Our Lady of the Visitation School

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Our Lady of the Visitation School
Location
Cincinnati, Ohio, United States
Information
School district Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Cincinnati
Affiliation(s) Roman Catholic, NCEA
Principal Terry P. Chapman
Students 835
Type Private, Co-ed
Grades 1–8
Athletics Baseball, basketball, bowling, football, golf, hockey, soccer, tennis, track, and volleyball
Athletics conference Varies for each sport
Motto "There are Different Gifts but the Same Spirit"
Mascot Viking
Color(s) Orange and Blue
Established 1949
Homepage

Our Lady of the Visitation School is a large private grade-school in Cincinnati, Ohio. The school has been noted for its academic achievements and is considered one the best schools in the Archdiocese of Cincinnati. The school won the 2007 Blue Ribbon Schools Competition. The school's name is often shortened to "Visi".

Contents

[edit] Academics

The school has grades 1-8 and there are four homerooms for each grade. Visitation has many extra classes as well. The school has one library, two gyms, two art rooms, two music rooms, and one large computer lab.

[edit] Blue-Ribbon Schools

Visitation won the 2007 Blue Ribbon Schools Competition. The Blue Ribbon award is considered to be the highest honor that an American school can achieve. Only one school per year is chosen to be a Blue Ribbon school. Any school in the U.S. can enter.

[edit] Extracurricular

[edit] Athletics

Visitation's mascot is a Viking and teams are normally nicknamed the “Visi Vikings”. Visitation offers many sports for all grades. In-school activities include "Olympic Day" and a volleyball game. "Olympic Day" is a day-long event in which students from each home room/grade compete in different activities. The volleyball game is a day-long event in which the 8th grade plays against the teachers (of any grade) in a volleyball game. Each homeroom (four homerooms) fields four teams and games take place throughout the day. Grades 1-7 watch the games (two grades for every four games) throughout the day as well.

[edit] Community Service

From first grade on many times of the year(for some grades almost everyday) there are opportunities for community service. Students raise money for charities, give gifts to those less fortunate, and many other things. The older students get the more responsibility students have. Eight graders have a group known as E.G.O.(Eight Grade Organization) which controls a lot (but not all) of which community service activity the school does and when certain fundraisers are. E.G.O. however doesn't control certain activities because certain activities or fundraisers are annual (such as the Layette program or the Ronald McDonald House Collection) and are not changed. Also, E.G.O. doesn't head every project either. For example, the seventh grade heads the Layette Program and the first grade heads a fundraiser to raise money for Guatemala schools. A.C.T.S.(Association of Catholic Teen Services) is a program that eight graders can join (but don't have to) which travels around the community doing acts of community service by visiting nursing homes, tutoring under privileged kids, and many other things.

[edit] Families

"Families" is an in-school program,started in 2005, that pairs members of each grade (so eight members per family usually) together for one year and then the families are reorganized. The eight grader in each family acts as the leader. "Families" participate in activities throughout the year such as making valentines for the elderly, creating things to hang up around the school, and simply have fun. Most recently "Families" created an human American Flag and sent to the U.S. troops overseas along with letters from each "family". "Families" are there to cut down on school bullying and troubles and allow for kids who normally feel left out at school find a home away from home, so to speak.

[edit] World Records

One of the activities "Families" do each year is setting a world record. The first year the whole school tried to set the world record for the biggest duck-duck-goose game. Visitation's success is pending.

[edit] 60th Anniversary

Visitation celebrated its parish's 60th Anniversary in 2006. The parish started in 1946 (the school didn't start until three years later) as a small church. The church, originally, was a converted army barracks. When the parish began growing rapidly a new church was planned. That church is still in use today but has since been expanded. More about this can be seen here.

[edit] Extra

  • Visitation also has a large cafeteria which serves hot lunch every day.
  • Visitation has an auditorium which is complete with a large stage as big or bigger than some high-school stages.

[edit] External links