The Cambridge School of Weston
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The Cambridge School of Weston | |
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Location | |
, United States | |
Information | |
Type | Private |
Motto | "Truthe and Gentil Dedes" |
Established | 1886 |
CEEB code | 222350 |
Head teacher | Lise Charlier[1] |
Enrollment | 310 students (2023-2024) |
Student to teacher ratio | 7:1 |
Campus | Suburban, 65 acres |
Color(s) | Blue and Yellow |
Mascot | Gryphon |
Website | www.csw.org |
The Cambridge School of Weston (also known as CSW or The Cambridge School) is an independent high school in Weston, Massachusetts. Currently, the school has 325 students in grades 9 to 12, with approximately 70% day students and 30% boarding students.[2]
History
[edit]The school was founded in 1886 as The Cambridge School for Girls at 20 Mason Street in Cambridge, Massachusetts, by Arthur and Stella Gilman, who had previously helped found Radcliffe College, as a preparatory school for Radcliffe. In 1918, The Cambridge School for Girls merged with the Boston-based Haskell School, and was renamed The Cambridge-Haskell School. Lebanese-born poet Kahlil Gibran, an "intimate friend" of headmistress Mary Haskell, designed a ring for her students depicting a "flower" "growing" in an open "hand".[3]
In 1931, the school was moved 20 miles (32 km) to its present campus in Weston under the direction of then-head of school John French, became coeducational, and was renamed a final time as The Cambridge School of Weston (CSW). A follower of educational reformer John Dewey, French put in place many of the progressive educational underpinnings that still guide the school, such as a focus on the whole student, experiential learning, community involvement, and a low student-to-faculty ratio. In 1939, the school implemented a form of community self-governance modeled after the traditional New England town meeting. Following Robert's Rules of Order, the entire school community, including students, meet to propose and debate school rules and policies, elect representatives to school committees, and decide on other relevant topics to the community. The Cambridge School Town Meeting continues to be a central part of the school's community governance to the present day.
Academics
[edit]The school adopted the Module System, implemented in 1973 by then Head of School Bob Sandoe. The goal of the Module, or "Mod" System, is to provide a framework to allow students to focus on fewer subjects more intensively during a given term. The academic year is divided into six terms (known as modules) of six weeks apiece. A school day consists of four class blocks of 90 minutes each, with some classes spanning several consecutive blocks. Students take up to three academic and one extracurricular class per mod. Some classes, such as those in mathematics or a foreign language, continue for multiple mods. No two students have the same schedule; every student's schedule is unique to themself. Students submit what classes they would like to enroll in, and the faculty works on their schedule to fit their electives into their schedule, along with the required classes each class must participate in.
Tuition
[edit]The Cambridge School of Weston's tuition for the 2019–2020 school year is $63,000 for boarding and $50,900 for day students.[4] About 25% of students receive financial aid.[5]
Initiatives
[edit]The Cambridge School of Weston finished building a Green building called the Garthwaite Center for Science and Art, with a dedication ceremony and day of environmental education events on October 20, 2007.
Athletics
[edit]The Cambridge School of Weston offers the following interscholastic sports: Soccer, Cross country running, Field hockey, Basketball, Baseball, Ultimate, Volleyball, Tennis, and Girls' lacrosse.[6]
Additional fitness courses offered include: Yoga, Rock climbing, Fencing, Bicycling, Weight training, Golf, Table tennis, Dance, and Martial arts.[7]
Notable alumni
[edit]This article's list of alumni may not follow Wikipedia's verifiability policy. (December 2020) |
- Miguel Arteta, director
- Max Geller, internet provocateur
- Hilaria Baldwin, yoga instructor and recreational method actor
- Louisa Bertman, illustrator
- Josh Clayton-Felt, singer-songwriter
- Andras Jones, actor, singer-songwriter
- Jennifer Coolidge, actress
- Robert M. Cunningham, cloud physicist
- Aprille Ericsson-Jackson, aerospace engineer
- Ian Falconer, illustrator and author; noted for his Olivia the Pig series of children's books (that spawned an animated children's television series)
- Zach Feuer, artist
- Paul Michael Glaser, actor famous for playing Starsky from Starsky and Hutch
- Aspen Gollan, woodworker and furniture maker
- Susanna Kaysen, author of Girl, Interrupted
- Helen Keller, author, political activist, lecturer, and the first deaf-blind person to earn a Bachelor of Arts degree
- Nia King, queer art activist and author
- Stephin Merritt, singer-songwriter
- Hamilton Morris, journalist
- David Mugar, businessman and philanthropist
- Steve Mumford, artist
- Daniel Jose Older, writer
- Esther Pasztory, art historian
- Douglas Preston, author
- Jonathan Roberts, screenwriter The Lion King, Monsters, Inc.
- Ella Williams, singer-songwriter and lead of Squirrel Flower
- Jonas Wood, artist
- Eric von Hippel, economist
- Kelly Zutrau, singer-songwriter and lead of Wet
- Jesse Novak, composer and songwriter, best known for Bojack Horseman and The Mindy Project
- Suzanne M. Rivera, president of Macalester College
References
[edit]- ^ "Head's Corner | The Cambridge School of Weston". www.csw.org.
- ^ "Who We Are | The Cambridge School of Weston". www.csw.org.
- ^ "The Cambridge School of Weston- About CSW- History- 1886–1918". Archived from the original on April 6, 2007.
- ^ "Tuition and Fees". www.csw.org.
- ^ "FAQs | The Cambridge School of Weston". Archived from the original on May 13, 2019.
- ^ "Interscholastic Sports | The Cambridge School of Weston". www.csw.org.
- ^ "Recreation and Wellness Activities | The Cambridge School of Weston". www.csw.org.
- de Lone, Richard H. and Susan T., John Dewey is Alive and Well in New England, Saturday Review, November 21, 1970, pages 69–71. Included in: The New World of Educational Thought, Frank A. Stone, editor (Ardent Media, 1973. ISBN 0-8422-0282-X, ISBN 978-0-8422-0282-4), pages 182–189.