Chapel Hill – Chauncy Hall School
This article contains academic boosterism which primarily serves to praise or promote the subject and may be a sign of a conflict of interest. (November 2023) |
Chapel Hill – Chauncy Hall School | |
---|---|
Location | |
, United States | |
Information | |
School type | Private, boarding |
Established | 1828 |
Head of school | Lance Conrad |
Staff | 64 |
Grades | 7–PG[clarification needed] |
Gender | Co-ed |
Enrollment | 200 |
Average class size | 10 |
Student to teacher ratio | 5:1 |
Campus size | 42 acres (170,000 m2) |
Color(s) | Blue and white |
Mascot | The Chargers |
Accreditation | AISNE |
Website | www |
Chapel Hill – Chauncy Hall School (CH-CH) is an independent, college-preparatory day and boarding school for grades 8 through PG located on a 42-acre (170,000 m2) campus in Waltham, Massachusetts, United States, and founded in 1828. The school is accredited by the New England Association of Schools and Colleges.
History
[edit]Chapel Hill – Chauncy Hall's history involves three schools: Chauncy Hall, Chapel Hill, and the Huntington School. Chapel Hill, a school for girls founded in 1860 in Waltham on the current campus, and Chauncy Hall, a Boston day school for boys founded in 1828, merged in 1971 to create Chapel Hill – Chauncy Hall.[1]
To the merger, Chapel Hill brought its strength in humanities and the arts, and Chauncy Hall brought its strength in the fields of science and math. In 1974, Chapel Hill – Chauncy Hall incorporated the Huntington School, a Boston school for boys founded in 1909.
Chapel Hill – Chauncy Hall has many long-standing traditions. Wilkins Hall and its free-standing spiral staircase is still in use today. At Head of School installations, the book of the school is passed from one head to the next. Charles Henry Sampson scholarships are annually awarded to qualified students. Additionally, the school continues to keep in contact with alumni of Chauncy Hall, Chapel Hill, and the Huntington School.[2]
In 2011, Chapel Hill - Chauncy Hall was featured in a Bloomberg article about schools that exploit Chinese student by representing themselves as high performing academic institutions, but are instead institutions with a heavy Special Education focus.[3]
Student population and diversity
[edit]CH-CH has 175 students, with a 45% boarding population and 55% day, and a 25% international student population. The school community celebrates its diversity with Diversity Day that consists of student led workshops that introduce faculty and fellow students to new countries. Additionally, there is an annual Flag Day ceremony in which students have an opportunity to share their heritage with the rest of the school.
Course requirements
[edit]Course requirements at CH-CH consist of four years of English, three years of mathematics (through algebra 2), three years of history (including U.S. history), three years of laboratory science, two sequential years of a foreign language, and two years of visual or performing arts. CH-CH also offers honors, advanced, or AP courses in all of the major academic disciplines for students looking to advance their studies.
Students enrolled in a history class are required to write a research paper during the winter trimester and all students enrolled in a science class participate in the annual science fair each May.
Senior Capstone: All seniors complete a composition in English, a research project in either history or science, and give a presentation to the school in order to graduate. Each senior is also required to complete 19 hours of community service.[4]
Multiple Intelligences Approach
[edit]Classes are influenced by Dr. Howard Gardner of Harvard University, who developed the Theory of Multiple Intelligences. Dr. Gardner proposes that there are nine "intelligences" that schools need to support: interpersonal, intrapersonal, existential, mathematical/logical, kinesthetic, linguistic, naturalist, musical, and spatial. Teachers incorporate these intelligences into their curriculum.[5]
On October 17, 2013, Howard Gardner visited the CH-CH campus. According to Dr. Gardner, "when something is important, try to teach it lots of different ways... Textbooks are fine, but not everybody learns best from text books. iPads, hands-on, works of art, debate, humor, graphics, and video, the more different ways you can teach something, the more likely it is to get in there, stay in there, and be useful."[6]
Main campus facilities
[edit]Harrington Hall: Named in honor of Louisa C. Harrington 2011. Today it consists of the dining hall and Clemence room downstairs and the freshmen and sophomore girls’ dormitory upstairs.
Cottage: The 9th grade building where almost all freshmen classes are held.
The CH-CH Commons: After serving the Waltham community for 150 years, the Covenant Congregational Church closed in 2010. In late 2011, the space was purchased by Chapel Hill-Chauncy Hall and connected with the rest of the campus. Each section was renovated and repurposed before reopening in 2012 as The CH-CH Commons. Performing arts, foreign language classes, and all school assemblies continue to be held here today. The CH-CH Commons is also home to the school's library and ‘MakerSpace.’ The CH-CH MakerSpace is a place for students to experiment, create, and explore hands-on alternatives to traditional classroom learning, using new technology like 3D modeling and printing, as well as established methods like sewing and basic woodworking. Students in the co-curricular MakerSpace activity investigate varied, self-directed topics, like basic coding, robotics, and prototyping, while academic classes are supported and enhanced by MakerSpace activities that introduce ‘design thinking’—iterative, progressive exploration of course material that encourages experimentation, collaboration, and a focus on process instead of results.[7]
Wilkins Hall: Built in 1864, Wilkins remains the main academic building for upperclassmen history, English, history, science, and math classes.
