2025-26 Waynflete Middle-Upper School curriculum guide
Middle and Upper School 2025– 26
WAYNFLETE MISSION
Waynflete’s mission is to engage the imagination and intellect of our students, to guide them toward self-governance and self-knowledge, and to encourage their responsible and caring participation in the world. Our aim is to provide a program that combines security with challenge, playful exploration with rigorous expectation, and range of experience with depth of inquiry.
PORTRAIT OF A GRADUATE
WAYNFLETE STUDENTS:
Explore the wonders of our world.
Curious and courageous learners, Flyers delight in discovery, draw on diverse perspectives and accurate sources, and employ flexible, critical thinking to deepen their understanding.
Grow through challenges.
Agile and resilient problem-solvers, Flyers embrace risk, stretch skills, propose solutions, and take direction from feedback and motivation from failure to achieve their most ambitious goals.
Work with passion and purpose.
Innovative and imaginative creators, Flyers pursue personal interests, develop unique talents, express authentic ideas and emotions, and prioritize health and humanity as they share stories and shape their world.
Lead the way forward, together. With a strong sense of self and care for others, Flyers eagerly engage in honest dialogue, forge allyships and friendships, and combine forces with other changemakers to advance the common good.
Waynflete’s Portrait of a Graduate is the result of a collaborative process that included input from our entire faculty. It is designed to inform what we teach and how we teach it. The portrait enables teachers to align program, pedagogy, and assessment around a shared vision of student success.
Middle School and Upper School Curriculum Guide 2025–26
MIDDLE SCHOOL
Welcome and Introduction 3
Subject Areas
English 8
Mathematics 9
History 11
Science 13
Computer Science and Engineering 14
World Languages 15
Visual Arts 18
Performing Arts 19
UPPER SCHOOL
Welcome and Introduction 23
Subject Areas
English 28
Mathematics 35
History 38
Science 41
Computer Science and Engineering 43
World Languages 46
Visual Arts 54
Performing Arts 56
Other Electives 60
Athletic Philosophy and Program 61
Testing, Evaluation, and Academic Support 62
The Marjorie Robinson Thaxter Library 66
College Destinations (2021–25) 66
Inside Back Cover
Beliefs, Goals, and Equity and Justice
Middle School
Welcome to Middle School
I’m excited to begin my work as Waynflete’s new Middle School director. While I’m new to the community, I’ve spent most of my professional life in middle schools as a teacher, coach, diversity coordinator, and school leader. I’m eager to bring these experiences and more to Waynflete, a school that clearly cherishes this remarkable stage of growth. This school is a place where young people are known, valued, and encouraged to grow into their best selves. Our middle schoolers are given real-world opportunities to learn, grow, and be a part of something greater than themselves. That’s the kind of environment middle schoolers need— and why I’m so excited to work alongside the outstanding educators who inspire our students every day.
Waynflete’s Middle School is guided by three core tenets: curiosity, care, and courage. Our faculty members honor the whole child, and these core values guide everything we do. Students can be artists and athletes, scientists and poets, quiet thinkers and bold leaders. They are encouraged to take risks, to ask big questions, to collaborate, and to contribute meaningfully to their community. I’m excited to see how these values are practiced every day in classroom discussions, sporting games, and community-building events.
Each Middle School grade dives into a big, interdisciplinary theme that connects all their learning. These themes give students a chance to think deeply, make connections, and see how the world is interconnected. Along the way, they’re building important skills—like how to research, write clearly, and ask questions—
whether they’re working in science, humanities, or anywhere in between. At the end of each year, they get to pull it all together in a culminating project that showcases all they have learned. Throughout the process, they’re also learning how to manage their time, stay organized, and take more ownership of their learning.
Waynflete’s Middle School program also emphasizes movement, creativity, and selfexpression. Students participate in athletics, the arts, and a whole host of other meaningful and rich activities. They build their sense of voice and agency through student council, performances, and presentations. Socialemotional learning is central to the curriculum, too, with faculty trained in the Responsive Classroom approach and a dedicated Health and Wellness Seminar offered each year. The middle school years are a time of remarkable growth. Students are figuring out who they are, what they care about, and how they fit into the world around them. It’s a time of curiosity, vulnerability, challenge, and discovery, all happening at once! At Waynflete, with its focus on relationships, deep thinking, and creativity, students are not only supported through this journey—they’re also inspired by it. One of the things that drew me here was how intentionally the school approaches these essential years. Our Middle School faculty are deeply committed to this age group and bring both expertise and heart to all their work. They are the best role models for our middle schoolers. I’m thrilled to be joining them, and I’m looking forward to getting to know our students and families as we start this next chapter together.
Jeffrey Tremblay Middle School Director
INTRODUCTION
The middle school years are defined by profound growth, adaptability, change, capacity, and questions. Designed to support the unique development of every student’s sense of belonging and identity, our program is guided by three core values, which we call “the three C’s”: curiosity, care, and courage. We value questions as units of understanding, engage in all endeavors with kindness and respect, and learn to speak our respective truths bravely. Waynflete’s Middle School students are seen, heard, and recognized for their diverse and remarkable qualities unique to this highly adaptive stage of human development.
Deepening one’s skills is at the center of the Middle School program. Writing, approaching problems with curiosity, engaging thoughtfully with peers and teachers, and developing the courage to speak and perform in small and large groups are all priorities in the Middle School program. Through the progression of grades 6–8, students build an understanding of themselves and the skills they need to engage in the world around them. Students learn how to code, how to think like engineers and designers, how to craft their writing as a way of expressing their thinking, and how to apply their knowledge to real-world issues and situations.
All Middle School students are required to take courses in English, mathematics, history, science, world languages (Latin for sixth graders; Chinese, French, Latin, or Spanish for seventh and eighth graders), computer science and engineering, studio art, performing and visual arts, and physical education. We believe it is essential for students to engage in all these subject areas during their middle school years.
Middle School Thematic Study
Thematic studies in the Middle School bring a more interdisciplinary approach to classes. Discrete subject areas complement each other through the lens of our grade-specific thematic curriculum. This approach aims to awaken the imagination, encourage curiosity about self and community, provide space for reflection and inquiry, and broaden one’s sense of the world.
Grade 6 – Adapt, Survive, Thrive
Our focus in grade 6 is inspired by Maslow’s hierarchy of needs. We examine our basic biological needs, our social needs, and our needs of self-fulfillment to better understand how these needs have shaped the world we live in. Students investigate guiding questions through their course of study, including: How have our needs driven all humans to invent and innovate? How have different civilizations throughout the world found different ways to meet their needs? In what ways are we still innovating in contemporary society, from developing treatments for diseases to designing structures that can withstand environmental shifts?
Grade 7 – Exploring and Constructing Home
In grade 7, students define and deepen their understanding of home and community to learn how to best protect, nurture, and contribute to creating a better world. Students focus on Portland and the state of Maine before broadening their perspective to the global level. They ask: What does home and community mean to me? How does where we live influence who we are? What different cultures make up our local community? What responsibility do we have to protect and nurture our planet?
Grade 8 – Change: Destruction, Transformation, Creation Grade 8 students examine what it means to change. Change can be explosive or subtle. It can be observed in laboratories and measured with instruments. It can be sensed in a person’s expression and felt in a person’s heart. Students spend the year studying change in all its forms with the goal of understanding how this great force can be harnessed to reinvent ourselves and the world around us. How have writers, scientists, and governments revolutionized the world around them? How can we harness our own courage and values to be upstanders in the face of injustice? How do we inspire a larger community to act?
Student Assessment and Performance Evaluation
A Waynflete education is intentionally designed to educate the whole child by preparing students to lead productive, meaningful lives. Students receive feedback on their academic progress through parent-teacher conferences, scheduled grade reports, and informal conversations throughout the year.
Students are taught to develop their own goals for improving academic skills, habits of work, and social-emotional skills, and are given opportunities for developmentally targeted self-assessment. Each program within the school provides a detailed, holistic assessment of a student’s academic accomplishments and approach to learning.
Middle School students receive written comments and skills rubrics that describe their academic progress after each semester. The nature of a student’s academic performance evaluation evolves from grade 6 to grade 8. Grade 6 students do not receive single, summary grades for each class in which they are enrolled. Instead, sixth graders receive feedback based on specific skills and tasks (e.g., lab work, homework, participation, and tests). Grades 7 and 8 students receive summary grades for each semester that reflect their overall academic performance in each subject. Middle School teachers also fill out equivalent skills rubrics to provide consistent and ongoing feedback across all three grade levels.
Student Health and Well-Being
LEAP Week
The academic year begins with LEAP (Learn-ExploreAppreciate-Play) Week, a four-day experiential learning program. This program builds community, fosters a sense of belonging, and facilitates friendships before classes start. LEAP Week also provides an opportunity for students to begin forging relationships with their advisors and other faculty members.
During LEAP Week, students in grades 6–8 are introduced to each other and the school through a variety of interactive academic and social learning experiences that are guided by unique grade-level themes. Team-based activities provide students with the opportunity to forge new friendships, practice effective communication, and understand the value of collaboration before classes begin. Students are also encouraged to reflect on their personal learning goals, the impact of their actions on others, and what it means to persevere through challenges.
