Kent School | |
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Temperantia, Fiducia, Constantia
"'Simplicity of Life, Directness of Purpose, Self-Reliance'" |
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Location | |
1 Macedonia Road Kent, Connecticut, USA |
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Information | |
Type | Private, Boarding |
Religious affiliation(s) | Episcopalian |
Established | 1906 |
Headmaster | The Reverend Richardson W. Schell '69 |
Faculty | 80.1 (on FTE basis)[1] |
Enrollment | 560 (as of 2008-09)[1] >90% boarding /~10% day |
Average class size | 12 students |
Student to teacher ratio | 7:1 |
Campus | Township |
Color(s) | Blue & Gray |
Athletics | 22 Interscholastic Sports 56 Interscholastic Teams |
Mascot | Lion |
Endowment | $73 million [2] |
Website | www.kent-school.edu |
Kent School is a private, co-educational college preparatory school in Kent, Connecticut, USA. The Reverend Frederick Herbert Sill, Order of the Holy Cross, established the school in 1906 and it retains its affiliation with the Episcopal Church of the United States.
Students at Kent come from more than 40 foreign countries and nearly as many states([1]). Situated between the Appalachian Trail and the Housatonic River, the 1,200-acre (490 ha) campus currently serves 560 students, about 510 of whom board. The school was one of the first New England boarding schools to educate both young men and women in 1960. Kent School Boat Club also became the first American school crew to row at British Henley Royal Regatta and compete for the Thames Challenge Cup in 1927([2]).
Kent is a member of the Founders League of New England preparatory schools which consists of, among others, Choate Rosemary Hall, Hotchkiss School and The Taft School. (Founders League Schools)
As of the 2008-09 school year, the school had an enrollment of 560 students and 80.1 classroom teachers (on an FTE basis), for a student-teacher ratio of 7.1.[1]
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Born in New York City on March 10, 1874, Father Reverend Frederick Herbert Sill attended Columbia University and the General Theological Seminary. He was a monk of the Order of the Holy Cross and in 1906 he saw the need for a school where "young men with slender means could gain an education second to none." Unlike the traditional boarding schools of the day that were reserved for the wealthy American elite, Kent School would serve young men whose parents could not afford the alternative.
Father Sill led the school for the first thirty-five years of its existence. In the ensuing years, four headmasters have led Kent. Father Schell, the current Headmaster and Rector, graduated from Kent in 1969 and studied at Harvard (A.B. '73) and Yale (M.Div. '76) before returning to Kent as Chaplain. He was appointed Headmaster in 1981.
Founded in the Episcopal tradition, as were many New England boarding schools, Kent has retained its spiritual affiliation in an era when many other institutions have relinquished theirs. Kent's diverse student body comes from a variety of religious backgrounds and secular traditions. The entire student body gathers at St. Joseph's Chapel for three weekly services, which often include a student, faculty, or guest speaker or performance.
Originally an all-boys school, a campus for girls opened in 1960 with 100 girls in the third and fourth forms, making Kent one of the first of the traditional New England boarding schools to offer co-education. The girls' and boys' campuses were consolidated in 1992, resulting in the current, fully integrated co-educational campus of 560 students. Currently 46% of students are female and 54% male.
From the onset, Kent has been a pioneer in educating a variety of students, regardless of their social or economic status. Father Sill was committed to educating students from "all walks of life." This original mission resulted in his "sliding scale tuition," where families paid a tuition which Father Sill felt they could afford. Kent continues this mission today with the Parents Fund and the Financial Aid Program, with one-third of the student body receiving some form of aid. Awarding more than six million dollars in the 2008 academic year, Kent's commitment to financial aid, relative to its endowment, ranks first among its peer schools.
Of the 66 teachers who compose the faculty, 71% have advanced degrees. Sixty percent of the teachers are men; forty percent, women. The average length of tenure at the School is greater than twelve years. Several teachers live on campus with their families. The student-to-faculty ratio is 8:1.
