Brearley School
The Brearley School | |
---|---|
By Truth and Toil | |
Address | |
610 East 83rd Street New York City, NY United States | |
Information | |
Type | Private Girls' School, Non-Denominational, College Preparatory Day School |
Established | 1884 |
Founder | Samuel Brearley |
Headmaster | Jane Foley Fried |
Faculty | 120 |
Grades | Kindergarten – Grade 12 |
Enrollment | 706 |
Color(s) | Red and White |
Mascot | Beaver |
Website | Brearley.org |
The Brearley School is an all-girls private school in New York City. It is located on the Upper East Side of the Manhattan borough of New York City. The school is divided into the Lower School (kindergarten – grade 4), Middle School (grades 5–8) and Upper School (grades 9–12). There are approximately 50 students to each grade.
The school is considered a sister school of the all-boys Collegiate School, the all-girls Spence School and the nearby all-girls Chapin School, with which it shares an after-school program, some classes, and the robotics team. Brearley is a member of the New York Interschool Association.
History
Samuel A. Brearley founded The Brearley School in 1884, and he remained the head of school until 1886 when he died of typhoid fever. James G. Croswell was the next head until his death in 1915. Since 1926, Brearley has been headed by women, first by Millicent Carey McIntosh, and 4 more women.[1] In June 2011, headmistress Stephanie J. Hull resigned for undisclosed reasons.[2] Recently, the school hired Jane Foley Fried to be the new head of school.
In the early 1900s, it transferred from East 45th Street to West 44th Street and then in 1912 to Park Avenue and East 61st Street, where the primary program was added. The school then moved to a new building in 1929 on East 83rd Street.[3]
Academics
The school's curriculum is based on the liberal arts. The student-to-faculty ratio is 6:1.
Languages offered are Greek, Latin, French, Spanish, and Mandarin Chinese. In the fall of 2004, the school piloted a new program that incorporated the use of iPods in language classes, allowing students to download portable audio lessons.[4] The school offers art, music, and drama classes, each based on their own floor.[5]
Students have access to two computer laboratories — one serving the Lower School, the other the Middle and Upper Schools. In addition, there are three smaller computer workrooms, one for middle schoolers and two for upper schoolers, as well as the science-projects room and laptops for use in the library and classrooms.
Rankings and college attendance
Brearley is ranked number two by The Wall Street Journal based on its ranking of students matriculating to eight national universities and liberal-arts colleges (Harvard University, Johns Hopkins University, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Pomona College, Princeton University, Swarthmore College, The University of Chicago and Williams College).[6] It is ranked number two by Worth magazine in sending students to Harvard, Yale University or Princeton.[7] Brearley is ranked 4th on Forbes "America's Best Prep Schools" in 2010, and first in the country among all-girls schools. Ranked 2nd best prep school in the United States and best all-girls school by Forbes in 2013.
From 2011-2015, the top 10 colleges at which Brearley students matriculated were as follows (264 students total):[8]
- Harvard University (22 students)
- Columbia University (18 students)
- Yale University (17 students)
- Princeton University (14 students)
- University of Pennsylvania (12 students)
- Brown University, Williams College (9 students)
- Dartmouth College (8 students)
- Johns Hopkins University (7 students)
- Washington University in St. Louis (7 students)
Student body
Current enrollment at Brearley is approximately 700 students in K-12, approximately evenly split between the Lower School, Middle School and Upper School. Students of Color represent approximately 48% of the student body. The 2016-17 tuition is $45,600; approximately 20% of the students receive financial assistance.
Sports facilities
A separate building, the "Field House" on East 87th Street, has facilities for physical education and athletics including track, soccer, basketball, tennis, badminton, volleyball, lacrosse and field hockey. In 2005, both the Varsity Volleyball and Varsity Cross-Country Teams won state championships. The Junior-Varsity Volleyball Team remained undefeated throughout its season, and won its tournament in 2007. The Cross-Country team won the New York Private School State Championship in 2006, 2007, 2008, 2009, 2010 and 2011. The Middle School Basketball Team were the first-ever New York State Association of Independent Schools Athletic Association Middle School Champions in 2009. In 2010, all four of Brearley’s fall varsity teams competed in the NYSAIS tournament.