Middle School Social-Emotional Curriculum
Waynflete believes that success in and out of school requires both social-emotional and academic skills. Early adolescence is a time of rapid physical change and intense emotions, and middle school is a critical time to practice skills for navigating both. Studies show that students who possess a positive self-regard and understanding of the physical and emotional changes they are experiencing, and strategies for building strong peer relationships, are better prepared for academic success, developing agency, and community engagement. Students in this age group are willing and able to discuss their social and academic experiences.
ENGLISH
The English department curriculum provides students with a varied background in literature, a thorough grounding in writing skills, and different approaches to literary analysis. Other educational goals include independent thought and reasoning, skill in working in small groups, creative problem-solving, and alternative ways of seeing various situations. To meet these goals, the English department offers thematic yearlong courses for Middle School.
Middle School students devote the majority of their study to reading literature and gaining proficiency in composition. In support of these areas, grammar and vocabulary are focuses each year, often in the context of the student’s writing but also through formal instruction in basic skills. Teachers encourage a process approach to writing—with drafting, peer review, and editing as integral components—whether students are writing exposition, fiction, personal essays, or poetry.
English 6: The Power of Storytelling
In connection to the sixth-grade theme, “Adapt, Survive, Thrive,” this course centers on the ancient innovation of storytelling. Throughout the year, students explore two essential questions: Why do we tell stories? What power do stories have? Readings may include The Giver (Lois Lowry), Ramayana: Divine Loophole (Sanjay Patel), King and the Dragonflies (Kacen Callender), and Other Words for Home (Jasmine Warga). Students sharpen writing skills through daily journaling, creative writing, and analytical writing. In the context of their literature and writing assignments, students practice critical thinking, annotation skills, vocabulary acquisition, and standard grammar usage.
English 7: Exploring Home
This course is built around the grade-level theme of “Exploring Home” by focusing on stories about adolescents who are working to define and understand the communities of which they are a part. Readings may include Lizzie Bright and the Buckminster Boy (Gary D. Schmidt), Akata Witch (Nnedi Okorafor), I Am Malala (Malala Yousafzai), American Born Chinese (Gene Luen Yang), and various short stories. Each unit is supplemented with a major writing assignment, including an introduction to the expository essay and a genre-based short story project. Students build skills in annotating class texts as well as preparing for and participating in class discussions. Quizzes assessing vocabulary, punctuation rules, and grammar are a regular part of the course.
English
8: Justice and Courageous Citizenship
In English 8, students will examine stories in which characters confront injustice and harness courage to enact bold change in themselves and their communities. We will also examine the choices of writers who have used their voices to change the real world around them. Core texts include Refugee (Alan Gratz), The Hate U Give (Angie Thomas), The Book Thief (Markus Zusak), and selections of American poetry. Strong emphasis is placed on the academic competencies of active reading, student-led discussion, and analytical writing. Social and emotional competencies complement and support our academic learning. The overarching goal of this course is for students to feel empowered to use their voices to participate in courageous citizenship.
MATHEMATICS
The mathematics curriculum in the Middle School covers a wide variety of courses. As mathematics education is ever-changing, the course of study is designed to incorporate new ideas and techniques while being mindful of the importance of a sound, traditional foundation. In this spirit, technology is used in all courses. Students gain confidence in representing and interpreting information graphically, numerically, verbally, and analytically. The ability to make reasonable predictions and assumptions based on collected information is a critical skill in the modern world, and much effort is made to cultivate this skill in each course. As mathematics is an art as well as a science, the department strives to help students foster an enjoyment and appreciation of the mathematical process.
Our Middle School mathematics program is an exploratory and problem-based curriculum that supports students in developing and strengthening their computation skills, number sense, and problemsolving techniques. Students learn by doing math, solving problems in mathematical and real-world contexts, and constructing arguments using precise language. Classroom routines involve a combination of independent work, group work, and whole-class discussions to build conceptual understanding and computational fluency. We provide each student with the appropriate level of support and challenge so they can build their confidence as mathematical thinkers and problem solvers, appreciate the discipline, and reach their full potential.
Grade 6
Math 6 begins with a unit on reasoning about area and understanding and applying concepts of surface area. Work with ratios, rates, and percentages draws on (and builds on) earlier work with numbers and operations. Students then build procedural and conceptual understanding of fractions, focusing on fraction equivalency and the operations of multiplication and division. Finally, students are introduced to more abstract concepts such as expressions, equations, and rational numbers. Throughout the year, students are noticing patterns, making connections, collaborating with peers, discovering algorithms, and building their confidence as mathematical thinkers and problem solvers.
Grade 7
Grade 7 math offerings include Math 7 and Math 7 Accelerated.
Math 7 begins by exploring scale drawings, an engaging geometric topic that reinforces computational skills and number sense while also supporting subsequent work with proportional relationships and percentages. Students then study operations with rational numbers, discovering patterns and processes that extend to simplifying variable expressions and solving variable equations and inequalities. Finally,
students put their new skills to work in the context of geometry (angles, triangles, and prisms), probability, and sampling.
In Math 7 Accelerated, students with a solid pre-algebra foundation explore more abstract, algebra-focused topics. Students deepen their understanding of linear expressions and equations and explore systems of equations. Students revisit the definition of an exponent, extend it to include all integers, and learn about orders of magnitude and scientific notation to represent and compute very large and very small quantities. Finally, in the context of the Pythagorean theorem, students encounter irrational numbers for the first time and informally extend the rational number system to the real number system.
Grade 8
Grade 8 math offerings include Middle School Algebra, Algebra 1 Accelerated, and Foundations for Advanced Integrated Mathematics.
In Middle School Algebra, students begin with a study of geometry: transformations, congruence, dilations, and symmetry. Students build on their understanding of proportional relationships to study linear equations in the coordinate plane. They express linear relationships using equations, tables, and graphs, and make connections across these representations. Students also explore systems of linear equations in two variables and learn that linear relationships are an example of a special kind of relationship called a function. Finally, students explore different representations of numbers, codifying the properties of exponents and encountering irrational numbers for the first time.
In Algebra 1 Accelerated, students discover the beauty and abstract nature of algebra. They revisit systems of equations and inequalities and engage in a more formal study of functions: function notation, domain and range, average rate of change, and features of graphs. These concepts are then applied to piecewise, linear, absolute value, exponential, and quadratic functions. Throughout each unit, applications of functions help students see the connections that exist between graphs, tables, and equations. For each function type, students closely examine the structural attributes of the function and analyze how these attributes are expressed in different representations.
Foundations for Advanced Integrated Mathematics is a high-level middle school mathematics course designed for students who are eager to engage in an accelerated and rigorous exploration of Algebra 1 and beyond. Rooted in a deep appreciation for mathematical thinking, this course challenges students to develop strong problem-solving and abstractreasoning skills. The topics studied include real numbers and operations, linear equations and inequalities, systems of equations and inequalities, polynomials and their operations, and quadratic and exponential functions. Placement in this course is dependent on completion of Math 7 Accelerated as well as teacher recommendation.
HISTORY
The history curriculum provides opportunities for discovery and individual expression while ensuring that students have explored history broadly and deeply by the time they graduate. Teachers focus on historical themes and questions, guiding students to use factual evidence to support their conclusions and arguments. Courses span the globe and cover historical eras from ancient to modern times.
The curriculum of the history department is carefully integrated. Starting in sixth grade and continuing through senior year, history courses progress smoothly as teachers continually reinforce common skills. Students learn to formulate and defend a thesis in expository essays and formal research papers, analyze primary sources, discuss and debate, and use technology and online sources in support of their work. Through carefully chosen content and skills, teachers help students grasp relationships among times and places; appreciate connections between history and other disciplines, such as literature, the arts, and science; make informed, ethical judgments about the past and contemporary society; think critically and independently; and become skillful and confident writers.
In Middle School, students learn about ancient and classical civilizations; world geography, including in-depth units on Western and non-Western cultures; and American history, with a focus on citizenship. In every course, heavy emphasis is placed on reading and writing skills, and students learn the step-by-step process involved in writing research papers. Hands-on projects as well as opportunities for debating and roleplaying tap into students’ creativity and imagination. Students use technology in a wide variety of ways in support of their work. The entire program is geared toward the middle school child but also serves as an excellent springboard for the Upper School curriculum that follows.
History 6: History of the Ancient World
This course is a yearlong study of ancient cultures, including those of Mesopotamia, Egypt, and China. With a focus on archaeology, students are introduced to artifacts as primary sources that tell the stories of a culture. Consistent with the grade 6 thematic study, ancient cultures are examined with a focus on how individuals innovated to adapt to their environments in order to survive and ultimately thrive. Study skills are embedded in the content, with an emphasis on linear notetaking and expository paragraphs. The year concludes with a thesisdriven research paper about ancient innovations and innovators that includes both a written component and an interactive project on a topic of choice from ancient civilizations around the world.
History 7: Cultural Geography
This course introduces students to a variety of cultures around the world, focusing on the ways in which the physical environment affects the human experience. The year begins with a study of North America, with students writing research papers about the cultural expressions of individual North American Indigenous nations, particularly the Wabanaki in Maine. Students then engage in an immigration unit beginning with why so many people did (and still do) come to Maine in search of new opportunities, including interviews with visitors from Portland’s migrant community. In the spring semester, students explore the geography, history, culture, and current events of Latin America, sub-Saharan Africa, and other regions. Throughout the course, students practice skills such as active reading and notetaking, the development of thesis statements, essay writing, and debate. By studying world geography and cultures, students gain a greater appreciation of diversity within their own local region and its connection to global issues.