Kent offers a college-preparatory curriculum with 160 courses, 25 of which are Advanced Placement.[3] The average class size is twelve students.[4]
Kent offers 22 interscholastic sports with 56 interscholastic teams ranging from the 3rds, Junior Varsity, and Varsity. More than three-quarters of the student body participate in interscholastic sports. Many of the school's athletes earn All-League or All-New England Honors, and go on to compete at Division I, II, and III colleges and universities. Kent is a member of the athletics Founders League of New England prep schools.[5] Its mascot is the lion, and formerly, the fighting Episcopalian. Loomis Chaffee and Kent have a long-running rivalry. The two schools have annual Kent vs. Loomis days in which both schools play a number of sports to compete for a spoon and a bowl. The Kent football team is undefeated in six consecutive matchups.
Crew at Kent has had a long history (Kent School Boat Club). The first crew was formed in 1922 with the encouragement of Father Sill, who was intimately familiar with the sport. Father Sill was the coxwain on the Columbia crew which won the first ever Poughkeepsie Regatta.
The program developed fast. In the ensuing years, Kent began competing with the Yale and Harvard teams and by 1927, was the first American school crew to row at British Henley and compete for the Thames Challenge Cup. In 1930, Kent was again Henley-bound, this time with the encouragement of New York Governor and future President, Franklin D. Roosevelt, who wished the team success and hoped that the "presence of a crew of American school boys will be helpful in strengthening the ties between good sportsmen of the two countries."
In 1933, Kent won the Thames Challenge Cup, just six years after launching the program. The Times in Britain wrote, "Kent School were almost certaintly the best crew that ever rowed in the Thames Cup." Kent continued to achieve success in the sport, competing at Henley 32 times and winning 5 times, most recently in 1972. The school was featured twice in Life magazine, once in May 1937 and the other in June 1948 when Stuart Auchincloss '48 was featured on the cover. Kent Boys Crew has won the New England Championship Regatta 25 times since 1947.
Kent girls crew began in 1973. They have won two National Championships (1986 and 1987), and won New Englands in 1983, 1985, 1986, 1987, 1996, and 1997. In 2002, they won at Henley.
In 2006, Kent boys crew won the New Englands championship. This team also became the first American crew to challenge for the new Prince Albert Cup at Henley. In 2010, Kent Boys Crew won the New Englands points trophy and placed 1st at Youth Nationals. They were runners up in the Princess Elizabeth Cup.
In the fall of 2009, Kent Football was the first American secondary school to compete internationally during the Fall season.
Kent is situated on 1,200 acres (4.9 km2) between the Appalachian Trail and Housatonic River. The picturesque New England landscape surrounds the campus' Georgian brick buildings, arranged comfortably along the river bank.
Residential Buildings: North Dorm, Borsdorff Hall, Middle Dorm South, Middle Dorm North, Case Dorm, Dining Hall Dorm, Field Dorm
Instructional Buildings: Foley Hall, Dickinson Science Center, Schoolhouse, Mattoon Language Center, Field Building, 50,000-volume John Gray Park Library, Mattison Auditorium, St. Joseph's Chapel, Music Studios, Art Studios
Athletics: Magowan Field House (Basketball, Weight Rooms, Pool), Fitness Center, Brainard Squash Courts, Indoor Tennis Building (4 courts), Springs Center (Nadal Hockey Rink), Sill Boathouse, Waring Partridge Rowing Center, Southfields Facility, Kent Stables, 9 Playing Fields, 13 Outdoor Tennis Courts, Cross-Country Course.
In 1995, Kent partnered with Microsoft, Toshiba and 29 other pioneer schools creating the Anytime Anywhere Learning program.Traditions and Innovations This program equips Kent students with laptop computers for use in every classroom on campus. Since 2002, these have been Tablet PCs. In addition, all of the classrooms and dorm rooms, as well as the library and administrative offices, have access to the Internet and the School network. All dorm rooms are equipped with individual data and voice connections which provide phone, Internet, and intranet access for each student. All of the academic areas, dorm common rooms and many public areas provide secure wireless as well.
The book (and 1999 film adaptation) Outside Providence is a fictionalized account of Peter Farrelly's experiences at the school.
The animated TV show Family Guy is written by alumnus Seth MacFarlane. In 1999, the school's headmaster, Father Schell, wrote to a number of companies urging them not to advertise with the TV show calling it obnoxious. Seth MacFarlane's parents, who worked at the school, resigned in protest.[6]
William G. Pollard, Fiftieth anniversary of Kent School