Ridley College
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- There is also Ridley College (University of Melbourne) in Australia
Ridley College is a co-educational boarding and day University-preparatory school located in St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada.
Motto | Terar Dum Prosim "May I be consumed in service" |
Established | 1889 |
Headmaster | Jonathan Leigh (2005-current) |
School type | Co-ed Private Boarding/Day |
Religious affiliation | Anglican |
Location | St. Catharines, Ontario, Canada |
Enrollment | 585 |
Campus Surroundings | Niagara |
Mascot | Tiger |
School Colours | Orange and Black |
Website | www.ridleycollege.com |
Contents |
[edit] History
Founded in 1889 under the auspices of its first headmaster, J. O. Miller, the School was forced to move to its present location as a result of a fire in the old school building. Today, Ridley is widely considered one of Canada's most prominent private independent secondary schools. The School's current headmaster, Jonathan Leigh, succeeded his predecessor, Rupert Lane, in January, 2005.
Originally a boys-only School, Ridley became co-educational in 1973 under headmaster Richard Bradley. Named in honour of Nicholas Ridley, a sixteenth-century Protestant martyr, the School remains tied to its original Anglican origin, but has long welcomed students of other faiths.
The School yearbook is titled Acta Ridleiana.
[edit] Middle School
The Middle School (formerly, the "Lower School") is located across the campus from the Upper School and the Chapel. The Middle School has one Grade 5 class, one Grade 6 class, two Grade 7 classes and three Grade 8 classes. The Middle school timetable consists of eight 37 and a half minute periods, with a lunch and one morning recess. The Middle School has a Drama Room; a carpentry shop; an art room; grades 5-8 homerooms, in which English and math are taught; a resource centre; and, a boys' and girls' residence. The typical Middle School class has 10-15 children. Middle School also hosts a 'Student Council'.
[edit] Upper School
There are roughly 624 Upper School students at Ridley. The Upper School or School House Building has a campus co-op store, a computer repair and order desk, and classrooms. The Second Century Building (2CB) houses: science labs; a music department, providing an instrument for every student in a class; a photography darkroom; an art department; and, the Mandeville Theatre. The Mandeville Theatre is an auditorium--not only used by Ridley, but also by nearby schools and production companies. The theatre can seat 353 people.
[edit] The Memorial Chapel
The Bishop Ridley College Memorial Chapel was built during the 1920s and dedicated to the memory of those Ridleians who died defending Canada in World War I. The chapel building was enlarged during the 1960s. Each stained glass window is unique, bearing such non-traditional imagery as Ridley football helmets, but also more conventional Christian imagery. The Chapel is equipped with a sound system, a new Yamaha grand piano and 2 pipe organs. The Ridley Pipe Organ is a Casavant Freres Opus 1099. It had a second manual keyboard added later in its life. The pipe for this added organ are located at the back of the Chapel, while the original four sets (great, choir, swell and pedal) are at the front. The Middle School chapel service includes at least one musical performance each Friday. The current Chaplain at Ridley is Reverend Tim Novis.
[edit] Academics
The School is well respected academically among its peers, which include Upper Canada College, Trinity College School, Appleby College, Bishop Strachan School, Bishop's College School, Crescent School, Nichols School, St. Andrew's College, Branksome Hall, Lakefield College School, and Havergal College (which, historically, was Ridley's sister School). Ridleians consider a culturally-diverse student body an asset to, and an exemplifying characteristic of, the School. Ridley continues to welcome students from throughout Canada, including Ontario, Quebec, Alberta and the Maritimes; from the United States; Latin America; the United Kingdom; the Caribbean; and, from southeast Asia. The School participates in the English-Speaking Union.
Ridley students benefit from superior facilities to enhance their studies. Ridley's 'Second Century Building' is a magnificent example of such superiority, with facilities emphasizing the use of laptop computers, the sciences, and the performing arts. Class sizes tend to be comparatively smaller, about half of that of public (government-operated and controlled) schools. The faculty are superior, with many holding graduate degrees and being available for academic consultation during evening study within the Ridley residence system. Over 98% of Ridley graduates matriculate to universities worldwide. Upon graduation, all graduates, both male and female, become entitled to optionally use the post-nominal "O.R." (Old Ridleian).
The School reorganised the terminology applied to its curriculum coincident with the implementation of the new Ontario four-year secondary school curriculum. The School continues to offer a fifth, "PG" ("post-graduate") year (similar to the previous OAC and AP), in order to ensure competitive university admission for Ridley graduates to universities in the United States and Canada. The School is a test administration site for the SSAT and the SAT. Thus, even as Ontario has abbreviated its standards for public schools, Ridley continues to exceed by a wide margin Ontario's minimum secondary school educational requirements.
Ridley College is accredited to the Canadian Association of Independent Schools (CAIS)[1] and the Canadian Educational Standards Institute (CESI) [2] under the Ridley College Board of Governors [3].
As a private, University-preparatory school, Ridley College is neither associated with nor accountable to any local school board.
