Jackson Academy (Mississippi)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Jackson Academy

Image:jacrest.gif

Name
Motto

Jackson Academy
Integrity, Achievement, Growth.

Address

4908 Ridgewood Road

City

Jackson, Mississippi

Established

1959

Type

Independent

Religion

Secular

Students

Coeducational

Grades

K3 through 12

Membership and Accreditations

National Association of Independent Schools, Southern Association of Independent Schools, Southern Association of Colleges and Schools, and the Mississippi Private School Association

Mascot

Raiders

Colors

Navy, Silver and White

Yearbook

Reflections

Newspaper

JA Chronicle

Website

Link

Jackson Academy is an independent, co-educational college preparatory school in Jackson, Mississippi. Unlike many independent schools which sprang up as symbols of opposition to forced integration of the public schools, JA was founded in 1959. In 1979, the campus was flooded entirely. Today, the campus is thriving with nearly 1550 students in grades K3 through 12. The school is a member of the prestigious Cum Laude Society Academic Honorary, one of only four charter members in Mississippi.

JA is the largest independent school in Mississippi. Its mission is "to serve students who prescribe to high times and lifelong learning in a balanced and nurturing environment in which each student is valued and is challenged to become a responsible citizen who can achieve his or her intellectual, spiritual, emotional, social, and physical potential."

Contents

[edit] Future

Peter Jernberg has been JA's headmaster since July of 1988. Jernberg also serves on the board for the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools and is the past president of the Delta State University Foundation and the Southern Association of Independent Schools. The school has, however, begun a nation-wide search for a new headmaster so Jernberg can serve the school as its first President and CEO. This decision was implemented so Jernberg can guide the school through its recently announced master plan [1], which intends to revolutionize the campus and community. The master plan has two parts and will cost an estimated $17.5 million.

Keith Branning is the senior high dean and associate headmaster. Bill Bunch is the associate senior high dean. Bobby West, a hugely successful high school basketball coach in the 1980's, is the junior high dean and athletic director. Sara Love is dean of the elementary school.

According to the school's website, The overall master plan has been divided into two phases:

Phase One includes the following objectives: a performing arts center for school programs, theatrical productions and concerts as well as classroom and rehearsal space for choral music and a black-box theater; a student commons with dining facilities, student lounges and meeting spaces accessible to all grades; an enclosed atrium connecting the student commons to the performing arts center; an academic lawn along Ridgewood Road made possible by moving parking and traffic circulation behind the buildings; a new parking lot creating 150 additional spaces as well as improved traffic flow with a quarter mile of queing space for cars on campus and off public roads; and a new 2,000 seat gymnasium adjacent to the secondary school gym.

Phase Two will include appropriate replacement of long-serving facilities with a new, state-of-the-art junior/senior high building to serve 7-12 grades; and a new, expanded elementary building.

[edit] Alumni

The school has an outstanding academic reputation and consistently sends its graduates to America's most prestigious universities. Notable alums include Calvin Thigpen ('94) who was a Rhodes Scholar and Jennifer Fillingim ('95) who was a Rhodes Scholar State Finalist. Thigpen said that "as students at Jackson Academy, we have had teachers who have pushed us farther than we once thought we could go. They have inspired passions in us; they have taught us to think critically, and they have taught us to communicate clearly. They have done these things because, like the staff, coaches and administrators who work alongside them, the teachers of Jackson Academy feel it is an honor to be a part of the lives of all of their students."

Currently, 10% of the University of Mississippi's Medical School graduating class are JA alumni [2], which is the second time this feat has been reached (with the first being in 1999). In addition, several JA alums have become the top student leaders on their campuses. Calvin Thigpen ('94) and Drew Snyder ('99) both were ASB Presidents at Ole Miss; Matt Allen ('96) was SA President at Mississippi State; William Waller III ('98) and Michael Ward ('03) were SA Presidents at Mississippi College. These examples prove that JA develops some of Mississippi's most well-rounded students and leaders.

