Ethical Culture Fieldston School
Ethical Culture Fieldston School | |
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Location | |
New York City, New York United States | |
Coordinates | 40°53′23″N 73°54′23″W / 40.889674°N 73.90641°WCoordinates: 40°53′23″N 73°54′23″W / 40.889674°N 73.90641°W |
Information | |
Type | Private Day School |
Motto | Fiat lux (Let there be light) |
Established | 1878 |
Founder | Felix Adler |
Head of school | Damian J. Fernandez |
Grades | Pre-K through 12 |
Enrollment | approx. 1,600 |
Color(s) |
PMS 021 orange PMS 289 blue |
Mascot | Eagle |
Accreditation | National Association of Independent Schools (NAIS) |
Newspaper | Fieldston News |
Yearbook | Fieldglass |
Other publications | Season Pass, Eagle Eye, Fieldston (Historical) Review, The Gouda, Ars Magna, The Fieldston LP, Fieldston Lit Mag, Middle School News, Dope Ink Prints |
Song | "Iam Canamus" (Upper School) |
Website | http://www.ecfs.org |
Ethical Culture Fieldston School (ECF), known as Fieldston, is a private independent school in New York City. The school is a member of the Ivy Preparatory School League. As of 2004, it had about 1600 students and a staff of 400. Damian J. Fernandez has been the Head of School since July 2011.[1] The school consists of two lower schools (Pre-K to 5th grade): Ethical Culture (known as "Ethical") located on the Upper West Side of Manhattan, and Fieldston Lower (known as "Lower"), located on the Fieldston campus in the Bronx, both of which feed into Fieldston Middle (grades 6-8) and an upper school (Forms III to VI, grades 9-12) - Fieldston Upper - also located on the Bronx campus. Ethical Culture is headed by Rob Cousins, Fieldston Lower is headed by George Burns, and Fieldston Upper is headed by Laura Danforth. Fieldston Middle is headed by Kevin Jacobson.[2] Tuition and fees for ECF were $37,825 for the 2011-12 year.[3]
History
The school opened in 1878 as a free kindergarten, founded by Felix Adler at the age of 24. In 1880, elementary grades were added, and the school was then called the Workingman's School. At that time, the idea that the children of the poor should be educated was innovative. By 1890 the school's academic reputation encouraged many more wealthy parents to seek it out, and the school was expanded to accommodate the upper-class as well, and began charging tuition; in 1895 the name changed to "The Ethical Culture School", and in 1903 the New York Society for Ethical Culture became its sponsor. The economic diversity which was important then continues today: although the school's tuition is over $30,000 per student per year, Fieldston is said to have one of the largest financial aid funds[4] of any independent school in the country. About 1/3 of the students are on full or partial financial aid.
The school moved into its landmark building at 33 Central Park West in 1904. The entire school was located in that building until 1928 when the high school division (Fieldston) moved to its 18 acre (73,000 m²) campus on Fieldston Road, in the exclusive Fieldston section of Riverdale; the Manhattan branch of the Lower School remained there, and in 1932 a second Lower School was opened on the Riverdale campus. In 2007, a new middle school was opened on the same Riverdale campus, for the 6th, 7th, and 8th grades.
Ethical Culture was said to pursue social justice, racial equality, and intellectual freedom.[5] The school and the affiliated Ethical Culture Society were
havens for secular Jews who rejected the mysticism and rituals of Judaism, but accepted many of its ethical teachings. Additionally, because the institutionalized anti-Semitism of the times established rigid quota systems against Jews in private schools, the Ethical Culture School had a disproportionately large number of Jewish students. Ethical was the only one that did not discriminate because of race, color, or creed."[5]
This tolerant spirit, and the founding philosophy overall, continues to draw families today although they might now be welcome anywhere. The school ended its formal ties with the Society in the 1990s, although retaining its name and striving to maintain the ethical tradition of its roots.
One of the early faculty members was the famous documentary photographer Lewis Hine.
ECF is not the only Ethical Culture School in the New York City area. In 1922, an Ethical Culture School was founded in Brooklyn, near Prospect Park, by Julie Wurtzberger Neuman.[6] However, this school is unrelated to the Ethical Culture Fieldston School.