The school's team colors are maroon and white, and its mascot is a beaver.
Notable alumnae
- Abiola Abrams, feminist filmmaker, author, and television personality.
- Blue Balliett, author of Chasing Vermeer
- Anne Baxter, actor
- Mary Ellin Barrett, novelist
- Mary Catherine Bateson, writer and anthropologist
- Devika Bhise, actor
- Jenny Bicks, screenwriter, What a Girl Wants and Sex and the City
- Mary Steichen Calderone, physician and public-health advocate
- Oona, Lady Chaplin, socialite
- Lucinda Childs, dancer and choreographer
- Jill Clayburgh, actor
- Emily Cross, fencer. Olympic silver medalist.
- Alexandra Daddario, actress and model
- Fernanda Eberstadt, novelist, essayist, critic.
- Anne d'Harnoncourt, museum director
- Elizabeth Fishel, journalist and writer, Reunion: The Girls We Used to Be, the Women We Became
- Lacey Fosburgh, journalist and author, Closing Time: The True Story of the Goodbar Murder
- Virginia Kneeland Frantz, pathologist, pioneer in the study of pancreatic tumors
- Betty Furness, actress, consumer affairs acitivist, current affairs commentator
- Virginia Gildersleeve, dean, Barnard College, statesperson
- Jane Ginsburg, law professor
- Betsy Gotbaum, Public Advocate for the City of New York
- Isca Greenfield-Sanders, artist
- Winifred Holt, sculptor, welfare worker. Founder of the nonprofit that is now Lighthouse International
- Nora Johnson, novelist, The World of Henry Orient
- Caroline Kennedy, diplomat, author and philanthropist
- Téa Leoni, actor
- Bethel Leslie, actress
- Ruth Messinger, Manhattan Borough President
- Sara Moulton, chef, author and television personality
- Elisabeth Murdoch, media executive
- Diane Paulus, opera and theater director. Artistic Director, American Repertory Theater
- Mary Rodgers, children's author and composer
- Anne Roiphe, journalist, novelist
- Katie Roiphe, writer
- Niki de Saint Phalle, artist
- Mary Louise Perlman, musician
- Dorothy Schiff, publisher of the New York Post
- Kyra Sedgwick, actor
- Maggie Shnayerson, journalist and blogger
- Helen Farr Sloan, educator, artist, philanthropist
- Kim Stolz, fashion model and television personality
- Marina Vaizey, art critic and author
- Elizabeth Chai Vasarhelyi, director and producer of documentary films
- Erica Wagner, literary editor for The Times
- Katharine Weymouth, publisher of The Washington Post
- Flora Payne Whitney, patron of the arts
Affiliated organizations
- National Association of Independent Schools
- New York State Association of Independent Schools
- New York Interschool Association
References
- ↑ "The Brearley School: About Brearley » Our History". Brearley.org. Retrieved 2011-07-01.
- ↑ Anderson, Jenny (June 30, 2011). "Head of Manhattan's Brearley School Resigns". The New York Times. Retrieved July 1, 2011.
- ↑ Witchel, Alex (May 2, 1998). "The Class of '48". Boca Raton News. Retrieved July 1, 2011.
- ↑ "iPod Personalizes Language Learning". Apple. Archived from the original on 2008-09-28.
- ↑ "Facilities". The Brearley School. Retrieved July 1, 2011.
- ↑ Staff writer (December 28, 2007). "How the Schools Stack Up". The Wall Street Journal. Retrieved July 25, 2008.
- ↑ "2003 PrepSchool/High School Rankings (thanks to Worth Magazine)". PrepSchoolUSA. Retrieved July 1, 2011.
- ↑ http://www.brearley.org/Page/Academic--Student-Life/Upper-School/College-Advising
External links
Coordinates: 40°46′21″N 73°56′44″W / 40.77250°N 73.94556°W