History
8: Citizenship and Social Justice in the United States
This course explores themes of justice and courageous citizenship. Students examine the foundational documents of the United States and identify the unfulfilled ideals that have required movements for civil rights and justice in both US history and current affairs. Essential questions include: What are the rights and responsibilities that come along with citizenship, and what does it take to achieve liberty and justice for all? Topics are explored through student-led discussions, close readings of primary and secondary sources, and analytical writing. The course concludes with a research project in which students identify a current issue in the US and present action plans for change.
SCIENCE
The science curriculum provides students with multiple and varied opportunities to explore the physical and natural worlds firsthand. Students acquire an understanding of the inherent value of the scientific method and knowledge of major scientific concepts. Students are also encouraged to connect scientific principles to everyday experiences, incorporate mathematics into the study of science, write scientific reports and papers, present research to their peers, and evaluate society’s application of scientific discoveries. Instructional technological tools are used when they enhance the curriculum or allow students to employ alternative methods of experimentation and analysis.
The Middle School curriculum introduces students to three major fields of science: life, earth, and physical. In the study of each of these disciplines, scientific inquiry and writing are emphasized. Students gain experience using scientific techniques that include making accurate observations, planning investigations, taking precise measurements, recording data neatly, creating meaningful charts and graphs, and communicating their findings clearly. All courses are activity-based and stress the value of creative problem-solving and working cooperatively with peers.
Science 6: Life Science
Sixth-grade science is a life science course that introduces students to skills such as observation, communication, collaboration, and research. Students gain a greater understanding and appreciation of the living world around them and of the complex relationships and processes that exist in nature that allow organisms to adapt, survive, and thrive. Through a variety of lab investigations, activities, field work, and discussions, students explore topics such as animal adaptations, microscopy, cell structure and function, viruses, infectious diseases, and human body systems.
Science 7: Environmental Science
In keeping with the seventh-grade cross-curricular theme of exploring home, students in seventh-grade science deepen their familiarity with the workings of the planet we call home across multiple scales of time and space. The first half of the year comprises four units of study spanning the major domains of earth science. Students analyze astronomical interactions that produce phenomena such as seasons and tides, clues about changes to living things and their environment throughout geologic time, how heat transfer within the planet’s interior moves continents and builds mountains, and the evershifting currents of our atmosphere and oceans. The second half of the year takes a project-based approach to investigating environmental challenges from the local to the global, including invasive species in the Gulf of Maine and the warming climate that will underpin major changes, both natural and societal, throughout students’ lives.
Science 8: Physical Science
Eighth-grade science is designed to give students a foundation in physical science and to fine-tune their lab and scientific writing skills. Through inquiry labs, research projects, and creative experimentation, students explore matter and the changes it undergoes through the lens of introductory chemistry and Newtonian physics. Topics include measurement, the metric system, matter, motion, forces, momentum, and energy transformations.
COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING
Computer science and engineering courses are designed to prepare students to be active participants in the technology-filled world in which they live. They will learn lifelong skills; develop a more resilient, problem-solving mindset; and become creators, not just consumers, of technology. Our inclusive curriculum includes coding, designing products for community awareness, problem-solving through design thinking, and hands-on programming of robots and physical devices. These courses empower students to excel in the future, make meaningful contributions to society, and understand the ethical impact of technology in the world.
Middle School students take a semester course in engineering during grade 6, a semester course in computer science in grade 7, and a full year of robotics in grade 8. These courses are designed to support and enrich the thematic studies in each grade.
Engineering 6
Students will use their creativity and ingenuity to solve challenging problems. Working through the engineering design cycle, students learn how to solve problems and iterate solutions that help people adapt, survive, and thrive. This is a hands-on course; students develop digital designs on their iPads and then fabricate them using laser cutters and 3D printers.
Computer Science 7
Students in Computer Science 7 will examine networking technology and cybersecurity. In keeping with the seventhgrade theme of exploring home and community, students will learn what the internet is and how it works to connect communities. They will explore the physical infrastructure of Waynflete’s internet connection and will study and test different methods for keeping information secure. Students also will learn how to build and format a website using HTML. Throughout the semester, students will engage in discussions about digital citizenship as well as the local and global impact of networking technologies.
Robotics I and Robotics II
Robotics embodies the grade 8 theme of “Change: Destruction, Transformation, Creation.” Robotics is the amalgamation of many forms of engineering—mechanical, electrical, and software. Students will learn how to integrate these fields to create, transform, and destroy LEGO robots to accomplish challenging feats. Robotics I will introduce students to LEGO SPIKE Prime robots. Students will develop the skills to collaboratively build, program, and problemsolve with their robots. As the course progresses, students will implement their engineering skills to complete longerterm, more complex projects of their own design. Throughout the course, students will explore the real-world impact of robotic innovations while also examining current events and ethics in the field of robotics.
WORLD LANGUAGES
The world languages department offers sequential courses in modern and classical languages, including French, Latin, Chinese (Mandarin), and Spanish. Modern language courses develop core linguistic skills such as aural comprehension, speaking, reading, and writing. Each language course strives to provide students with an understanding of and an appreciation for world cultures.
Courses in French, Latin, Chinese, and Spanish are offered at the Middle School level. As part of a curriculum based on the evolution of human society, all sixth-grade students take Latin. Seventh graders may choose to continue their study of Latin or begin the study of French, Spanish, or Chinese.
Grade 6: Latin
Required for all sixth-grade students, this course is an exploration of the Latin language and of various topics in ancient Roman culture. Students learn core Latin vocabulary and root words, develop reading strategies, and practice communication skills. In addition to these linguistic areas, students also explore the major gods and heroes of GrecoRoman mythology and examine how Rome adapted over the course of its long history to meet the challenges posed by various internal and external threats. This course also helps students hone their study skills and make cross-curricular connections with other sixth-grade courses.
Grades 7 and 8: Latin, Chinese, French, or Spanish In seventh grade, students may choose to continue their study of Latin or begin another language (French, Spanish, or Chinese). The language choice made in seventh grade is a two-year commitment. Students completing a grade 8 language class may move into level II of their respective language when they enter grade 9, provided that they demonstrate competency on a placement diagnostic at the end of their eighth-grade year.
In Latin 7 and 8, students continue to develop and strengthen their translation skills and expand their knowledge and understanding of the cultural diversity found throughout the history of ancient Rome. Students use the texts Suburani and Lingua Latina per se illustrata. Supplementary materials and primary texts in Latin are introduced as appropriate.
In French 7 and 8, students build skills in the four major linguistic areas: speaking, listening, reading, and writing. Oral and aural proficiency is developed through conversation, role-playing, and creative work such as skits. Speaking and listening competencies are strengthened through grammar practice, vocabulary acquisition, and problem-solving in the target language, helping students gain flexibility in how they use French in response to various situations. Cultural elements of the Francophone world are a central part of the
class, offering insight into where and how French is spoken globally and preparing students for more in-depth historical learning in future courses.
In Chinese 7 and 8, students begin a two-year course of study that develops competence in the four linguistic areas: speaking, listening, reading, and writing. Students learn to read and write simplified Chinese characters. An emphasis is placed on the most basic elements of the Chinese language as students begin to build a vocabulary and learn simple grammatical structures. The pronunciation of words (pinyin), the four tones, proper stroke order, and character composition are all taught and reinforced throughout the Middle School curriculum. Cultural elements are integrated into the curriculum to supplement the language work with historical and modern contexts.
In Spanish 7 and 8, students develop proficiency in the four linguistic skill areas: speaking, listening, reading, and writing. The courses emphasize the importance of communicative competence through activities such as roleplaying, rhyming, storytelling, and skits. Exercises include short-answer written and oral responses and descriptive pieces in the present tense as students explore themselves and their communities in a global context. Students learn vocabulary that is focused on each grade’s thematic study.
VISUAL ARTS
The mission of the visual arts department is to engender lifelong participation in the arts, to develop skills of perception and execution, and to create an appreciation for the craft and aesthetics of contemporary and historical cultures. Waynflete’s studio art classes allow students to problem-solve in an environment where there is more than one correct answer, and they provide a venue for nonverbal modes of expression where learning takes place using multiple intelligences.
Studio Art 6
Studio Art 6 introduces students to the foundations of visual expression through a variety of materials and techniques. Emphasizing skill development, creative problem-solving, and artistic confidence, students explore drawing, painting, collage, sculpture, and mixed media. Projects are often designed to connect with the sixthgrade theme “Adapt, Survive, and Thrive,” encouraging students to think critically and reflect on how art can express resilience and transformation. This hands-on, process-oriented course nurtures curiosity, supports interdisciplinary thinking, and lays the groundwork for continued growth in the visual arts.
Studio Art 7
In Studio Art 7, students build on prior knowledge as they refine technical skills and explore deeper levels of visual expression. Using materials such as drawing tools, paint, collage, sculpture, and mixed media, students create artwork that reflects personal identity and creative voice. Projects often connect with the seventh-grade theme of “Home,” encouraging students to consider what home means to them—physically, emotionally, and symbolically. Through hands-on projects and exposure to diverse artistic traditions, students engage in meaningful creative exploration, strengthen their confidence, and continue to grow as thoughtful, expressive artists.
