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Vermont Academy

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Type
  
Private Boarding/Day

Head of School
  
Stan Colla

Enrollment
  
approx. 240

Phone
  
+1 802-869-6200

Number of students
  
240

Established
  
1876

Faculty
  
approx. 50

Average class size
  
10

Mascot
  
Wildcat

Colors
  
Black, Orange

Vermont Academy

Address
  
10 Long Walk, Saxtons River, VT 05154, USA

Profiles

Vermont Academy ("VA") is an independent, coeducational, college preparatory school in Saxtons River, Vermont, in the United States serving students from 9th to 12th grade and postgraduates. Founded in 1876, Vermont Academy's student body consists of boarding and day students from 30 states and 15 countries. The campus is 515 acres overlooking the village of Saxtons River.

Contents

Vermont Academy embraces the concept of having students actively participate in a class as opposed to passive learning. The Academy's goal is to discover the possibilities that lie beyond the traditional four walls of the classroom and work with students in more progressive methods that encourage and stimulate different types of learners.

The Academy's athletic offerings focus on this type of experiential education. Sports include cross country, biking, and Nordic skiing; varsity and junior varsity athletic teams compete weekly against teams from all around New England.

Vermont academy hockey new year same goal


History

The school was founded in 1876. It originally included a lower school for younger boys and the school gave "special attention to life in the open".

In 1934, Dartmouth College president Ernest Martin Hopkins recommended a fellow Dartmouth graduate for the job of headmaster of Vermont Academy. Laurence G. Leavitt was headmaster for 25 years, during which time he doubled enrollment, retired the school's debt and made many improvements to the school's campus.

Academics

  • 7:1 student-teacher ratio
  • Honors and AP level classes
  • Science Center: Classes include advanced biology, biochemistry, kinesiology, robotics, bio-ethics, physics
  • Foreign Languages: French, Spanish, Russian, Chinese
  • Learning Skills Center: Available to all students, 5 full-time faculty members
  • Advisor Meetings: 6 advisees per advisor; four meetings per week
  • School accreditations: NEASC, NAIS, TABS, ISANNE, AISNE
  • Athletics and outdoor activities

    The school offers a wide-range of interscholastic athletic activities: alpine skiing, baseball, basketball, crew, cross country, dance, equestrian, field hockey, freeski, golf, ice hockey, lacrosse, mountain biking, Nordic skiing, snowboarding, soccer, and tennis.

    The school has five playing fields and two practice fields; an ice rink, with artificial ice-making and maintenance system; six tennis courts ("composition" courts); a 13-station ropes course; a mountain biking course, 20 kilometres (12 mi) of trails (for cross-country running and skiing, snowshoeing, and walks); and a winter sports park, complete with snowmaking, three ski jumps, a modest ski slope with rails, lighting, and a grooming machine. Off-campus activities include alpine skiing/snowboarding; an equestrian program; and Wilderness Program (hiking, rock-climbing, kayaking, canoeing, camping).

    The school belongs to the New England Preparatory School Athletic Council and is a member of the Lakes Region League.

    Studio and performing arts

    The Academy offers theater productions (3 per year, plus cabarets and coffee houses); music (theory and composition, jazz and chamber ensembles, vocal ensemble, and private music lessons); dance; studio art (painting, drawing, pottery, 3-D art, portfolio development); filmmaking; and photography.

    Campus

    The Academy campus is located on the north side of the village of Saxtons River, bounded on the south by Burk Hill Road and the east by Pleasant Street. It is more than 31 acres (13 ha) in size, and includes buildings dating to the period of the school's founding in 1876. Jones Hall, now a dormitory, was built in that year, and was its only building until 1888, when Fuller Hall, the visual and administrative centerpiece, was built. The campus was listed on the National Register of Historic Places in 2015.

    Buildings include a 350-seat performing arts center built in 2006, a newly renovated Learning Center, new Library, campus-wide wireless technology, a dance studio with Harlequin hard-wood sprung floor built in 2004, a fitness center and locker rooms in a renovated gym built in 2004, and an observatory with high-powered telescope built in 2003. There are separate dormitories for boys and girls. There is space for 60 girls and 111 boys. There is a Winter Snow Park on campus for skiing, snowboarding, and jumping which was built in 2003.

    Notable alumni

  • Frank C. Archibald, Vermont Attorney General
  • John Barrett 1885, United States diplomat
  • Donald E. Edwards 1955, retired United States Army Major General and Adjutant General of the Vermont National Guard
  • Paul Harris 1888, founder, Rotary International
  • Bernard Stanley Hoyes 1970, Artist
  • Bruce M. Lawlor 1966, retired United States Army Major General and former Chief of Staff at the Department of Homeland Security
  • Jim MacLaren 1981, motivational speaker and triathlete
  • Richard Moulton 1967, Film Producer
  • Albert Ketcham 1892, American Orthodontist
  • Anthony 'Joe' Perry 1969, lead guitarist, Aerosmith
  • Samuel B. Pettengill 1904, United States congressman
  • Russell W. Porter 1891, Arctic explorer and a founder of amateur telescope making in America
  • Archibald Query 1900, inventor of Marshmallow creme
  • Florence Sabin 1889, Doctor, Scientist
  • Christopher A. Sinclair 1967, retired chairman and CEO of Pepsi-Cola
  • Mark W. Smith 1987, attorney and New York Times best-selling author
  • Lee Stanley 1961, Filmmaker, Activist
  • William A. Torrey 1952, NHL executive. GM of the '80, '81, '82, '83 NHL Champions New York Islanders
  • Jamie Schoffman, 2002, author
  • Taylor Smoke, 2005, Denver 2014 FIL World Lacrosse Championship bronze medalist with the Iroquois National Team
  • References

    Vermont Academy Wikipedia


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