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Armenian Sisters Academy

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Armenian Sisters Academy
File:ASAEmblem.gif
Location
Map
Information
TypePrivate
MottoHye Qyooreroo Varjaran
Established1967
Head of schoolSr. V. Louisa Kassarjian
Faculty20 full-time
Enrollment180 students
Color(s)Blue and Gold

The Armenian Sisters Academy is a Pre-K through eighth grade institution located in the Philadelphia, Pennsylvania suburb of Radnor. The name is also shared by two sister schools founded later in Boston and Los Angeles. The Armenian Sisters Academy is run by the Armenian Sisters of the Immaculate Conception who teach Armenian and religion classes, while a mostly American faculty teach homeroom classes.

History

In 1963, at the request of Msgr. Stephen Stepanian, then pastor of St. Mark's Armenian Catholic Church in Philadelphia, three energetic nuns, Sister Valentine, Sister Hripsime and Sister Arousiag, were sent from Rome to establish an Armenian day school. After four years of preparation, the first Armenian day school on the East Coast was started in a two-room facility with an initial enrollment of 12 preschool/kindergarten children.

The Board of Directors was formed in 1968 made up of Armenian-Americans of the Philadelphia area community. Generous financial and moral support of the Armenian community assisted the Board and the Sisters in their efforts to establish this school. Between 1967 and 1975 a grade was added each year, and the enrollment grew to 165. The school was relocated three times to accommodate its growing needs.

In October 1975, after eight years of moving from one facility to another, the first students of the new school building moved into the current hilltop campus in Radnor, Pennsylvania. Thanks to the financial generosity of the Philadelphia Armenian community it has been able to keep tuition low in order to provide an education to any Armenian child that desires it. In 2005 the Academy doubled in size when it added a new state-of-the-art educational wing and gymnasium. The Radnor location was renamed the Armenian Sisters Academy- Vosbikian Campus in honor of Peter and Irene Vosbikian for their great support of the expansion project and the school itself throughout the years.