Studio Art 8
Studio Art 8 challenges students to build on the foundational skills developed in sixth and seventh grade while embracing the eighth-grade theme of “Change”—in themselves, their communities, and the world around them. Students engage in more complex, purposeful projects across a range of media. As they explore the elements of art, principles of design, color theory, and composition, they are encouraged to take creative risks and develop their own artistic voice. This course emphasizes personal growth through change—both conceptually and artistically—and encourages students to use art as a tool for reflection, communication, and transformation. Studio Art 8 also serves as a bridge to Upper School classes, preparing students for deeper, more specialized study.
PERFORMING ARTS
Waynflete’s performing arts program is an essential part of the school’s curriculum, helping foster the artistic, intellectual, and social-emotional growth of our students. Our diverse classes, ensembles, and cocurricular theater program build students’ foundational skills and artistic understanding and support the ongoing artistic education of those who wish to immerse themselves at a deeper level. We believe that every student can discover and develop their unique voice as they invest in the creative process, work collaboratively with their peers, and embrace the arts as both a powerful vehicle for selfexpression and a window to understanding humanity.
The program includes a progression of classes in dance, drama, music, production technology, and music ensembles. Additional performing arts opportunities include the Middle School play as well as the fee-based dance choreography workshop and private music lessons offered through the Enrichment Music program.
Grades 6 and 7
Performing arts classes meet twice a week. Students develop skills and gain experience by spending one quarter exploring dance, drama, general music, and production technology across sixth and seventh grades. These four classes are exploratory, experiential, collaborative, and connected to each other thematically.
Grade 8
The eighth-grade theater class builds on the sixth- and seventhgrade performing arts classes. Students explore a range of topics, including theater for social change, public speaking, character development through monologue study, and, finally, collaboration on a full-grade culminating performance. This yearlong experiential class, which is thematically tied to the integrated English and history programs, encourages students to apply their skills as expressive performers, make connections across their academic experience, and strengthen their sense of community.
Grades 6–8 Ensembles
Sixth graders are introduced to ensemble music-making and develop foundational skills through Band 6, Chorus 6, or String Ensemble 6. Seventh and eighth graders come together for more advanced ensemble experiences in Band 7–8, Chorus 7–8, or String Ensemble 7–8. The ensembles rehearse twice a week, and their collaborative journey culminates in performances at music concerts in the winter and spring. They also share their work with the Middle School community at assemblies during the school day.
Upper School
Explore the wonders of our world, grow through challenges, work with passion and purpose, and lead the way forward—together. Welcome to Waynflete’s Upper School, where we are committed to realizing the promise of our Portrait of a Graduate through a wide range of extraordinary curricular and cocurricular opportunities.
Students begin each Upper School year with Outdoor Experience (OE). We believe that the learning that takes place during OE is as essential as the academic experiences that will transpire later in our classrooms. On camping trips, service learning projects, or white water rafting adventures, connections are made, new friendships begin, and students are encouraged to explore their own interests and learn about others—all in a nonevaluative, supportive environment. Our goal is for the experience to provide a comfortable and exciting entry point for all.
In the classroom, students have the opportunity to explore a wide range of content. Regardless of the program they pursue, students will experience a student-centered learning environment, taught through multiple lenses of experiences and from various vantage points, where teachers strive to meet students where they are and to challenge them appropriately. Advisors play an integral role in supporting students through all these decisions. We encourage our students to explore our program fully, including athletics, performing arts, and clubs such as robotics, Model UN, debate, and Science Olympiad.
As you explore this guide, make note of how our faculty members work to know students individually and deeply. Take in how frequently our students work closely with advisors and teachers to develop a program that is equally holistic and individualized. I hope you can also get a clear sense of our deliberate effort to support students in their leadership aspirations and our belief that leadership can manifest in a variety of ways. Underlying the entire program is a dedication to ensuring that every student finds their place here, that diversity—in all its facets— is embraced, and that we commit to helping all students foster a true sense of belonging in this community.
We look forward to seeing you on campus soon!
Asra Ahmed Upper School Director
INTRODUCTION
Upper School Requirements
Each Upper School student is required to take the equivalent of five full-credit courses each year. Students accrue half a credit per course, per semester—accumulating at least 20 credits over their four years of Upper School.
Students are encouraged to design their individual programs in accordance with their aspirations, interests, and goals (while ensuring that requirements are met). They select courses with the assistance of their advisors and, when appropriate, the Upper School director and/or the director of college counseling. Faculty advisors encourage every student to select the most challenging and appropriate course of study. The following represents the actual course selections of recent graduates, with the school’s minimum graduation requirements listed parenthetically:
• ENGLISH One hundred percent have taken the equivalent of at least four years of English. (Requirement: four years of English, including Essay Writing or Writers’ Workshop, and at least two upper-level literature electives.)
• MATHEMATICS More than 98 percent have taken at least four years of mathematics. (Requirement: three years of mathematics.)
• HISTORY More than 90 percent have taken at least three years of history. (Requirement: two years of history, including one year of US history.)
• SCIENCE More than 90 percent have taken at least three years of laboratory science. (Requirement: two years of laboratory science, including one year of biology.)
• WORLD LANGUAGES More than 80 percent have taken at least three years of world languages, typically through the fourth-year level. (Requirement: two consecutive years of the same language.)
• ARTS In addition to formal classes in the visual and performing arts, students earn credits by enrolling in performing arts electives and ensembles. (Requirement: two credits.)
• INTERSCHOLASTIC ATHLETICS AND PHYSICAL EDUCATION
Students are required to participate in either interscholastic athletics or physical education classes during all three seasons of each year. Students may choose from a wide array of interscholastic athletics and physical education offerings. Students are also eligible to apply for an individualized athletic program.
• COMMUNITY ENGAGEMENT PROGRAM All students are required to participate in the Community Engagement program for all four years of Upper School. Requirements vary based on grade level. Please visit waynflete.org/cep for more information.
Upper School Academic Options
Intensive Courses
Available in Spanish, biology, chemistry, and physics. Intensive courses follow the core curriculum but also allow students who wish to study these subjects in more depth the chance to do so as they investigate related issues and gain greater skill mastery. Advisors work with students individually to help them decide on the appropriate level of study.
Accelerated Courses
Offered only by the mathematics department. Accelerated courses allow students who have a strong interest and facility in mathematics to pursue mathematical concepts in more depth and at a faster pace. A consultation among previous teachers, the student, and the department chair determines a student’s placement in math.
Honors Program
Available in English in grades 9 and 10. Students elect to participate in extended reading, analytical writing, and class discussions. If students successfully complete the work of the Honors Program, they earn an English Honors designation on their transcript.
Independent Study
Occasionally, an Upper School student—typically a junior or a senior—has a particular interest in a subject area that is not covered by the curriculum. With a faculty sponsor and the necessary approvals, a student may design an independent study for course credit. The deadline to apply for an independent study is the end of the first week of May.
Malone Schools Online Network
Waynflete is a member of the Malone Schools Online Network (MSON). Juniors and seniors may apply to take a course offered by the network along with students from all over the country. These rigorous courses combine synchronous instruction and real-time videoconferencing seminars with asynchronous instruction, recorded lectures, and exercises that students complete outside class. Each course meets twice a week for an hour. A wide variety of courses are offered, ranging from Greek to psychology to the fundamentals of nuclear science. Waynflete students have taken MSON courses in multivariable calculus, forensics, organic chemistry, Arabic, technology, and identity. MSON courses are designed for highly motivated students with excellent study skills.
Off-Campus Study
Some Waynflete students, with the approval of the Upper School director, have participated in semester or yearlong residential programs. Students should consult with their advisors and the Upper School director when considering and evaluating possible off-campus study options.
Senior Projects
Seniors in good academic standing have the opportunity to finish their regular coursework in May and spend the last four weeks of the school year engaged in Senior Projects. These projects allow students to pursue academic and cocurricular interests, investigate potential career paths, and get involved in significant community service in creative ways. Projects are subject to approval by a faculty committee.
Student Assessment and Performance Evaluation
A Waynflete education is intentionally designed to educate the whole child by preparing students to lead productive, meaningful lives. Students receive feedback on their academic progress through parent-teacher conferences, scheduled grade reports, and informal conversations throughout the year. Students are taught to develop their own goals for improving academic skills, habits of work, and social-emotional skills, and are given opportunities for developmentally targeted self-assessment. Each program within the school provides a detailed, holistic assessment of a student’s academic accomplishments and approach to learning.
Upper School students receive reports on their academic progress after each of four marking periods. Academic courses are designed on either a yearlong (one-credit) or a semester (half-credit) basis. All grades earned by Upper School students for either semester-long or yearlong classes are cumulative and demonstrate the evolution of their academic progress within a particular subject. A final transcript, detailing the final grades given for each course, is provided at the end of each school year. A student’s overall academic evaluation is based on criteria such as class participation, homework, essays, special projects, quizzes, and exams.
Academic Honors
Honors are awarded on the basis of a numerical grade average. This is calculated using a 12-point scale (A+=12.0; D-=1.0). To earn honors, a student must achieve an average of 8.0 (B). To earn high honors, a student must achieve an average of 10.0 (A-). Academic honors are listed on students’ official transcripts. These distinctions may include
• HONOR ROLL Requires a B average or better in all courses.
