Wilbraham & Monson Academy

Wilbraham & Monson Academy
Location
Wilbraham, MA
USA
Information
Type Private, Boarding, Day
Motto The Global School™
Established 1804
Head of School Brian Easler
Faculty 66
Enrollment 425
Student to teacher ratio 6:1
Campus 300 acres (1.2 km2)
Mascot Titans
Website http://www.wma.us

Wilbraham & Monson Academy is a college preparatory school located in Wilbraham, Massachusetts. Founded in 1804, it is a four-year boarding and day high school for students in Grades 9-12 and postgraduate. A middle school, with Grades 6-8, offers boarding for Grade 8 students. The Academy is located in the center of the town of Wilbraham, 75 miles from Boston and 150 miles from New York City. The program features small classes (6:1 student/teacher ratio) and 23 AP courses. Athletics include rugby, lacrosse, baseball, cross country, dance, wrestling, soccer, tennis, golf, football, basketball, track, volleyball, softball, water polo, crew and swimming.[1]

WMA was established by the merger of two nineteenth-century academies — Monson Academy, founded in 1804,[2] and Wesleyan Academy, founded in 1817 in New Market, New Hampshire. Wesleyan Academy relocated to Wilbraham in 1825 and was renamed Wilbraham Academy in 1917. In 1971, when the school merged with Monson Academy, the name was officially changed to Wilbraham & Monson Academy. Wesleyan was the first co-educational boarding school in the country, and Monson Academy became the first to enroll Chinese students in 1847.

Mission

Wilbraham & Monson Academy is a transformational experience where students become challenge-seeking citizens and leaders of an evolving world.

Academics

The Center for Entrepreneurial & Global Studies

The Center for Entrepreneurial & Global Studies (CEGS) offers courses in the study of global economics, finance, entrepreneurship, ethics, and sustainability. CEGS offers a multidisciplinary approach to learning, including lectures, seminars, independent study, and an online class with the University of Massachusetts Isenberg School of Management. These are augmented by discussions with local business leaders, college professors, and prominent Wilbraham & Monson Academy alumni. Field trips to financial and governmental organizations provide “real-world” experience of class concepts. In 2005, CEGS students visited Brussels, the capital of the European Union, for a two-week program on the effect of the EU on the world's economy.[3]

The Global Scholars Program

A Merit-Based Scholarship Program for Students of Outstanding Academic Achievement

The Global Scholars program provides a select group of extraordinary students opportunities for extra-curricular intellectual enrichment, including monthly lectures, special speaker series, and cultural events, which engage them in important scholarly dialogue about global issues. The Global Scholars experience incorporates research, travel, and study abroad opportunities. In the concluding year of their scholarship, all Global Scholars create and defend an in-depth independent research project concerning a global issue, culminating in a public presentation of their work.

AP / Advanced Courses

Advanced Placement Art Portfolio, Advanced Placement Biology, Advanced Placement Calculus AB and BC, Advanced Placement Chemistry, Advanced Placement Economics, Advanced Placement English Language, Advanced Placement English Literature, Advanced Placement Environmental Science, Advanced Placement European History, Advanced Placement French, Advanced Placement Latin, Advanced Placement Music Theory, Advanced Placement Physics, Advanced Placement Spanish, Advanced Placement Statistics, Advanced Placement United States History

Special Programs

Advanced Placement exam preparation, ESL, Honors section, Independent study

Athletics

In fall 2007, the Academy unveiled its $4 million expansion of the Greenhalgh Athletic Center on campus. The expansion includes a fitness room, a multi-purpose dance and wrestling space, a large gathering room, and new central locker facilities.[4] Construction was recently finished on new varsity playing fields, and have recently begun on new tennis courts. The boys varsity soccer team is one of the premier small private school teams in New England.

Notable alumni

See also

References

  1. "The Association of Boarding Schools".
  2. George Adams (1853). "Education in Massachusetts: Incorporated Academies". Massachusetts Register. Boston: Printed by Damrell and Moore.
  3. "NAIS Resource and Statistics".
  4. "Kuhn Riddle Architects".
  5. "Boarding School Review".
  6. "Worcester District Medical Society".

Further reading

Coordinates: 42°07′20.96″N 72°25′53.67″W / 42.1224889°N 72.4315750°W / 42.1224889; -72.4315750

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