Wooster School | |
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Location | |
Danbury, Connecticut, United States | |
Information | |
Type | Private, Co-ed |
Motto | Ex Quoque Potestate, Cuique Pro Necessitate |
Religious affiliation(s) | Episcopalian |
Established | 1926 |
Head of School | Timothy B. Golding |
Faculty | 62.9 (on a FTE basis)[1] |
Enrollment | 408 (as of 2005-06)[1] |
Student to teacher ratio | 6.5 [1] |
Athletics | interscholastic sports teams Hudson Valley Athletic League |
Website | Wooster School official site |
Wooster School is a private, co-educational, college-preparatory Pre-K-12 school in Danbury, Connecticut, in the United States. Wooster was founded in 1926 by Aaron Coburn and is named after General David Wooster, a Revolutionary War hero. Wooster's four cardinal principles are simplicity, religion, hard work, and intellectual excellence. An Episcopal school, Wooster emphasizes community service and helping others.Wooster states that its mission is to "maintain a school for the intellectual, spiritual, ethical, aesthetic, and physical development of boys and girls of diverse backgrounds." The school motto is Ex Quoque Potestate, Cuique Pro Necessitate. This translates roughly as "From each according to ability, to each according to need."
As of the 2003–04 school year, the school had an enrollment of 417 students and 56.1 faculty members (on a full-time equivalent basis) for a student-teacher ratio of 7.4.[1]
Notable alumni include award-winning folk singer and guitarist Tracy Chapman,[2][3] trial attorney Cyrus Mehri,[4] developer Marc Vandenhoeck,[5] and Neil Rudenstine, president of Harvard University for a decade in the 1990s.[6][7]
It has earned 5 stars on the "Great Schools" web site.[8] The school is a member of the Connecticut Association of Independent Schools,[9] and other prep school groups.[10]
Wooster School is named for General David Wooster, whom fought at the Battle of Ridgefield for the Colonial side in the American Revolution, the battlefield for the Danbury Raid is near the campus.[11]
The school was the first prep school to actively recruit minority candidates as a "feeder system" for elite Ivy League colleges, such as Harvard University.[12]
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Wooster follows a liberal arts tradition. Self-help has been one of the fundamental principles at Wooster since the School's founding in 1926. It is a philosophy that places total responsibility for the physical environment of the school on the students.
Students are not only responsible for cleaning and maintaining the campus, but also for the program's organization and management.
As students in the Lower School (grades K - 5) progress through the grades, they assume more responsibility for their classrooms and the Lower School building. Students in the Middle and Upper Schools (grades 6 - 12) are in charge at all times of the upkeep of the whole school.
In addition to self-help and volunteering, Upper School students meet the requirement of 100 hours of community service outside the Wooster community, which can be completed between the summer before freshman year and graduation.
Seniors in good standing academically may also participate in the Senior Independent Study (SIS) program the last six weeks of their senior year, at which time they may pursue a community service project or career interest as a job off campus. Upon completion of SIS, each student submits a written report and makes an oral presentation to the faculty and senior classmates about what he or she learned.[13]
Date Founded: 1926 – Rev. Aaron C. Coburn
Headmaster: Timothy B. Golding, the ninth head of the school
Religious affiliation: Episcopalian
Accreditation: New England Association of Schools and Colleges
Memberships:
• Connecticut Association of Independent Schools
• National Association of Independent Schools
• National Association of Episcopal Schools
• Cum Laude Society
Size of campus: 127 acres (0.51 km2)
Number of school buildings: 15
School song: The hymn O God, Our Help in Ages Past (based on Psalm 90).
Enrollment: 354 boys and girls in grades PreK-12.[14]
Number of full time faculty: about 52.[14]
From 2001 to 2004, Wooster School made some improvements to its physical plant, notably the addition of a new gymnasium and a middle school.[15][16] The school is a frequent site of Toastmasters meetings.[17][18] Wooster continues to retain its reputation as a leader amongst Episcopalian Schools;[19] the church's top educator award is named for former School Head John D. Verdery.[20] The school's library received a grant of over $6,000 from U.S. Senator Chris Dodd's office to improve its Internet access through the E-rate grants.[21]
Wooster School students co-founded, and are hosts to, YRTA (Youth Reacting to AIDS), the first teen-run organization to increase awareness of AIDS and to assist persons living with AIDS.[22]