Each year the number of students enrolled in the school system grows. In 2002, talk of expansion began; plans were laid out the following year. A new middle school as well as new gym facilities were planned, and construction began in June 2004 with an estimated date of completion of September 2007.[7] The design of the two new buildings as well as significant renovations to the dining hall and classrooms was done by the New York architecture firm Cooper, Robertson & Partners. Previously, the lower schools started with Pre-K and went up to 6th grade, and the upper school from 7th to 12th grade, with Forms 1 and 2 (7th and 8th grade) somewhat distinct from the high school, but sharing the same space, and with some overlap of faculty and much interaction among students. With the new middle school, located on the Fieldston campus, students in 6th, 7th and 8th grade are in their own building, with their own curriculum and faculty, and less interaction with the high school. This has the positive result of additional classrooms for the lower and upper schools which are overcrowded. However, there has been much controversy among the alumni, parent and student body concerning the issue, as some felt that Fieldston was losing its unique identity with this change, but economic and space pressures prevailed. The community remains divided on whether a separate middle school was pedagogically warranted, with strong feelings on both sides.
Philosophy and academics
The school is a prominent part of the Progressive movement. Part of the school's curriculum, per the philosophy of Adler] includes courses in ethics and moral philosophy, along with required community service. Drawing heavily on the educational philosophy of John Dewey, hands-on "learning by doing" is emphasized from pre-kindergarten through the senior year of high school. The school is known for its predominantly liberal student body and its commitment to diversity and a well-funded scholarship program. The "senior gift" given by graduating seniors and their families is frequently designated for financial aid.
The academic standards are high and virtually 100% of its graduates go on to college. Students in the upper school have to gather credits in a wide range of academic subjects and there are well-developed arts and performing arts programs, as well as many sports teams. There are many elective courses for the upper grades, providing flexibility for students to set their own curricula. The community service program is a cornerstone of the school, with students volunteering within the school, the surrounding community and the city at large. A hallmark of the school's ethics program has been the interaction by older students as peer advisors for younger ones, with 5th graders working with kindergarteners, and 11th and 12th grade students leading 7th and 8th graders in ethics courses (through a program called Student to Student), for example.
Fieldston dropped its participation in the Advanced Placement Program in 2002 to give its faculty the freedom to offer supposedly more challenging and thought-provoking material. Students can take AP exams, but the school no longer officially sponsors such courses. While there was some concern that college admissions could be negatively affected, Fieldston's college office worked closely with admissions officers of schools across the country to explain the change, and to assure that its students would be evaluated on the quality of its courses, even without the AP designation.[8]
The upper school's student newspaper is called the Fieldston News and the yearbook is the Fieldglass. The ECF Reporter and Field Notes provide news of the schools to alumni and parents. There are several student-run literary and art magazines, as well, such as Litmag, Dope Ink Prints, the popular satirical publication The Gouda, the mathematics magazine Ars Magna, the music magazine The Fieldston LP, and the sports magazine "Season Pass".
Its ideal is stated as follows:
The ideal of the school is not the adaptation of the individual to the existing social environment, but to develop individuals who will be competent to change their environment to greater conformity with moral ideals.—ECF's founder Felix Adler
Athletics
Fieldston's athletic program includes 44 teams covering 14 sports. The teams, known as the "Fieldston Eagles", play in the Ivy Prep League against other private schools in the region. The school's hockey team, however, does not play in the league and schedules its own games.
