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Concord Academy

 
Wikipedia: Concord Academy
Concord Academy
Location
Concord, Massachusetts, United States
Coordinates 42°27′33″N 71°21′17″W / 42.45917°N 71.35472°W / 42.45917; -71.35472
Information
School type Private
Religious affiliation None
Established 1922
Status Open
Faculty 61
Gender Co-ed
Enrollment 373
Average class size 12
Student:teacher ratio 6:1
Campus size 39 acres (160,000 m2)
School Colour(s) Green     
Mascot Chameleon
Average SAT scores 2061
Endowment $40 million
Students of Color 23%
Acceptance rate (2008) 32%
Website

Concord Academy is a coeducational, independent, college preparatory school for grades nine through twelve, located in Concord, Massachusetts. Founded in 1922, the school currently enrolls 367 boarding and day students from eight countries and twenty states.

Contents

Mission Statement

This is Concord Academy's mission statement:

Concord Academy engages its students in a community animated by a love of learning, enriched by a diversity of backgrounds and perspectives, and guided by a covenant of common trust.

Students and teachers work together as a community of learners dedicated to intellectual rigor and creative endeavor. In a caring and challenging atmosphere, students discover and develop talents as scholars, artists and athletes and are encouraged to find their voices.

The school is committed to embracing and broadening the diversity of backgrounds, perspectives and talents of its people. This diversity fosters respect for others and genuine exchange of ideas. Common trust challenges students to balance individual freedom with responsibility and service to a larger community. Such learning prepares students for lives as committed citizens.

Academics

Concord Academy’s curriculum includes classes such as [1]:

  • Applied Chemistry: Neurochemistry
  • Applied Physics: Meteorology
  • Advanced Physics: Electromagnetism
  • Creative Nonfiction and the Art of the Essay
  • The "Hidden Luminous": Writing and Reading Poetry
  • Latin American Literature: Magical Realities
  • All Under Heaven: Early Chinese History

Athletics

Concord Academy students play on twenty-eight teams in twenty-three sports; about 75 percent of students play on at least one team each year. [2]

The Boarding/Day Hybrid

Concord Academy's population is approximately half boarders and half day students. [3]

Location

Concord Academy's primary campus is on Main Street in the center of Concord, Massachusetts.

The Chameleon

Concord Academy's mascot is the Chameleon, chosen for the adaptability it implies. Excerpted from “Leapin’ Lizards,” Winter 2008 Concord Academy magazine:

“It’s unclear how or why the chameleon was chosen, or exactly when that happened, but “the critter” has been associated with the school for more than eighty years. When Philip McFarland was researching A History of Concord Academy: The First Half-Century and A History of Concord Academy: The Wilcox Years, alumnae told him that the chameleon dates from the era of Elsie Garland Hobson, who was headmistress from 1922 to 1937, and that it was used as a symbol before becoming the title of the school’s literary magazine, first published in December 1927 . . . Over the years, the chameleon has been used in a variety of ways—most notably on the school ring, but also on the cover of the literary magazine, in recognition of contributions to Annual Giving, on stationery, pillows, bags, pens, mugs, and clothing . . . True to its nature, the chameleon has adjusted with the times. It remains an important part of CA—an enduring legacy and a symbol of how adaptable the school’s graduates can be while still maintaining their individuality.”[4]

Publications

  • The Centipede, Concord Academy’s student newspaper, is published approximately eight times a year.
  • The Chameleon, a literary magazine, is published annually.
  • The Scallion, a satirical newspaper playing on the title of The Onion (a scallion is also called a green onion, alluding to Concord's school color), has published as frequently as six times a year and as infrequently as never. Its slogan: “Yeah. We Said It.”
  • The Gentleman's Standard, a satirical journal on world events and politics written from the exaggerated perspectives of fake highly conservative and traditional intellectuals.
  • Concord Academy magazine, the school’s alumnae/i magazine, is published three times a year and is sent to more than 8,000 graduates, parents, and friends of CA.

History

From Concord Academy’s Web site, written by Teacher Emeritus Philip McFarland:

Concord Academy, grades 1 through 12, was established in what is now Haines House on Main Street in September 1922. Selected to lead the new school for girls was Elsie Garland Hobson, who in fifteen vigorous years as head would stress academic effort and see that scholarship was rewarded. During the brief tenure of Miss Hobson’s successor, Valerie Knapp (1937–40), a less rule-bound but no less demanding spirit was admitted, a spirit that Josephine Tucker (1940–49) encouraged. It was Miss Tucker who introduced the advisor system and abolished prizes at commencement, innovations that remain central to the school's philosophy.

Classes through those early years were small. The class of 1924 numbered three girls, fifteen girls were in the class of 1938, twenty in the class of 1948. Not until the administration of Elizabeth Hall (1949–63) did Concord Academy grow markedly in size and achieve national stature. Mrs. Hall shaped the Academy into an independent high school, and the numbers in the boarding department expanded until boarders exceeded day students. Later in her administration and through that of David Aloian (1963–71), Concord Academy was regarded as perhaps the finest independent secondary school for girls in the country.

1981—Thomas E. Wilcox named headmaster

1984—Elizabeth B. Hall Chapel dedicated

2000—Jacob A. Dresden named head of school

2004-05—Renovation and expansion of Elizabeth B. Hall Chapel

2007—Purchase of additional 13.6-acre (55,000 m2) property near main campus

2009—Richard G. Hardy named head of school; began July 1, 2009

Notable Alumnae/i

Trivia

  • A previous school named Concord Academy existed in Concord, Massachusetts between 1822 and 1863. Henry David Thoreau attended the school in 1823. In 1838, he helped re-establish it and taught there.
  • Concord Academy’s campus includes eleven historic houses on Main Street, all built as family homes between 1780 and 1830.
  • Elizabeth B. Hall, the headmistress from 1949 to 1963, often disciplined students by making them saw or chop wood.
  • Elizabeth B. Hall, the headmistress from 1949 to 1963, founded Bard College at Simon's Rock in 1964, the nation's oldest and most prestigious college early entrance program.

References

  1. ^ Concord Academy course catalogue, at www.concordacademy.org/academics.
  2. ^ www.concordacademy.org
  3. ^ www.concordacademy.org
  4. ^ “Leapin’ Lizards,” by Ingrid von Dattan Detweiler, Class of 1961, from the Winter 2008 Concord Academy magazine


Philip McFarland, A History of Concord Academy: The First Half-Century and A History of Concord Academy: The Wilcox Years

External links


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