• HIGH HONOR ROLL Requires an A- average or better in all courses.
• WAYNFLETE SCHOLAR Distinguished by having no grade below an A- in any course in a given semester.
Student Health and Well-Being
Navigating the Upper School
During Outdoor Experience, students spend their first four days of Upper School in small groups forming bonds that serve them well in the years ahead. In a wilderness or service setting, faculty members help students discover new aspects of themselves and others. Students discover their leadership potential, take charge of their own learning, and set goals for their academics and cocurricular activities. Whether taking in a pristine summit view on Maine conservation lands or discussing objectives in a complex urban setting, students discover what it means to be part of the Waynflete community.
The school’s ninth-grade seminar builds on the relationships students begin to form during OE and sets the stage for student-centered learning in Upper School. Topics include weekly check-ins, setting goals for academic and personal well-being, time management, u nderstanding diversity, overcoming stereotypes, and communicating with integrity. Discussions include those on mindfulness and stress reduction, sleep and nutrition, healthy relationships, sexuality, mental health, and preventing substance abuse.
Upper School Advising Program
Advisors are the primary guides for students as they navigate the curriculum, the cocurricular offerings, and their personal lives. Students begin each school day by checking in with their advisors, and they join their advising groups for lunch, discussion, and activities once a week. Advisors facilitate lessons to teach students developmentally appropriate socialemotional skills. Time is set aside during the year for students to meet individually with their advisors to measure progress, consider course selections for the following year, and explore new interests. These conversations eventually lead to the college application process, which starts with informational programs during a student’s sophomore year and begins in earnest during the spring semester of their junior year.
Cocurricular Activities
Upper School students choose from a range of cocurricular activities in addition to their academic classes. Faculty advisors help students explore new areas of interest, exercise leadership, and engage with multiage peer groups that share similar interests.
Add/Drop Policy
For moves from Intensive/Accelerated courses to the regular equivalent course:
At any point until one week after fall parent conferences, students may switch to the regular course without the grade from the Intensive/Accelerated course appearing on their transcript. Only the regular course (and the grade they earn in the regular course) will appear on the transcript. If students remain in the Intensive/Accelerated course beyond one week after fall conferences, they may move to the regular class only at the semester break. Their transcript
will show both a grade from the first semester in the Intensive/Accelerated course and a grade from the secondsemester regular course.
Students who have remained in an Intensive class through the first semester but are clearly struggling may be asked to move to the regular class at the discretion of the department chair and Upper School director. Their grade from the first semester of the Intensive/Accelerated class will appear on their transcript as a semester grade.
For moves from a regular course to the Intensive/ Accelerated equivalent course:
Students can move upward with teacher recommendation at any point until four weeks into the course. Students will be responsible for bridging any gaps in material covered by the higher-level class prior to their arrival. Students will only be graded on the work they do in the course they have added.
For all other courses (where a level change is not an option):
Students have two weeks (or six class meetings) to drop a class and add another course in its place through the add/ drop process. There will be no record of the dropped course on the transcript.
Course changes cannot be made based on a student’s teacher preference, nor to move to a different section of a multisection course, except potentially in cases in which a student would be moving from a larger class to a smaller class. If a course change necessitates broader changes to the student’s schedule, class size limits must be considered for any new classes involved.
After the two-week point, students may still drop the course until one week after parent conferences. They will not be able to add another course. There will be no record of the dropped course on the transcript. Students may still drop a course with no record of the dropped course on the transcript until one week after parent conferences. They will not be able to add another course if six class meetings have already passed.
If a student chooses to withdraw from the class after the parent conference deadline, an annotation of WP (withdrawn passing) or WF (withdrawn failing) will appear on the transcript. This option is only possible if the student has at least five other classes.
Cases involving extenuating circumstances will be considered individually.
College Counseling
Drawing upon the expertise of college counselors who spent years as college admissions professionals at some of the nation’s most selective colleges and universities, Waynflete’s college counseling program empowers students to take charge of their college search and selection process. Through a series of individual meetings, small group sessions, and opportunities to meet with college representatives, Waynflete students learn how to research colleges that can help them fulfill their goals as well as how to complete an application that highlights their individual interests, strengths, and accomplishments. These opportunities are complemented with advising around standardized testing, parent meetings, and college financial aid seminars.
With the guidance of the college counseling team, Waynflete students learn how to navigate a multistep process that involves multiple constituencies, including not only the members of the admissions committees who will read their files but also the teachers, coaches, mentors, and counselors poised to assist each student in putting together the strongest application possible. Our process allows students to feel supported by the relationships they have formed during their Upper School years while providing them with opportunities and prompts to reflect upon their experiences, both inside and outside the classroom.
ENGLISH
The English department curriculum provides students with a varied background in literature, a thorough grounding in writing skills, and different approaches to literary analysis. Other educational goals include independent thought and reasoning, skill in working in small groups, creative problem-solving, and alternative ways of seeing various situations. To meet these goals, the English department offers thematic yearlong courses for grade 9 and 10 students. Beginning in the fall of their junior year, students choose from a selection of literature and/or writing electives each semester.
The Upper School English program focuses on literature, writing, critical thinking, and discussion skills. Students read a variety of literary genres while learning to write critical literary analysis. The reading list may be supplemented from year to year in response to student interest. Essay writing and creative writing are incorporated into every required course. Grammar is taught in the context of written work and through direct instruction. In grades 9 and 10, English courses are yearlong and thematic. In grades 11 and 12, students select from an array of semester courses.
English 9: Questions of Power (Full Year) Honors Program option
English 10: Confronting the Indeterminate (Full Year) Honors Program option
GRADE 9
GRADES 11 AND 12
Students take at least one elective per semester. They must take either Essay Writing or Writers’ Workshop and two literature electives. Essay Writing or Writers’ Workshop
GRADE 10
English 9: Questions of Power (Full year, 1 credit)
This course will examine the many forms of power that drive social, political, and personal conflict in literature. Where does power come from? Where does it reside? What are the consequences when it shifts? What happens when we challenge it? Students will explore these questions and many more throughout the semester, beginning with an examination of Western and non-Western conceptions of power through a close reading of the first chapters of Genesis alongside creation/formation myths from other cultures and traditions. This approach provides the foundation for the remaining texts, which include Macbeth (William Shakespeare), The Great Gatsby (F. Scott Fitzgerald), A Raisin in the Sun (Lorraine Hansberry), and selections from other modern and contemporary writers. Students broaden their close reading skills and their love of language through a unit on poetry. Extensive instruction in grammar and vocabulary provides a solid foundation for frequent work on analytic writing. This rigorous course also includes an optional Honors Program.
English 10: Confronting the Indeterminate (Full year, 1 credit)
This course explores the nuances, intricacies, and contradictions of our world and our identities. Through literature, students confront complex ethical, social, and political questions, none of which have easy answers. Readings may include Kindred (Octavia Butler), I Know Why the Caged Bird Sings (Maya Angelou), Night (Elie Wiesel), and Exit West (Mohsin Hamid), as well as short stories and poetry. In addition to developing analytical writing skills, students gain significant exposure to personal essay writing through an extensive memoir project in which they reflect on the complexities of their own identities and experiences while strengthening their revision skills and exploring the stylistic elements of creative nonfiction. This rigorous course also includes an optional Honors Program.
Junior-Senior English Electives
In the fi nal two years of Upper School, the English department offers a set of electives that students select based on their individual interests and strengths. Students must take at least four semesters of English electives, two of which must be literature electives, during their junior and senior years. By graduation, each student must also have completed either Essay Writing or Writers’ Workshop. Not all electives are offered every year.
AMERICAN LITERATURE
American Hubris: In Search of the National Identity (½ credit) This class focuses on the question of American identity—who we are and where we are headed. Students examine the culture by acting as literary critics and cultural anthropologists who seek to understand our times. They consider a range of pointed and conflicting conceptions of contemporary American identity as portrayed in novels, films, television, and various artifacts from popular culture gleaned from the internet. Novels may include The Reluctant Fundamentalist (Mohsin Hamid), A Visit from the Goon Squad (Jennifer Egan), The Brief and Wondrous Life of Oscar Wao (Junot Diaz), Animal Dreams (Barbara Kingsolver), A Hologram for the King (Dave Eggers), Casebook (Mona Simpson), The Free (Willy Vlautin), and Redeployment (Phil Klay). Films may include Crash, Beasts of the Southern Wild, Margin Call, and Winter’s Bone. The class may also study selected episodes from television series like The Wire.
The Productivity of Dissent: Reading, Writing, and Understanding Civil Discourse (½ credit)
This class will explore argumentative literature, focusing specifically on the idea of dissent and those who practice it. The course will include critical analysis of core texts (e.g., The Traitor’s Niche, The Nightingale, The Long Walk to Freedom), as well as plays, poetry, song lyrics, political pamphlets, and famous legal dissents from international jurists. By the end of the semester, students will comfortably distinguish between dissent and disagreement, whether discussing British punk rock lyrics
or the drafting of the South African Constitution. Additionally, students will engage creatively with dissent throughout the semester by writing their own poetry and short fiction.