Special programs
- Fieldston Outdoors - a six-week environmental day camp
- Weeks of Discovery/Computer Camps - one-week sports, computer, and other activity camps during school breaks
- BeforeSchool and AfterSchool - at the two Lower schools
- Fieldston Enrichment Program (FEP) - tutoring program for selected public school students in preparation of public and private high school entrance exams and requirements
- Young Dancemakers Company - acclaimed summer dance program
- City Semester - a "study at home" program that reorients a semesters worth of classes through the lense of the local: the Bronx.City Semester: The Bronx Experience
Notable alumni and former students
Among its many notable alumni and former students are:
- Jill Abramson - former executive editor of The New York Times[9]
- Clifford Alexander Jr - former Secretary of the Army[10]
- Joseph Amiel - author[11]
- Diane Arbus - photographer[12]
- Richard Barlow - intelligence officer
- Leslie Cohen Berlowitz - past president, American Academy of Arts and Sciences
- Leon Black - financier, Apollo Management and Drexel Burnham Lambert[13]
- Jordan Bratman - music marketer[14]
- Nancy Cantor - chancellor, Syracuse University[15]
- Roy Cohn - attorney[16]
- Sofia Coppola - Oscar-winning writer/director (attended middle school at Fieldston)[17]
- Andrew Delbanco - critic and author[18]
- Nicholas Delbanco - novelist[19]
- David Denby - film critic, The New Yorker[17]
- Ralph de Toledano - author
- Joseph Leo Doob - mathematician
- Douglas Durst - real estate magnate
- Darcy Frey - author
- Rita Gam - film actress
- Alan Gilbert - music director of the New York Philharmonic
- Ailes Gilmour - dancer
- Leonie Gilmour - educator and writer
- Rob Glaser - internet pioneer
- Matt Goldman and Chris Wink - founders of Blue Man Group
- Judith Lewis Herman— psychiatrist
- Charles Herman-Wurmfeld - film director
- Robert Jervis - political scientist
- Rodney Jones - jazz guitarist
- Jeffrey Katzenberg - film producer, media mogul[20]
- Yosuke Kawasaki - violinist
- Sinah Estelle Kelley - chemist
- William Melvin Kelley - author (A Different Drummer, Dunfords Travels Everywhere)
- Charlie King - New York civic leader and politician
- Arthur Kinoy - civil rights lawyer
- Ernest Kinoy - screenwriter
- Walter Koenig - actor
- Joseph Kraft - public affairs columnist
- Louise Lasser - actress
- Christopher Lehmann-Haupt - author, The New York Times book reviewer
- Sean Ono Lennon - musician
- Eda LeShan - child psychologist and author
- Carl P. Leubsdorf - Washington bureau chief, Dallas Morning News
- Doug Liman - film director
- Andrew Litton - conductor, Dallas Symphony
- Beulah Livingstone - motion picture publicist[21]
- Douglas Lowenstein - president and CEO of Private Equity Council, founder and former president of Entertainment Software Association
- Staughton Lynd - peace activist and civil rights activist
- Jeffrey Lyons - film critic, WNBC-TV, New York
- Mark A. Michaels- author and sexuality educator
- Bob Marshall - conservationist, writer, and the founder of The Wilderness Society
- Jane Mayer - staff writer, The New Yorker
- Nicholas Meyer - film director
- Jo Mielziner - stage designer
- Marvin Minsky - pioneer in artificial intelligence at MIT
- Frederic S. Mishkin - governor of the Federal Reserve Board
- Robert M. Morgenthau - retired New York County District Attorney
- Robert Moses - urban planner
- Howard Nemerov - former United States Poet Laureate
- Gabriel Olds - actor, writer
- J. Robert Oppenheimer - physicist, Scientific Director of the Manhattan Project, "Father of the Atomic Bomb"
- Emanuel R. Piore - chief scientist of IBM, and electrical engineering pioneer
- Belva Plain - author
- Letty Cottin Pogrebin - author
- Edward R. Pressman - film producer
- Richard Ravitch - business and civic leader
- Menachem Z. Rosensaft - attorney and founding chairman of the International Network of Children of Jewish Survivors
- Dan Rottenberg— journalist and author
- Muriel Rukeyser - poet and playwright
- David Sarasohn - associate editor and syndicated columnist for the Oregonian newspaper
- James H. Scheuer - U.S. Congressman (N.Y.)
