture hall with a stage and multimedia capabilities is now complete. An earth science lab was also recently completed, providing more space for experimentation in the science department. With its completion, the number of labs available to students is four, one for each of the major sciences. The largest and most noticeable upgrade is to the school entrance, which now houses a new reception area and office space for student-teacher consultations. The rest of the school also received minor technological upgrades, including the installation of SMART Boards in several classrooms.

Notable alumni

Notable faculty

See also

References

  1. ^ MSA-CSS. "MSA-Commission on Secondary Schools". Retrieved 2009-06-23.
  2. ^ Academics & Curricula - Course of Study
  3. ^ College Matriculations
  4. ^ Mathews, Jay. "Challenge Index." Live Online Discussion. WashingtonPost.com
  5. ^ Willis, Laurie. "St. Frances students to get advanced courses via sattelite." Baltimore Sun, August 30, 2000, pg. 3B. Baltimore Sun
  6. ^ History & Traditions