[edit] School Motto and Colours
The School's Latin motto is Terar Dum Prosim, translated as "May I be consumed in service", a reference both to the martyrdom of Nicholas Ridley and to modern Ridleians' obligations to give to others of themselves. Students in the '60s and 70s jocularly translated the motto as "Tear Down Our Prison". The School uniform is known as 'blues and greys'. The School Colours are orange and black, and the School mascot is the Tiger (known as 'Hank'). The orange-and-black car used in cheerleading at football games is known as the 'Hank Tank'.
It has been suggested that the School adopt, as its unofficial motto, words also used to comprise the motto of the Republic of Trinidad and Tobago: “Together we aspire; together we achieve”.
[edit] School Life
Ridley's School Life philosophy could be said to embrace four essential qualities: academics, athletics, citizenship, and faith.
One of Ridley's most notable traditions is the 'Snake Dance,' a school spirit-building celebration inspired by the novel Lord of the Flies, to inaugurate the fall sports season. Other traditions include an annual Cross-Country Run, intramural competition between dormitory residences for the Bradley Shield (girls') and Bermuda Cup (boys') trophies, the Chimes Challenge (a sprinting contest held during the midday chimes of the clock tower) and the annual Prize Day that concludes the school year, which is divided into three trimesters, known as the 'Michaelmas', 'Lent' and 'Trinity' terms. North American students typically return to their families during School holidays, and often international students who choose not to return to their home countries (or are unable to due to time constraints) are billeted with some Ridley families residing in North America during some School holidays.
The School is comprised of a Middle School (grades 5-8, formerly the Lower School) and an Upper School (grades 9-12 and PG). Essential to School life is the Ridley residence system (see House system), in which both boarders and day students participate, supervised by Housemasters who are also members of the School's faculty and reside within the residences. The residences are named for prominent alumni. The school day begins with a brief Chapel service in the Anglican tradition, with school days on Wednesdays and Saturdays being of half-day duration.
The School has dining halls for both the Middle and Upper Schools. On Wednesday and Saturday afternoons, intramural and inter-School sports fixtures are held. A full Eucharist service is held on Sunday mornings, through which the Anglican church year is observed. Often, alumni choose to have their weddings and baptisms take place in the Ridley College Chapel. The School faculty includes a full-time Chaplain, who also has academic duties and serves on Master-on-duty rotation (see 'evening study', above).
Discipline is based on the demerit system, and accumulations of demerits lead to the imposition of 'gatings', during which students are prohibited from leaving the campus and must 'check in' with the Master on Duty each half-hour, on the half-hour, when not engaged in classroom work or taking meals.
In 1981, the National Film Board of Canada released the documentary film Ridley: A Secret Garden about the School.[4]
In 2000, the book Ridley: A Canadian School, by Richard Bradley and Paul Lewis, was published, also about the School.[5]
[edit] Athletics
The school has several competitive athletics teams, including the boy's soccer team, Canadian Independent Schools National Champions in 2003, the boy's ice hockey team, which competes in the highly competitive Midwest Prep Hockey League, and the boy's lacrosse team, defending champions of the CISAA league. Boy's basketball has continued to be a strong program at Ridley, winning numerous Canadian Independent Schools Championsips in the last few years. Traditionally, cricket was a popular fixture at the school, though in recent years the sport has been dropped due to waning interest. Today one of Ridley's most renowned athletics programs is comprised of its strong rowing crews. Ridley crews often hold, and are currently holding, the honour of National Champions as a result of prevailing in the CSSRA Championships, held in St. Catharines on an annual basis. Girls' sports include rugby, introduced in 2002; field hockey; and, volleyball.
[edit] Cadet Corps
The School maintains a well-established, yet controversial and oft-debated, tradition of mandatory service in the Royal Canadian Army Cadets. Each year, all students are required to parade in an inspection by a visiting Canadian inspecting Officer. Ridley will participate in its 100th annual inspection in May 2007. Rarely, during the Cadet Inspection students have fainted due to the heavy uniforms and heat of the day.
[edit] Surveillance
Ridley College boasts a top of the line video surveillance system, extending from outdoor monitoring cameras to video cameras 'secretly' built in to the exit signs in the hallways of each residence. These cameras were originally installed to capture laptop thieves, but never succeeded in bringing anyone to justice. They remain installed as a reminder of the failures of Rupert Lane and Margaret Lech (Former Dean of Students) who, even in violating the rights of students, were unable to outwit a couple of teenagers.
[edit] Notable Alumni
- Hume Cronyn, film and stage actor, Cocoon; Cocoon: The Return; *Batteries Not Included [6]
- David A. Dodge, Governor of the Bank of Canada [7]
- Colm Feore, film and stage actor, Trudeau[8]; Pearl Harbor; The Sum of All Fears; The Insider
- Peter Gzowski, journalist and author, Morningside; The Private Voice, A Journal of Reflections[9]
- Raine Maida, lead singer of Our Lady Peace
- Samantha McGlone, Canadian triathelete.
- Michael Sabia, CEO of Bell Canada.
- John Bell, founder of the Wellcome Trust Center for Human Genetics.
- Henry Allen John, 8th Earl Bathurst
- James Coyne, Governor of the Bank of Canada[10]