Saint Joseph's Preparatory School

Saint Joseph's Preparatory School
Men For and With Others
Ad Majorem Dei Gloriam
(For the greater glory of God)
Address
1733 West Girard Avenue
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 19130
 United States
Information
Type Private, All-Male
Religious affiliation(s) Roman Catholic;
Society of Jesus
Established 1851
President Rev. George Bur, SJ '59
Principal Michael Gomez
Faculty 75
Grades 9-12
Enrollment 931  (2008)
Campus size 6.5 acres (26,000 m2)
Color(s) Crimson and Gray         
Slogan Educating Men of Competence, Conscience & Compassion since 1851
Song Swing on Along With the Crimson
Athletics conference Philadelphia Catholic League
Mascot The Hawk
Team name Hawks
Accreditation(s) Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools[1]
Average SAT scores 615 Verbal
623 Math
614 Writing
Admissions Director Jason Zazyczny '90
Athletic Director James Murray '59
Website

Saint Joseph's Preparatory School, founded in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania in 1851, is a Catholic, urban, college preparatory school for young men. The school is operated by the Society of Jesus.

Contents

History

In 1851, St. Joseph’s College opened in the buildings of St. Joseph’s Parish off Willings Alley in Philadelphia, just a few blocks from Independence Hall. By then, a permanent church had replaced the old Chapel attached to the Jesuit Residence. On September 15, 1851, ninety-five students greeted Rev. Felix Barbelin, the first president of St. Joseph’s College, for their first day of class. The Commonwealth of Pennsylvania chartered the school, and it was incorporated as "The St. Joseph's College In The City of Philadelphia" on January 29, 1852.

In 1876, the land that is now St. Joseph's Prep was open country near the Centennial Exposition in Fairmount Park. Around this time, the Jesuits of the Maryland Province were planning to open another parish in a part of the city more conducive to operating a college. The Girard area seemed like a natural location because it was a blossoming suburb with Girard College, Eastern State Penitentiary, a hospital and a reservoir nearby. Father Barbelin found an undeveloped block between 17th and 18th Streets and bounded on the north and south by Thompson and Girard Streets. Here the Church of the Gesu and St. Joseph's Prep were built.

The Prep's school building, which had housed students for nearly 75 years, was almost completely destroyed by fire on the night of January 30, 1966. After fierce debate over the location and construction of a new school building—which included plans to relocate outside the city limits—the new Prep building, with modern (and fireproof) flourishes, opened in 1969 at the same location.

Church of the Gesu

In the early 1990's the Jesuits permitted the Gesu Parish to be closed, although the former parish school has been maintained as a private Catholic school. The Prep purchased the adjacent Church of the Gesu (named for the Society of Jesus' original church in Rome) from the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Philadelphia. It now serves as the school's chapel.

Changes

St. Joseph's was one of many religiously-affiliated secondary institutions in the Delaware Valley marked for changes in the early 1990's. At one point, the administration strongly considered a move from single-sex to co-educational classrooms due to low enrollment; similar changes had been implemented at other Jesuit secondary institutions such as Scranton Preparatory School. However, in subsequent years, both admissions and enrollment have substantially increased, removing the need for gender integration.

In the summer, The Prep hosts a Pre-8th Grade program for 5 weeks for girls and boys going into 8th grade. The program includes a variety of activities including swimming, ping-pong, wiffleball, basketball, volleyball, and soccer. It also includes computer classes, drama classes, Math, and Literature/LA.

Mission

"The mission of St. Joseph’s Prep, a Jesuit, urban, college preparatory school, is to develop the minds, hearts, souls, and characters of young men in their pursuit of becoming men for and with others."[2]

In the summer of 2006, the Prep community began an intensive program of "mission renewal", so as to reaffirm the core tenets of the school's philosophy and thus differentiate it from similar Catholic secondary institutions in the area. This process is ongoing.

Academics

The Prep offers a four-year college preparatory program geared to intellectually talented students. Its faculty has an average of 17 years of service. Of the full-time faculty of approximately 70 men and women, over 91% possess master's degrees.