- Gil Scott-Heron - musician
- Nicole Seligman - lawyer, Sony Corporation executive
- Cynthia Propper Seton - author
- Robert B. Sherman - composer, lyricist, screenwriter, painter
- Stephen Slesinger - creator of the Red Ryder comic strip
- Tess Slesinger - author/screenwriter
- Donald J. Sobol - author of juvenile short stories
- Stephen Sondheim - composer, attended the Fieldston Lower School
- Dan Squadron - New York State Senator
- Andy Stein - musician
- Stewart Stern - screenwriter
- Paul Strand - photographer and filmmaker
- James Toback - filmmaker
- Richard Tofel - author
- Doris Ulmann - photographer of Appalachia
- Laurence Urdang - lexicographer, dictionary editor[22]
- Helen Valentine - founder of Seventeen magazine
- Barbara Walters - TV news broadcaster[17]
- Andrew Weisblum - Oscar-nominated film editor
- Howard Wolfson - deputy mayor of New York City
- Jane C. Wright - oncologist[23]
- Keith L. T. Wright - New York State Senator
- Sheryl WuDunn - former award-winning writer for the New York Times
- Adam Yarmolinsky - academic and author who served in the Kennedy, Johnson and Carter administrations
- Eli Zabar - New York City restaurateur
Peer school
Ethical Culture Fieldston is a part of the Ivy Preparatory School League, with many of the city's elite private schools. The three high schools Fieldston, Riverdale, and Horace Mann together are known as the "Hill schools", as all three are located within a short walking distance of each other in the Riverdale section of the Bronx, on a hilly area above Van Cortlandt Park. The three are also involved in inter-school sports rivalry.
See also
References
- ↑ New Head of School, 2011
- ↑ "Fieldston Middle". ecfs.org. Retrieved 12 November 2011.
- ↑
- ↑ as of 2004
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 Rosalind Singer (2002-04-25). "The Ethical Culture School". New York Review of Books. Retrieved 2007-07-02.
- ↑ Brooklyn Ethical Culture School Alumni site
- ↑ Middle school brochure
- ↑ "High School Drops Its A.P. Courses, And Colleges Don't Seem to Mind", Yilu Zhao, The New York Times, February 2, 2002.
- ↑ Byers, Dylan (June 2, 2011). "Everything You Ever Wanted to Know About Jill Abramson". Adweek. Retrieved July 18, 2011.
- ↑ "Boss Man". Ebony (magazine). Retrieved July 18, 2011.
- ↑ Joseph Amiel short bio
- ↑ Rubinfien, Leo. "Where Diane Arbus Went." Art in America, volume 93, number 9, pages 65-71, 73, 75, 77, October 2005.
- ↑ Koshman, Josh (2009-08-17). "Black Ops Mission: APOLLO FOUNDER RE-ENTERS THE LEVERAGE MARKET". The New York Times. Retrieved 2 May 2010.
- ↑ "The Kids Can Be Classy Too: Christina Aguilera and Jordan Bratman". Ringsurf. Retrieved 31 July 2011.
- ↑ Lieber, Scott (2006-05-01). "The path of Nancy Cantor: In the name of defending her values, she's won acclaim with academia, two chancellor jobs -- and enemies along the way". The Daily Orange. Retrieved 18 June 2011.
- ↑ "In a Neutral Corner; Roy Marcus Cohn", The New York Times, April 22, 1960. Accessed August 5, 2008.
- ↑ 17.0 17.1 17.2 "Will Ferrell's Commencement Speech For New York Private School Fieldston". Huffington Post. 2009-06-17. Retrieved 18 July 2011.
- ↑ "Andrew Delbanco to Offer University Lecture, 'Melville, Our Contemporary,' April 10". Columbia News. 2003-04-08. Retrieved 24 July 2011.
- ↑ "Openings, Performances, Publications, Releases" (PDF). ECF Reporter. Winter 1999 – Spring 2000. Retrieved 24 July 2011.
- ↑ Comfort Food
- ↑ Ethical Culture School Record, New York City, 1916, p. 46, retrieved 21 December 2013
- ↑ Bruce Weber (2008-08-26). "Lawrence Urdang, Language Expert Who Edited Dictionaries, Dies at 81". The New York Times. Retrieved 2009-03-27.
- ↑ Bruce Weber, "Jane Wright, Oncology Pioneer, Dies at 93", New York Times (obituary), March 2, 2013.
External links
- Media related to Ethical Culture Fieldston School at Wikimedia Commons
- Official website
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