Shakespeare in America (½ credit)
This course explores American literature and politics, from the country’s founding through its most recent election, in the context of three of Shakespeare’s plays. Students will examine American poems, novels, speeches, plays, and essays alongside Shakespeare’s Hamlet, Romeo and Juliet, and Othello. Shakespeare influenced American culture and politics from the beginning, and these three plays shed light on many aspects of our culture and history. Readings will include works by the founding fathers, Washington Irving, Anne Bradstreet, Abraham Lincoln, Herman Melville, Emily Dickinson, Mark Twain, Walt Whitman, James Baldwin, Lin-Manuel Miranda, Adrienne Rich, Kanye West, and Tupac Shakur.
Southern Gothic: From Flannery O’Connor to Jesmyn Ward (½ credit)
This course will explore authors who use the language of dreams, nightmares, and the supernatural to understand the unpleasant truths of real-life American history. Originally considered a lowbrow genre, the tradition of gothic fiction has allowed generations of writers to explore the social and psychological horrors of everyday life in the American South, a region haunted by racism, violence, and poverty. The course will conclude with a unit on film and cinema. Possible texts include Flannery O’Connor’s short stories, As I Lay Dying (William Faulkner), Beloved (Toni Morrison), and Sing, Unburied, Sing (Jesmyn Ward), as well as films and television from the Gothic tradition including Night of the Hunter, A Streetcar Named Desire, and excerpts from American Horror Story.
The Vietnam War Through Literature and Film (½ credit)
This course focuses on novels, short stories, poetry, expository writing, and screenplays about the Vietnam War written from a variety of points of view: those of the soldiers, family members, war protesters, and Vietnamese citizens. Several popular films that depict the war are discussed and contrasted with other visual images that have become imprinted on our culture’s memory—images ranging from wartime photography to the look and iconography of war memorials, such as the Vietnam Veterans Memorial in Washington, D.C. Readings may include The Quiet American (Graham Greene), The Things They Carried (Tim O’Brien), In Country (Bobbie Ann Mason), The Sadness of War (Bào Ninh), When Heaven and Earth Changed Places (Le Ly Hayslip), Everything We Had (Albert Santoli), Dispatches (Michael Herr), and In Pharaoh’s Army (Tobias Wolff). Films may include The Green Berets, Apocalypse Now, Full Metal Jacket, and Platoon. This course includes a mandatory personal interview assignment with written documentation and formal essay writing.
Postmodern Literature: Embrace the Chaos (½ credit)
Is it possible for a fictional story to represent the truth more accurately than reality? Can authors represent truth more effectively by reinventing traditional narrative techniques? Students explore these topics by examining postmodern literary techniques such as unreliable narration and metafiction that turn traditional narrative modes inside out and call into question that which seems true. Readings may include Lost in the Funhouse (John Barth), Slaughterhouse-Five (Kurt Vonnegut), Jazz (Toni Morrison), and A Visit from the Goon Squad (Jennifer Egan). Other possible authors include Chuck Palahniuk, Tim O’Brien, and David Foster Wallace. Possible films include Big Fish and The Truman Show.
Women’s Literature: Voices of Self-Expression (½ credit)
How has the literary voice of women changed over the years? Can men be included in the dialogue? How does the evolving literature reflect women’s varying experiences? A variety of genres—including poetry, prose, and theater—guide discussions of how women’s perceptions have changed and been viewed over the past century. More specifically, the course examines how class, race, geography, ethnicity, and sexual orientation shape women’s life experiences. Students explore writers from many backgrounds, including Jeanette Winterson ( Written on the
Body) and Margaret Atwood (The Handmaid’s Tale), as well as classic British writers such as Virginia Woolf (A Room of One’s Own).
Voices of African American Writers (½ credit)
From Phyllis Wheatley to Kendrick Lamar, the story of African American literature has always been a complex and illuminating dialogue of voices and ideas. Today, the tradition continues to evolve and the story continues to unfold in ways that are inseparable from the history and culture of the nation. In this course, we will explore poetry, novels, plays, and songs that represent heights of literary complexity and provoke essential questions about society, history, politics, and the nature of literature itself, including Go Tell It on the Mountain (James Baldwin), Sula (Toni Morrison), Babel-17 (Samuel Delaney), and Erasure (Percival Everett). We will end the semester with an extensive unit on the history and poetics of rap and hip-hop, culminating in a close reading of To Pimp a Butterfly (Kendrick Lamar).
Poetry and Revolution in America (½ credit)
Just as America has been an experiment since its inception, so has its poetry. From the religious fundamentalism of the Puritans to the radical individualism of the nineteenth century or from the feminist, pacifist, and Communist doctrines of the 1960s to the postmodern experimentations of the present day, there has never been an era in which American poetry has not held closely to revolutionary ideas. This course examines a number of American poets in depth (considering both the formal innovations of their verse and their roles in society), including Anne Bradstreet, Phyllis Wheatley, Walt Whitman, T.S. Eliot, Langston Hughes, Edna St. Vincent Millay, Audre Lorde, Adrienne Rich, Frank O’Hara, Sylvia Plath, and Terrence Hayes.
The Graphic Novel (½ credit)
Over the past few decades, the graphic novel has gone from the niche world of comic books to a varied, complex, and increasingly legitimate form of literary expression. Students trace the development of the form as it separated itself from other narrative modes and explore the themes and voices unique to graphic novels. Students are exposed to a wide range of graphic novels to learn how to examine illustration as literary style. The emphasis is on essay writing, but students create visual narrative writings of their own. The class considers whether a graphic novel should be considered literature. Readings may include Fun Home: A Family Tragicomic (Alison Bechdel), The Smartest Kid on Earth (Jimmy Corrigan), Black Panther (Chris Ware), and the works of Ta-Nehisi Coates and Brian Stelfreeze.
The American Immigrant Experience (½ credit)
This course explores the voices and experiences of American immigrants through multiple genres, including novels, short stories, essays, memoirs, poems, and films. Students will address essential questions such as: What forces draw people away from their homelands to the US? What systems are in place to support or thwart the process of “becoming American”? What is the impact of race, class, culture, and language on American and individual identity? Possible authors include Jhumpa Lahiri, Amy Tan, Dave Eggers, Khaled Hosseini, Chimamanda Adichie, Frank McCourt, Sandra Cisneros, Julie Otsuka, Julia Alvarez, Edwidge Danticat, Gene Luen Yang, and Junot Diaz.
The Making of the American Criminal (½ credit)
This course explores the intersection of literary and legal studies with a particular focus on the identities, backstories, and depictions of those accused or convicted of crimes. The class examines the role of law in the structure of institutions, relationships, and political and personal power. Students also consider the glamorization and demonization of the criminal in literature. Texts may include Just Mercy (Brian Stevenson), Nuts (Tom Topor), To Kill a Mockingbird (Harper Lee), The Searchers (John Ford), and Rita Haywarth and the Shawshank Redemption (Stephen King and Frank Darabont). Some discussions will focus on violence, incarceration, and other difficult subject matter.
Native American Literature (½ credit)
Through early Native American literary texts and the contemporary literature that these texts have influenced, this class examines the oral tradition of storytelling and its relationship to the Earth—plants and animals, rivers and rocks, and all things believed significant in the life of America’s first peoples. Readings will examine the historical fissure between the first peoples and the conquering colonial powers that existed in the early Americas and continues as cultural and political conflict today. Readings include Black Elk Speaks (Nicholas Black Elk, Lakota), Reservation Blues (Sherman Alexie, Spokane–Coeur d’Alene), Ceremony (Leslie Marmon Silko, Laguna Pueblo), and Little: A Novel (David Treuer, Ojibwe).
WORLD LITERATURE
Law, Literature, and Social Justice (½ credit)
This course will explore the intersection of literary and legal studies, with a particular focus on social justice and to what degree the legal systems of various nation-states achieve it. Through literature and film, students examine the role of law in the structure of institutions, relationships, and political/personal power. They also interrogate our their ideas about morality, law, justice, and punishment and develop a lexicon and framework for discussing these concepts as legal scholars. Texts may include legal cases, excerpts from legal textbooks, Icelandic sagas, The Trial (Franz Kafka), Cell One (Chimamanda Ngozi Adichie), and Too Dear! (Leo Tolstoy).
African Literature: A Question of Power (½ credit)
Although distinct in countless ways, many African cultures throughout the continent have a common experience that has shaped their destinies, namely the rapid conquest by the West in the latter part of the nineteenth century, the often-brutal colonial rule that followed, and then sudden independence from the West starting in the latter half of the twentieth century. African novelists and filmmakers played essential roles in the struggle to shape African identity after political independence, as Africans themselves took ownership of a narrative that previously had been told to the world almost exclusively by Western outsiders. This course will orient students within the literature and then engage them in open and generative discourse to identify core themes that also help illuminate contemporary African experiences. Novels may include Things Fall Apart (Chinua Achebe), God’s Bits of Wood (Ousmane Sembène), The Bride Price (Buchi Emecheta), When Rain Clouds Gather (Bessie Head), Radiance of Tomorrow (Ishmael Beah), We Need New Names (NoViolet Bulawayo), and The Heart of Redness (Zakes Mda). Films may include Mister Johnson, Xala, and Sometimes in April.