Graduation Requirements: To graduate, a student must complete 26 academic credits, satisfy the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania requirement for physical education and fulfill community service requirements (20 hours for juniors, 40 hours for seniors) through the Ignatian Service Program. Course requirements include: Six years of foreign language study (with a minimum of two years of a modern language, and two years of Latin or Greek), English (four years), Fine Arts (one semester), history (three years, including one year of Government), mathematics (four years, or three years of mathematics and one year of computer science), religious studies (four years) and science (three years).

Special Academic Opportunities: Advanced Placement courses are offered in 15 areas of study, including English, history, Latin, mathematics, psychology, science, and computer science. All students enrolled in Advanced Placement courses are required to take the Advanced Placement examinations.[3]

Accreditations: The Prep is fully accredited by the Pennsylvania Department of Education and the Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools. It is also an active member of the Jesuit Secondary Education Association, the National Catholic Education Association, the Pennsylvania Association of Independent Schools, and the Association of Delaware Valley Independent Schools.[4]

Community

St. Joseph's Preparatory School, one of forty-five (45) Jesuit secondary institutions in the United States, is located just north of Center City Philadelphia. The present student body includes residents of metropolitan Philadelphia (30%), the surrounding suburban communities (50%) and New Jersey (20%).

Athletics

All of the Prep's athletic teams compete in the Philadelphia Catholic League (16 schools); most participate in the eight-member Southern Division. The Prep joined the Pennsylvania Interscholastic Athletic Association in the 2007-2008 school year.

Fall: Cross Country, Football (varsity, junior varsity and freshmen), Crew (varsity and junior varsity), Soccer (varsity, junior varsity and freshmen), and Golf.

Winter: Basketball (varsity, junior varsity and freshmen), Bowling (varsity and junior varsity), Indoor Track, Swimming and Wrestling (varsity and junior varsity).

Spring: Baseball (varsity, junior varsity, and freshman), Crew (varsity, junior varsity and freshmen),Lacrosse, Outdoor Track and Tennis.

In addition the Prep offers a number of sports at the club level including Ultimate Frisbee, Rugby (A-Side, B-Side, U16-Side),Ice Hockey (Varsity AAA, Varsity A, JV), Squash, and Fencing.

Notable Alumni

Capital Campaign

The Prep completed a $30 million dollar capital campaign, which involved transforming the nearby former Jesuit Residence (adjacent to the Gesu Church) into a new academic center and cafeteria: Jesuit Hall and The Sauter Dining Hall. The new renovations are meant to ease pressure on the main academic building (which held almost 1,000 students, while designed for a smaller student population) and allow the Prep to provide more need-based scholarships and better implementation of technology.

References

  1. ^ MSA-CSS. "MSA-Commission on Secondary Schools". http://www.css-msa.org/search.php/. Retrieved 2009-07-31. 
  2. ^ SJP: Our Mission
  3. ^ SJP: College Information
  4. ^ SJP: Academics
  5. ^ http://www.defense.gov/transcripts/transcript.aspx?transcriptid=4794
  6. ^ http://www.navy.mil/navydata/bios/navybio.asp?bioID=169
  7. ^ Couloumbis, Angela (20 June 2011). "Hussein capture puts spotlight on local officer Army Maj. Brian J. Reed of Huntingdon Valley was part of the team that caught the Iraqi ex-dictator.". The Philadelphia Inquirer. http://articles.philly.com/2003-12-17/news/25469379_1_saddam-hussein-fort-hood-first-brigade-combat-team. Retrieved 20 June 2011. 
  8. ^ http://www.asanet.org/footnotes/julyaugust05/fn3.html
  9. ^ Lane, Chris. "Reggie Redding, this Bud's for you!". http://www.thenovablog.com/2010/4/7/1408524/reggie-redding-this-buds-for-you. Retrieved 20 June 2011. 
  10. ^ Evan Amos (28 April 2011). "Evan Amos interview with Matt Duke". http://commons.wikimedia.org/wiki/User:Evan-Amos/Interviews/MattDuke. Retrieved 4 May 2011. 

External links