Semester school

Semester school is a term used to describe a school that complements a student’s secondary education by providing them with the opportunity to step out of their regular school for half an academic year and step into a uniquely different educational setting while continuing their required academic studies.[1][2] The academic curriculum at semester schools tends to be college preparatory, interdisciplinary, and experiential.[3][4][5]

Contents

Characteristics

Benefits

Attending a semester school can:

Growth of Semester Schools

The first semester school was Milton Academy's Mountain School which opened in 1984 in Vershire, Vermont. Since then more than a dozen additional semester schools have opened across the United States of America and in other countries. The list of opening dates below shows the growth in semester schools over time and their geographic diversity.

1984 – Mountain School, Vershire, Vermont
1986 – Swiss Semester, Zermatt, Switzerland
1988 – Chewonki Semester School, Wiscasset, Maine (originally named Maine Coast Semester)
1995 – The Outdoor Academy, Pisgah Forest, North Carolina
1996 – CITYterm, Dobbs Ferry, New York
1997 – Discovery High School Semester at Sea, Western North Atlantic Ocean and the Caribbean Sea
1998 – HMI Semester, Leadville, Colorado (originally named Rocky Mountain Semester)
1999 – The Island School, Cape Eleuthera, Bahamas
1999 – Oxbow School, Napa, California
2004 – Woolman Semester, Nevada City, California
2004 – Kroka Semester School, Marlow, New Hampshire
2009 – School for Ethics and Global Leadership, Washington, D.C.
2009 – Finding the Good, Nevada City, California
2010 – Coastal Studies for Girls, Freeport, Maine
2010 – Conserve School, Land O’ Lakes, Wisconsin

Projected launches of new semester schools

2012 – Alzar School, Valley County, Idaho
2012 – Burr and Burton Academy Mountain Campus, Manchester, Vermont
2013 – New England Friends Semester School, Rindge, New Hampshire

References