Authenticity and Performance in the Digital Age (½ credit)
What does it mean to be authentic? Who is “the real you”? How does an online presence influence one’s real-life identity? This course examines these questions, considering how truth and performance intertwine in the age of social media and how contemporary literature probes the relationship between authenticity and digital existence. Students read a variety of texts (supplemented with critical and theoretical perspectives), from David Foster Wallace’s short story “Good Old Neon” to Remainder (Tom McCarthy) and The First Bad Man (Miranda July). The course draws on contemporary films and television shows that address the issues of authenticity and technology, such as the television series Black Mirror. Students also draw on their own experiences online and work together to create virtual platforms that promote authentic self-presentation.
A Fantastic Journey: Reading and Writing in Lands Beyond (½ credit)
Fantasy literature has moved from bit player to robust star in the literary heavens. In this course, students are challenged to investigate and analyze why fantasy holds such allure and where its roots lie. Students begin with a brief look at some essential source materials, from ancient myths to works like Beowulf, The Tempest, or Gulliver’s Travels. The class then reads extensively in the genre, beginning with a close reading of The Hobbit and going on to excerpts from The Lord of the Rings. Other works that may be used include Earthsea (Ursula K. Le Guin) and works
by Lewis Carroll and C.S. Lewis, as well as contemporary works such as the Harry Potter and The Hunger Games series. This is a class for the fantasy fan. In addition to the readings, there will be a self-designed research project and an extensive fantasy fiction writing assignment.
Medieval Literature of Europe and the Islamic World (½ credit)
Headless knights, powerful women in politics, Persian mystics, undead Vikings, intrepid travelers, and giant birds—far from being an age of darkness and disorder, the Middle Ages were a time of cultural exchange, innovation, and wonder. This course explores the literature and history of two adjacent worlds: Europe after the fall of Rome and the Islamic world of the Umayyad and Abbasid Caliphates. Students will read a wide range of texts in translation, from tales of heroes and monsters to scathing political satires and visions of the end of the world. They will supplement their readings with music, art, religion, and philosophy. The goal is to make sense of this long and complex period of history while asking what lessons the modern world can learn from the dialogue between cultures of the past. Readings may include the Old English Beowulf, the French Song of Roland, folktales and fantasy from the Arabian Nights, the Persian epic Shahnameh, the political allegory of Dante’s Inferno, the mystical poetry of Jalal ad-Din Rumi, the visions of Margery Kempe, and The Conference of the Birds (Farid Attar).
Telling Tales: Folklore, Mythology, and Reinterpretation (½ credit)
Myths, folklore, and children’s stories are often our introductions as we explore elements of the world around us and try to answer the cosmic questions of how and why. This course addresses myths and folktales as the foundations on which other works of literature are built. Students explore the foundational stories and then the ways in which authors draw on these ideas to probe issues of sex, gender, creation, race, family, and more. An examination of picture books and other children’s literature allows us to observe the impact words and images have on us from a very young age and consider the differences in reexperiencing their effect as more mature readers. Expect analytical and creative writing assignments. Works studied may include creation myths from around the world, a variety of fairy tales and folk stories, Frankenstein (Mary Shelley), Animal Farm (George Orwell), Freshwater (Akwaeke Emezi), Alice in Wonderland (Lewis Carroll), and The Bloody Chamber (Angela Carter).
Perpetrators and Victims (½ credit)
How do apparently normal people subject others to atrocity and murder? How do societies promote, condone, or prevent genocide? How do individuals and countries survive emotionally, culturally, and politically? What, if anything, can be done to prevent genocide in the future? Students examine genocide from a historic and political perspective through memoir, essay, fiction, and poetry. Possible titles include This Way for the Gas, Ladies and Gentlemen (Tadeusz Borowski), Imagining Argentina (Lawrence Thornton), and Johnny Mad Dog (Emmanuel Dongala).
Russian Literature (½ credit)
Using literature from the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, this elective is designed as a sweeping introduction to the literature of the pre-Soviet, Soviet, and post-Soviet periods in Russian writing. Course readings may include Fathers and Sons (Ivan Turgenev), Crime and Punishment (Fyodor Dostoevsky), Doctor Zhivago (Boris Pasternak), and One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich (Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn). Students may also read selections of poems, short stories, and plays by Nikolai Gogol, Alexander Pushkin, and Anton Chekhov, as well as pieces by contemporary writers. Students read critical articles of the major texts, write analytical essays, and conduct research to learn about the political and cultural contexts of the literature and the writers themselves. Students should be prepared for a rigorous reading schedule.
“What’s Up with That?”: Engaging Your World Through Journalism (½ credit)
Climate change, politics, immigration rights, fashion trends, sign stealing in baseball—these are all stories you can follow and develop through journalism. This class is designed to introduce students to the fundamental elements of news writing and photojournalism. Students will learn the terms and concepts of journalism as well as the history of journalistic ethics. Students will write in multiple genres, including news, features, and sports articles. Classes will include discussions, workshops, group and individual meetings, writing, revising, and publishing. This is a hands-on course that requires active participation and a commitment to working under deadlines for news stories and page layouts. Students will read, discuss, and analyze examples of creative journalism and recently published articles in print and online and will also collaborate on research projects. This counts as a writing class.
WRITING
Writers’ Workshop (½ credit)
The goal of this workshop is to strengthen each student’s process of writing as a means of discovery and expression. Students write daily to gain practice and authority in response writing. They keep journals as a means of free writing and as a source of ideas for later papers. Contemporary essays provide models and form the basis of discussions about writing styles. Students complete extensive drafting of both personal and expository pieces, ending with a final edited draft. Each student will write a minimum of four essays. Peer review and teacher review are integral to this process. Course readings include The Color of Water (James McBride).
Essay Writing (½ credit)
The course explores personal essay modes and techniques. Through an examination of narrative, descriptive, persuasive, and expository models, students work to discover the importance of voice, sentence styling, effective word choice, and intention. A habit of informal writing is encouraged through nightly blog posts inspired by prompts or on a subject of the student’s choice. The class relies on peer review and workshop feedback through revision. Students practice preparing essays for submission to various outlets (all students submit at least two pieces for possible publication).
Poetry Writing (½ credit)
In this course, students will write poems. They will do everything in their power to do brilliant things with words, and they will change the way they see the world in the process. Students will read widely. They will borrow mercilessly from the voices of others while looking for voices of their own, and they will fearlessly critique one another’s work. William Carlos Williams said a poem is “a machine made out of words.” Percy Bysshe Shelley said poets are “the unacknowledged legislators of the world.” The class is formatted like a workshop. Students will read each other’s work and outside poems daily, provide constructive criticism, and commit some of the poems to memory. They will also study poetic terminology and learn a variety of forms and techniques through their own practice. This is credited as a writing class.
Fiction Workshop (½ credit)
Do you ever have the urge to write great prose and not think about thesis statements and topic sentences? This course examines creative forms of fiction, with a focus on examining personal narratives, articles, and editorials. Looking at models of published prose, the class offers writing activities to give new ideas on both form and content. Students work on technical skills that support good writing in a workshop model of sharing pieces for class-wide feedback. A strong commitment to the writing process and a willingness to share weekly pieces with classmates are necessary.
MATHEMATICS
The Upper School mathematics curriculum covers a wide variety of subject matter. As mathematics education is ever-changing, the course of study is designed to incorporate new ideas and techniques while being mindful of the importance of a sound, traditional foundation. In this spirit, technology is used in all courses. Students gain confidence in representing and interpreting information graphically, numerically, verbally, and analytically. The ability to make reasonable predictions and assumptions based on collected information is a critical skill in the modern world, and much effort is made to cultivate this skill in each course. As mathematics is an art as well as a science, the department strives to help students foster an enjoyment and appreciation of the mathematical process.
The curriculum appropriately challenges students at each level. Students in the Upper School are required to complete Algebra I, Algebra II, and Geometry before electing other options. Several levels of difficulty and challenge are available in each course. Accelerated courses allow students who have a strong interest in and facility for mathematics to pursue concepts in more depth and at a faster pace. Consultations with previous teachers, the student, and the department chair help determine a student’s placement in math.
Math department members work collaboratively to place each student in the most appropriate course as students progress through the mathematics curriculum. Students must have a teacher recommendation and meet grade requirements to take accelerated courses (B or higher in an accelerated course to take the following accelerated course, A- or higher in a non-accelerated course to move up to the accelerated version of the following course). Students moving from non-accelerated courses to accelerated courses are required to complete supplemental summer work to aid in the transition. Math placements are communicated to students (via their math teacher) and to parents at parent conferences. New student placements in the math department are made after consultation with the student’s previous coursework at their current school. In some cases, diagnostic tests are given to students to help determine appropriate placement.
Algebra I (Full year, 1 credit)
Algebra I is designed to nurture and strengthen the transition from computational to algebraic thinking. With a focus on the connection between algebraic and graphical representations, this course aims to deepen students’ ability to process and think at higher abstract and conceptual levels. Students will explore linear equations and inequalities, systems of linear equations and inequalities, the definition of a function, and characteristics of linear, quadratic, and exponential functions. Through a problem-solving approach, students will make meaningful connections between mathematical skills and life experiences. Emphasis will be placed on multiple approaches, as various strategies will be developed, analyzed, and discussed.
