St. Anselm's Abbey School

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St. Anselm's Abbey School
Image:Stalogo.png
Motto Pax in Sapientia
"Peace in wisdom"
Established 1942
Type Private all-male secondary
Affiliations Roman Catholic, Benedictine
Headmaster Fr. Peter Weigand, OSB, MTS
Faculty 50 (approx)
Students 242 (in 2007-08)
Grades 6–12
Location 4501 South Dakota Avenue NE,
Washington, D.C., USA
Accreditation Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools
Mascot Panthers
Publications The Priory Press, The Corbie Chronicle
Website www.saintanselms.org

St. Anselm's Abbey School is an exclusive boys preparatory school for grades six through twelve in Washington D.C.. It is located in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Washington. The school sits on a forty-acre wooded campus in the city's Northeast quadrant and is run by the Benedictine monks of Saint Anselm's Abbey.

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[edit] History

The school was founded in 1942 as the Priory School by Fr. Thomas Verner Moore, OSB, the superior of what was then St. Anselm's Priory. The school was renamed St. Anselm's Abbey School in 1961, when the monastery was elevated to the status of an abbey.

St. Anselm's is home to the longest running high school basketball tournament in the Washington, D.C. metropolitan area. The St. Anselm's Invitational, founded by former basketball coach Bob Dwyer and former headmaster Fr. Hugh Monmonier, OSB, has been a tradition at the school since 1948.

Although the school began as a high school, 7th and 8th grade classes (known as Form I and Form II, respectively) were added in the late 1970s. A sixth grade, known as Form A, was added in 1991.

[edit] Academics

The school explicitly targets its program to "gifted and talented" boys. In 2004, roughly two-thirds of the graduating class achieved commendation or higher honors from the National Merit Scholar program, and the average combined SAT I score was over 1400. In 2003, roughly half of the senior class achieved the AP Scholar, AP Scholar with Distinction, or National AP Scholar level as defined by the Advanced Placement Program. The graduating class of 2001 had at least one student accepted to each of the Ivy League schools with the exception of Cornell University. Each student who has graduated from St. Anselm's Abbey School since its founding has been accepted to an accredited four-year college or university.

The school's curriculum emphasizes classics and is somewhat idiosyncratic. Grades are called "forms," in accordance with the British school system. In addition to six years of science and five years of a spoken language, four years of Latin are required. Ancient Greek is also offered as an elective for students in the Upper School, as is Arabic for students in fourth and fifth forms. As in many other religious schools, theology is also a required course each year.

The school is accredited by the Middle States Association of Colleges and Secondary Schools and is a member of the National Association of Independent Schools.

St. Anselm's is consistently rated by its score in the Washington Post's Challenge Index as one of the top high schools in the Washington D.C. area. In a December 2006 online discussion, Challenge Index creator Jay Mathews said, "Saint Anselm's Abbey in NE D.C. has one of the highest ratings in the country, far above most private schools I know."[1]

[edit] Student life

Class sizes are small, and the school's student-to-faculty ratio is approximately 5:1. Classes are smallest in the Upper Division (Forms V and VI), and graduating classes are typically made up of 35 or fewer students.

The school makes available to students a large number of clubs and associations, many unique to the school. These include The Cultural Student Organization, Mythology Club, Latin Club, Greek Club, It's Academic, Chamber Orchestra, Jazz Band, Fencing Club, Biology/Forensics Club, Sentence Diagramming Club, Chinese Anime Club, and Beekeeping Club.

St. Anselm's competes in the Potomac Valley Athletic Conference at the middle school and varsity levels in several sports each season. In Varsity Basketball, St. Anselm's last won the St. Anselm's Invitational in 2006, defending their title from the year 2005. In 2007, in one of the most competitive tournaments in recent memory, the Abbey squad placed as runners-up to St. Mary's of Annapolis; however, the 2007 team won the PVAC championship for the first time since 2003.

[edit] Campus and Facilities

The Abbey Church, St. Anselm's Abbey
The Abbey Church, St. Anselm's Abbey

The school's campus is approximately forty acres and includes the monastic building of St. Anselm's Abbey, an academic building, and an athletics/performing arts complex. The campus is also home to several tennis courts, athletic fields, batting cages, a cemetery, and extensive woodland areas.

The academic building is currently undergoing a large renovation. A large stadium-seating multimedia room with a grandiose stage and technology upgrades is almost complete. An earth science lab was recently completed, providing more space for experimentation in the science department. With its completion, the number of labs available to students is four, one for each of the major sciences. The largest and most noticeable upgrade is to the school entrance, with a new reception area and office space for student-teacher consultations. The rest of the school is also receiving minor technological upgrades.

The St. Anselm's Academic Building
The St. Anselm's Academic Building

[edit] Notable alumni, faculty and students

  • Brian K. Devine, '59 - current Chairman of the Board and former CEO of Petco
  • Morgan E. O'Brien, '62 - co-founder, former Chairman of the Board, and current Vice Chairman of Nextel
  • Xavier Suarez, '67 - First Cuban-born mayor of Miami
  • Patrick Boniface Resing, '97 - Digital Artist working in New York City.
  • Tom Napack, '03 - Keyboardist/Programmer of electroclash duo Dangerous Muse
  • Fr. John Main, OSB, Fifth Headmaster, 1970-1974 - distinguished leader in the field of Christian meditation
  • John Montroll, current Calculus and Origami teacher - author of many books on origami; one of the world's most distinguished paper-folders, also has been on design staff for nuclear submarines, and holds world record for being able to whistle in 5 octaves

[edit] See also

[edit] References

  1. ^ Mathews, Jay. "Challenge Index." Live Online Discussion. http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/discussion/2006/12/08/DI2006120800608.html

[edit] External links