[edit] JA Athletics

Jackson Academy also excels in athletics. The football team has won three consecutive state championships, and Jackson Academy regularly wins or contends for championships in boys basketball, girls basketball, tennis, track, and baseball. Major rivals include Jackson Prep, Hillcrest Christian School, and MRA. Former high school boys basketball coach Stan Jones, who led JA to overall championships in 1994 and 1995, is now an assistant basketball coach at Florida State University. He has also coached at The University of Miami and the Washington Wizards.

[edit] Football

As with many places in the deep south, football is the heart and soul of the athletic program and in some respects, the school itself. Joey Hawkins is the head coach of the high school football team. In his five seasons at JA, Hawkins has compiled a 53-7 record, winning four state championships, including the last three. He won the Metro Jackson Coach of the Year for 2005. To date, JA and Madison Central hold the record for the most coaches named to the All-Metro team at three, respectively [3]. In addition, Hawkins track team hasn't lost an individual track meet since 1997. In 1996, Hawkins was hired as head coach of Jackson Academy's junior high team, replacing popular head Dan Boyce, who had taken a high school head coaching job at Indianola Academy. From 1996-2000, Hawkins led the JV Raiders to a 35-2 record and to four South AAAA JV titles. In the spring of 2001, JA Athletic Director Bobby West made a surprising announcement that David Blount, the head football coach of 5 1/2 seasons, two-time state champion winner, and 1996 Metro Jackson Coach of the Year, would be taking a position as Assistant Athletic Director. Hawkins would move up from junior high school to coach high school, and Tom Luke, a former University of Mississippi quarterback, would remain as offensive coordinator. Many supporters of JA athletics were skeptical about the new coach. Though Hawkins was very successful junior high coach, he lacked extensive high school head coaching experience. Blount was the first JA head coach in the history of the school to defeat Jackson Prep, doing it in 1995, 1996, and 1998. But JA had lost three consecutive contests to Prep when Hawkins took over. The 2001 JA Raiders faltered early in the season, losing to North AAAA rival Lee Academy in Clarksdale. But behind an experienced offensive line a workhorse running back Rob Cannon, JA rolled to several victories and earned a spot in the playoffs. Hawkins would lose his first meeting with Jackson Prep in the regular season, but a 14-0 playoff victory on the road against Starkville Academy gave JA a second chance against Prep. At Robinson-Hale stadium in Clinton, Mississippi, Hawkins's Raiders played a magnificent defensive game and shocked Jackson Prep 12-7. Like his predecessor, Hawkins had won a state championship in his first season. But the momentum would last under Hawkins' leadership.

[edit] Hawkins Coaching Record At JA


2005 12-0 (MPSA Class AAA Div-1 State Champion)
2004 11-1 (MPSA Class AAA Div-1 State Champion)
2003 11-1 (MPSA Class AAA Div-1 State Champion)
2002 10-2 (MPSA Class AAA Div-1 State Champion)
2001 9-3 (MPSA Class AAAA State Champion)

[edit] JA Alums Playing College Football

  • Miles Lane, '02, T, Navy

[edit] JA Athletics on the Radio

Jackson Academy is one of a few high schools that has all of its football, boys basketball, girls basketball, and baseball games broadcast via radio [4]. Bryan Eubank is the voice of Jackson Academy Football, a position he has held since 2000. Ben Ingram is the basketball voice for JA. Jay White handles the call during baseball season. JA is one of a handful of schools, independent or public, to have all of its major sports broadcast via radio in the Jackson, Mississippi area.

[edit] Images

Images is a publication of fiction, nonfiction, poems and art by Jackson Academy students. The publication has won the Gold Crown, the highest award bestowed by the Columbia Scholastic Press Association. No other high school publication in the state of Mississippi has received this award. Images also has won the Highest Award by the National Council of Teachers of English.

[edit] References