Worcester Hall: Originally built in 1963 as a girls' dormitory, Worcester Hall is now the boys' dormitory and includes a wrestling facility.
South Hall: A gift from Arthur Astor Carey of the Astor family in 1903, South Hall is now the upperclassmen girls' dormitory.
Peebles Hall: The admissions office [8]
Beaver Gymnasium & Machen Center: Built in 1981 in honor of Claude F. Machen '27. Today it houses the gym, workout room, and nurse's office.
Barn & Theater: Houses arts spaces including the theater, digital arts lab, makerspace studio, photography dark room, pottery studio, and dance/yoga studio. On Wednesday, August 29, Chapel Hill – Chauncy Hall School broke ground on their $5.5 million for their historic building, the visual and performing arts, the Barn renovation. The School added 9,000 square feet (840 m2), including a new theater, new music classroom space, expanded state-of-the-art studio spaces, and a glass atrium gallery, creating a 22,000-square-foot (2,000 m2) center for the arts. The Barn was renovated in the fall of 2019.
Co-curricular activities
[edit]Students are required to participate in the afternoon co-curricular program each trimester. Two activities each year must be interscholastic sports or team activities. A list of offerings are listed below:
Sports:
|
Other Activities:
|
|
CH-CH participates in the Massachusetts Bay Independent League (MBIL) for boys' soccer, cross country, basketball, baseball, and lacrosse. The school is also a member of the Independent Girls' Conference (IGC) for soccer, basketball, softball and lacrosse and the Eastern Independent League (EIL) for boys' wrestling.[10]
Spring Session program
[edit]In the spring of 2013, CH-CH began an experimental learning program called Spring Session. The program takes place during the last week of May and consists of a variety of experiences that give students the opportunity to engage themselves in a topic they are passionate about. A few past Spring Session experiences have included:
- Walt Disney World educational programs
- Circus Arts at Esh Aerial Arts Studio
- Creative Writing Workshop
- A trip to Washington, D.C., and Gettysburg to study the Civil War
- Studying Marine Biology in Key West
Earlier in the school year, students are given the option to choose from over a dozen potential experiences. Each experience is designed and chaperoned by CH-CH faculty and staff. All of the offerings have an educational component. Upon their return, each group gives a presentation to the school on their Spring Session experience. [11]
Notable alumni
[edit]This article's list of alumni may not follow Wikipedia's verifiability policy. (April 2024) |
- Alice Stone Blackwell
- Ida Smoot Dusenberry
- Curtis Guild Jr. – Guild was educated at Chauncy Hall and then attended Harvard University. At both schools he was involved in military organizations and he became a lieutenant in Harvard's rifle corps in 1879. In 1906, he became the 43rd Governor of Massachusetts serving until 1909.
- C. M. S. McLellan
- Benjamin F. Nutting
- James Sturgis Pray[citation needed]
- Edward Everett Rose
- E. Leroy Sweetser – U.S. Army brigadier general[12]
- Marion Talbot
- Abbott Handerson Thayer
- Lucy Wheelock – enrolled in the Chauncy Hall School to prepare for college in 1876, but her discovery of the school's kindergarten altered her plans. After graduating, she became a kindergarten teacher at Chauncy Hall. In 1888, Wheelock instituted a one-year training course for teachers of the school.[13] By 1896, Wheelock left the school to form the independent Wheelock Kindergarten Training School. Several decades later, Wheelock College was named to honor her efforts in the field of education.[14]
Camps
[edit]Chapel Hill – Chauncy Hall School is the host of Running Brook Day Camp for youth and teens between the ages of 3.5 to 18.[15]
References
[edit]- ^ "Our History". Chapel Hill – Chuancy Hall. Archived from the original on September 5, 2015. Retrieved July 27, 2015.
- ^ name="chch.org"
- ^ "Chinese Lose Promise for $52,000 as U.S. Schools Exploit Need". Bloomberg. Retrieved May 16, 2024.
- ^ http://www.chch.org/ftpimages/39/download/Profile%202013-2014v2.pdf [bare URL PDF]
- ^ "CH-CH - Multiple Intelligences". www.chch.org. Archived from the original on September 19, 2015. Retrieved August 10, 2015.
- ^ "Dr. Howard Gardner Visits CH-CH". October 18, 2013.
- ^ "CH-CH - About The Commons". www.chch.org. Archived from the original on September 18, 2015. Retrieved August 1, 2015.
- ^ "CH-CH | Campus Map". www.chch.org. Archived from the original on February 12, 2017. Retrieved October 16, 2017.
- ^ "CH-CH - Our Campus". www.chch.org. Archived from the original on September 7, 2015. Retrieved July 28, 2015.
- ^ "CH-CH - Co-Curricular Activities". www.chch.org. Archived from the original on September 10, 2015. Retrieved July 28, 2015.
- ^ "Experiential Learning: Spring Session Preview". March 13, 2014.
- ^ Davis, Henry Blaine Jr. (1998). Generals in Khaki. Raleigh, NC: Pentland Press. p. 355. ISBN 978-1-5719-7088-6 – via Google Books.
- ^ "Biography of Lucy Wheelock". www.wheelockgenealogy.com.
- ^ "Wheelock College of Education & Human Development". www.wheelock.edu.
- ^ "Running Brook Camps - at Chapel Hill-Chauncy Hall in Waltham, MA". runningbrook.org.