Edmund Burke School

Edmund Burke School
Location
Washington, D.C.
United States
Information
Type Private Preparatory School
Established 1968
Head of School Damian Jones (2014-present)
Faculty unknown
Enrollment 300 (2015-present) (grades 6-12)
Average class size 15
Student to teacher ratio 7:1
Campus Connecticut Avenue and Upton Street, NW
Color(s) Burgundy and gray
Athletics conference Potomac Valley Athletic Conference
Mascot Bengal tiger
Website www.burkeschool.org

The Edmund Burke School is a private college preparatory school in Washington, D.C. Located on Connecticut Avenue, NW, near the Van Ness metro station. It covers 6th through 12th grades, and it currently enrolls about 300 students.[1] Founded in 1968 by Jean Mooskin and Dick Roth, the school practices progressive education: teachers are called by their first names and classes are small. In 2003, after years of legal negotiations with neighbors, Burke gained city approval to expand its facilities with a new building which would increase both size and capacity. New computer labs, offices, classrooms, athletic facilities, a theater, and a large parking garage were built.

The school was named for British parliamentarian and philosopher Edmund Burke, a founder of modern Conservatism. The quote, "The only thing necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing," of which attribution to Burke is disputed, hangs in the main hallway adorned with statues of the school's founders, Dick Roth and Jean Mooskin.

Facilities

The school has two buildings, dubbed "Calvin" and "Hobbes". The buildings occupy the corner of Connecticut Avenue and Upton St.[2] The school, while small in comparison to others in the area, still has all of the essential educational facilities, including a black box theater, a gym, a library, one computer lab, and a music room. Future plans for a pool have been rebuffed. In 2011, Burke refurnished Howard field, an athletic field on Upton St. used by Burke for general athletic use.

History

1968 Founded by Dick Roth and Jean Mooskin, teachers formerly employed by the Hawthorne School in Southwest Washington, D.C., which had previously gone bankrupt. The school opens in a building on California Street, Northwest, Washington, DC.
1973 Purchases and moves into 2955 Upton Street,Northwest, Washington, DC, in the science building of a former girls' school which occupied what is now Howard University Law School.
1984 Constructs addition on west side of building, roughly doubling the size. New addition includes gymnasium
1985 Joe Sharlitt, a board member and parent of alumni Peter Sharlitt, pens a speech in which he coins the phrase "The Burke Style" which most closely defines Burke's culture.
1998 Founders Roth and Mooskin retire. Search committee selects David Shapiro as Headmaster.
2006 New building opens at corner of Connecticut and Upton street, across alley from existing building. Buildings are connected via 2nd floor walkway over the alley.
2011 Andrew Slater named head of school upon David Shapiro's retirement.
2013 Damian Jones named head of school upon Andrew Slater's departure.

References

Coordinates: 38°56′32.4″N 77°3′43.3″W / 38.942333°N 77.062028°W / 38.942333; -77.062028

This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.