High Mowing School
Coordinates: 42°49′04″N 71°44′38″W / 42.81778°N 71.74389°W
High Mowing School | |
---|---|
Location | |
Wilton, New Hampshire, United States | |
Information | |
Type | Private, Independent Waldorf |
Established | 1942 |
Founder | Beulah Hepburn Emmet (1890-1978) |
Enrollment | ~120 |
Campus | Rural |
Color(s) | Green and White |
Website | www.highmowing.org |
High Mowing School is an independent private, co-educational, day and boarding school, located in Wilton, New Hampshire, in the United States. High Mowing is a Waldorf school, and is the only Waldorf boarding school in the United States. It is a high school (grades 9 through 12). It was founded in 1942 by Beulah Hepburn Emmet, a schoolteacher who was displeased with the politics in the public school in Connecticut in which she taught.
According to its mission, High Mowing School aims to "educate artistically through dynamic, transformative activity that resonates with the developmental stages of adolescence and the unique development of each individual."
Special programs include: naturalist, fine and applied arts, apprenticeship pottery program, Sinfonietta (community orchestra) and annual, interest-based two week "Projects Block."
High Mowing is accredited by the New England Association of Schools and Colleges and the Association of Waldorf Schools of North America.
Academics
A liberal arts curriculum meant to promote "engaged and active learning" forms the basis of High Mowing's academics. Each school day begins, for each grade, with "block class" - a class that runs for between three and four weeks. Subjects for block classes encompass history, literature, drama, science, and mathematics. Approximately one third of blocks are devoted to the sciences and one third to historical subjects. Others focus on drama, literature, or math. Examples of blocks include Russian Studies, World Religions, Zoology & Evolution, Dante, Greek Drama, Permutations and Combinations, Thermodynamics, History Through Art, and Surveying and Trigonometry.
Block classes are followed by track classes, typically four each day. These include English, Mathematics, Natural Sciences, History, Foreign Languages, and Studio and Performing Arts. Many of these are required courses for underclassmen and are taken in sequence beginning with the introductory course. Four years of track classes are required in the subjects Language Arts, Natural Sciences, and Studio & Performing Arts, three years in Mathematics and Physical Education, and two in World Language and History. Electives are courses freely chosen by students and are more common to upperclassmen who have completed core requirements. Examples of electives include Naturalist, Great Novels, French, Spanish, and German, Philosophy, Biology, Physics, Filmmaking and Digital Arts, Eurythmy, Drawing and Painting, Woodwork, and Pottery.
Traditions
Chapel
Chapel, held on Sunday nights on campus, was originally a weekly spiritual/religious event begun by the school's founder, Mrs. Emmet. It now typically occurs less frequently and is designed to allow students and faculty to "reflect on the changing world and our responsibilities to it." Members of the broader community such as parents and alumni, as well as faculty and students, are invited to give talks at Chapel. Boarding students are required to attend Chapel while it is optional for day students.
Christmas Block
Greens Sunday
Students returning from Thanksgiving Break attend school on Sunday afternoon to commemorate the beginning of the holiday season. Among other activities, they gather pine branches and laurels from the surrounding woods to make wreaths and other decorations. A large Christmas tree is brought into the main room of the main building on campus. Afterward, the Advent Chapel is held.
Caroling Chapel
At the caroling chapel, students and faculty sing Christmas carols while the tree is decorated.
Nativity
The annual depiction of the story of the birth of Jesus is a theatrical and musical event originally designed by Mrs. Emmet. It involves Mary and Joseph, the angel Gabriel, numerous other angels, a host of shepherds, and the Three Kings. A sizable percentage of the student body participates in the short play, which is followed by the Snow Goose Party, an annual students-only event.
The Yule Festival
This event has been held every year since the school's founding on the night before Winter Break. It is preceded by an all-school Holiday dinner, and semi-formal dress is appreciated. The Festival has a number of built-in traditions including a skit by the "fools", a movement-based rendition of the carol A Partridge In A Pear Tree by seniors, the reading of a Christmas story from the Bible in as many languages as are spoken in the school community, the Yule Log, wassailing, and the presentation of the Christmas book, a compilation of artwork (generally holiday-themed) made up of the contributions of all students.
May Day
May Day takes place in the spring and is meant to celebrate the end of winter and the new season. The event is open to the public and involves a number of events and activities. These include a pottery sale, musical performances, cake walks, games and other entertainment for children, a grease pole with a twenty dollar bill at the top, a cow plop competition (in which the winner is the one onto whose pre-purchased field space an ushered-in cow first excretes fecal matter), and the Maypole Dance. The Maypole is a tall wooden pole buried in the ground on the center green-space and is a metaphor for the fertility of spring. Students hold colored bands originating at the top of the pole and dance around each other on the ground, creating a weave pattern of the fabric on the pole. Another tradition, the May Day Play, is a skit put on by students and faculty. Initially Queen and King Winter (played by faculty members) attempt to proclaim the predominance of winter over spring, backing up their assertions by throwing ice and icicles into the crowd. Eventually the Spring Fairy enters and proclaims that spring is nigh and that the representatives of Winter should be gone. At one point the audience is asked which they would prefer, Winter or Spring, at which point (most) everyone cheers for "Spring". The Spring Fairy typically sprinkles flower petals and other plant materials on audience members as well as Queen and King Winter. They are eventually "driven off" and the Queen and King of Spring (played by students) are wed to commemorate the season.
Afternoon Activities (Athletics)
Because of High Mowing's emphasis on the physical well-being of its students, each is required to participate in a sport or "physical discipline" on weekday afternoons. These are termed afternoon activities, and include both team sports and other activities. The team sports High Mowing offers are Men's/Women's Soccer and Cross Country Running in the fall, Men's/Women's Basketball in the Winter, and Men's Baseball in the Spring for team sports. Other afternoon activities may include, depending on the year and season, yoga, downhill/cross-country skiing, ultimate (frisbee), indoor rock climbing, or folk dancing. Physical education requirements fulfilled by participation in afternoon activities are necessary to graduate from High Mowing.
High Mowing offers
Notable alumni
- David E. Blackmer, audio electronics inventor
- Austin Chick, film director, screenwriter and producer
- Nancy Huston, novelist
- Julianna Margulies, actress
- Judson Mills, actor
- John Fitzallen Moore, physicist and innovator
See also
References
- "Beulah Hepburn Emmet, Founder Of a Progressive School in 1942". The New York Times. November 21, 1978, Tuesday. p. B12, Metropolitan Report. Retrieved 2008-07-26.