Thomas Jefferson School
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Thomas Jefferson School | |
Location | |
---|---|
4100 S. Lindbergh Blvd., Sunset Hills, MO, 63127 USA |
|
Information | |
Affiliation(s) | None |
Head of school | William Rowe |
Enrollment |
82 |
Faculty | 12 |
Type | Private |
Mascot | Titans |
Color(s) | Blue & White |
Established | 1946 |
Campus | Suburban |
Homepage | http://www.tjs.org/ |
Thomas Jefferson School is a small coeducational boarding and day school located in Sunset Hills, Missouri, near St. Louis, and consistently rated among the United States' top boarding schools for academic standards and college matriculation.[citation needed]
[edit] School History
Thomas Jefferson School, or TJ as it is known to students and faculty, was founded in 1946 by Robin McCoy, Charles E. Merrill Jr. (son of a founder of Merrill Lynch;also started the Commonwealth School in Massachusetts), and Graham Spring. They planned to establish, in the Midwest, a boarding school with academic standards equal to those of its more famous New England peers. They also tried to create a school whose governance rested with the faculty, patterned after the colleges that comprise Oxford and Cambridge Universities, which are faculty-governed institutions. Teachers who remain at the school for a relatively long period of time automatically become Board members; there are also a number of outside, nonfaculty Board members drawn from the alumni, past parents, and friends of the school.
For its first twenty-five years, TJ remained a boarding and day school for boys in grades 9-12, with a demanding curriculum and success in sending students to top colleges. In the 1950s, owing to the school's high standards and prevailing practices in college admission, it was a feeder for Harvard. The school became coed in 1971. During the 1970s, the school also began admitting students as five-day boarders, an option for families who live in the "middle distance" and for some others who live closer to the school. The school added an eighth grade in 1976 and a seventh grade in 1981.
Robin McCoy remained Headmaster for 34 years, and Lawrence Morgan (TJ '53) succeeded him in the summer of 1980. William C. Rowe (TJ '63) succeeded Mr. Morgan as Head of School in July, 2000.
[edit] Overview
The school is located on twenty acres in the middle of St. Louis's South County suburbs. It is somewhat unique in that it is extremely small for a school of its kind, with only 82 students from grades 7 through 12, about one fourth of whom are international students. Boarding students and day students attend in about equal numbers.
TJ is focused on the classics, and the ideal of a classical education in general, balanced by a strong math program (all students continue through calculus) and Advanced Placement work in science and history for all students. The Greek program, in particular, is among the best in the nation. Classes, all in the morning, are discussion-oriented and relatively short, at 35 minutes. Students spend the remainder of the day studying independently, engaged in athletics and other extracurriculars, or consulting privately with the thirteen faculty members, some of whom live on campus. Supervisory staff also includes two Resident Assistants.
As ranked by the Boarding School Review, the median SAT scores of seniors are among the highest in the nation for boarding schools: 710 reading, 670 math, 690 writing. The school also has a good deal of success in sending its students to top colleges and universities, with a large share of its alumni going on to attend liberal arts colleges.
The school has long held membership in the National Association of Independent Schools (NAIS), the Association of Boarding Schools (TABS), and Midwest Boarding Schools (MWBS), and in 1997 it gained full accreditation by the Independent Schools Association of the Central States (ISACS).