Algebra II (Full year, 1 credit)
This course presents the concepts of a traditional Algebra II program for students who have successfully completed Algebra I and may be taken prior to or after Geometry. Topics include linear, absolute value, quadratic, polynomial, and square root functions. Systems of equations are solved both graphically and algebraically, and students simplify and solve rational and radical expressions and equations. Complex numbers are introduced as an extension of the real number system. Use of a graphing calculator reinforces and supports skills learned in this course. Prerequisite: Algebra I or equivalent.
Accelerated Algebra II (Full year, 1 credit)
This course is for strong math students who have successfully completed an Algebra I program. It begins by exploring sequences and series and how these topics have connections to both linear and exponential relationships. It also includes other topics traditionally found in a rigorous Algebra II course, such as linear and quadratic functions, higher-order polynomial functions, and rational functions. If time permits, students will also explore exponential and logarithmic functions. Technology is used to support learning and exploration, leading to a deeper connection to the material. Prerequisite: Algebra I or equivalent.
Advanced Integrated Mathematics I (Full year, 1 credit)
This advanced ninth-grade mathematics course is designed for students ready to engage in a rigorous and two-year accelerated study of Algebra II, Trigonometry, and Precalculus. Students will strengthen their analytical thinking, problem-solving skills, and mathematical reasoning— preparing them for the highest levels of high school mathematics. Topics will include advanced functions (polynomial, rational, exponential, logarithmic, and trigonometric); complex numbers and their applications; analytic trigonometry and applications, sequences, series, and limits; introduction to calculus concepts, and mathematical proofs. Placement in this course is dependent on completion of Advanced Algebra I as well as teacher recommendation. Prerequisite: completion of an advanced or accelerated Algebra I course in grade 8.
Advanced Integrated Mathematics II (Full year, 1 credit)
This advanced tenth-grade mathematics course is designed for students to continue to engage in a rigorous and accelerated study of mathematics. It is the continuation of the ninth grade Advanced Integrated Mathematics I course. In addition to the topics listed in the Advanced Integrated Mathematics I course, students will spend time delving into eloquent proofs based on geometric concepts. Students who successfully complete ninth- and tenth-grade Advanced Integrated Mathemetics I and II will then be placed in Calculus I Accelerated in grade 11, with teacher recommendation. Prerequisite: Advanced Integrated Mathematics I or equivalent.
Geometry and Data Analysis (Full year, 1 credit)
This course covers the topics of traditional Euclidean geometry: points, lines, planes, angles, properties of parallel lines, triangles, quadrilaterals, polygons, circles, area and volume, and congruence and similarity. Students use a variety of digital tools throughout the course to promote self-discovery and gain insight into spatial relationships and transformations. The course concludes with an introduction to the studies of data analysis and statistics. Prerequisite: Algebra I or equivalent.
Accelerated Geometry and Data Analysis (Full year, 1 credit)
In this course, students study all that is covered in the previous geometry course listing but at a faster pace and in greater depth. This course also places a stronger emphasis on formal, two-column proofs and spatial problem-solving. The curriculum includes introductions to the studies of data analysis and statistics. Prerequisite: Algebra I or equivalent.
Functions, Statistics, and Trigonometry (Full year, 1 credit)
This course is designed for students who have completed Algebra II but are not yet ready for Precalculus. It includes an introduction to statistical representation and measurement as well as a thorough consideration of linear, exponential, logarithmic, polynomial, and trigonometric functions and their corresponding inverses. Included in the study of trigonometric functions are the unit circle, the six basic functions, trigonometric identities, trigonometric equations, the law of sines, and the law of cosines. Students who have successfully completed this course will be prepared for Precalculus the following year. Prerequisites: Algebra II or equivalent and Geometry.
Precalculus (Full year, 1 credit)
This course begins with an exploration of coordinate geometry (coordinate distance, midpoints, and equations of circles) followed by a focus on functions, beginning with general function characteristics such as notation, domain and range, operations on functions, composition, symmetry, inverse relationships, and transformations. Students review linear and quadratic functions before exploring polynomial, rational, exponential, and logarithmic functions. The second part of the course includes a study of trigonometry, both application of the unit circle and analytical trigonometry. If time allows, probability and some elementary limits will be studied. Graphing calculators are used to reinforce and support learning, and real-life applications are emphasized. Prerequisites: Algebra II or equivalent and Geometry.
Precalculus Accelerated (Full year, 1 credit)
This course focuses on functions and begins with general function characteristics such as notation, domain and range, operations on functions, composition, symmetry, inverse relationships, and transformations. Students then engage in a detailed study of polynomial, rational, exponential, and logarithmic functions. The second part of the course consists of a detailed study of trigonometry and some elementary limits. Graphing calculators are used to reinforce and support learning. Real-life applications are emphasized. Prerequisites: Algebra II or equivalent and Geometry.
Calculus I (Full year, 1 credit)
This course starts by reviewing material from Precalculus that will support the study of calculus topics. Students explore limits of functions, the derivatives of functions, and applications of derivatives, which include related rate problems, maxima and minima problems, and curve sketching. The second half of the course focuses on integral calculus, including applications involving the area between two curves and volumes of solids of revolution. Upon completion of this course, students will have a solid grasp of calculus topics to support further study in this field. Prerequisite: Precalculus.
Calculus I Accelerated (Full year, 1 credit)
Students engage in an in-depth study of the limits of functions, derivatives of functions, and applications of derivatives, including related rate problems, maxima and minima problems, and curve sketching. The second half of the course focuses mainly on integral calculus, including applications involving the area between two curves. Differential equations and the volumes of solids of revolution are explored. Upon successful completion of this course, students will be prepared to take the Advanced Placement Calculus exam. Prerequisite: Precalculus.
Calculus II Accelerated (Full year, 1 credit)
This course offers a thorough review of the techniques of differentiation and integration. Students will study applications involving surface area, length of a curve, and parametric equations. Other topics include different techniques of integration, sequences, and series, including Taylor polynomials and Taylor series. Upon successful completion of this course, students will be prepared to take the BC Advanced Placement exam. Prerequisite: Calculus I Accelerated.
Advanced Statistics (Full year, 1 credit)
This course covers most topics included in the AP Statistics exam, with an emphasis on applications. Students examine depictions of data through graphs, correlation, and regression; data collection and sample design; randomness, binomial, and geometric distributions; and inference and significance tests on distributions, proportions, and tables. Students make extensive use of the statistics package on the TI-84 calculator. Prerequisite: Precalculus.
Linear Algebra and Advanced Mathematical Topics (Full year, 1 credit)
This course offers an introduction to the study of linear algebra and also includes additional topics designed to give students a survey of advanced fields of study in mathematics. The course begins with an analysis of matrices and matrix operations (including Gaussian elimination, determinants, and inverses), followed by an exploration of vectors, vector space, and vector operations. The study of linear algebra concludes with an analysis of orthogonality, eigenvalues, and eigenvectors. Students will be able to explore additional topics, including elementary abstract algebra, non-Euclidean geometries, number theory, and graph theory. Students’ specific interests will be accommodated as they engage in the exploration of a range of topics. Prerequisite: Calculus II.
HISTORY
The history curriculum provides opportunities for discovery and individual expression while ensuring that students have explored history broadly and deeply by the time they graduate. Teachers focus on historical themes and questions, guiding students to use factual evidence to support their conclusions and arguments. Courses span the globe and cover historical eras from ancient to modern times.
The curriculum of the History department is carefully integrated. Students take at least two years of history: World Civilizations (grade 9) and two semesters of US History (grade 11). In addition, the department offers a yearlong elective, Topics in Global History for sophomores, as well as a wide array of semester-long junior and senior electives. Students learn to analyze primary sources with increasing sophistication at each grade level; reliance on textbooks is minimal. In every course, students are encouraged to draw their own conclusions and to formulate original arguments. Upper School history courses also emphasize research papers, seminar-style studentled discussions, and the use of new technologies, including online discussions.
World Civilizations (Full year, 1 credit)
This ninth-grade history course explores major faiths of the world today (Hinduism, Buddhism, Judaism, Christianity, and Islam) and considers topics in history up through the Middle Ages. The concepts of humanism, polytheism, monotheism, pluralism, and syncretism will be investigated as students explore the faiths and histories of different parts of the world. The analysis of primary and secondary sources, the development of research skills, critical thinking, and student-led class discussions will be stressed throughout the course. Students will write a research-based essay on a topic of their choice as they practice formulating thesis statements, documenting sources, composing formal bibliographies, and providing written arguments and historical analyses.
Topics in Global History (Full year, 1 credit)
This sophomore history course focuses on examining selected developments around the world between the thirteenth and early twentieth centuries. Students explore a variety of topics, from the history of Asia, Africa, the Americas, and Europe through several broader ideas that are woven into the units and that allow for creating meaningful connections between countries, societies, and developments. These broad ideas include governance, cultural and social developments and interactions, economic systems, and technology and innovation. Throughout the year, students continue to practice research skills, comprehension, and analyses of primary and secondary sources, crafting arguments and supporting them with evidence in writing assignments and in-class discussions. The spring semester culminates in a research project on topics driven by students’ interests and is connected to the larger themes explored throughout the year.
US History I: The Formation of the United States, 1600–1860 (½ credit)
This course covers the history of the United States from the beginning of European colonization through Lincoln’s election in 1860. Students focus on the country’s political, economic, geographic, social, and cultural growth. The course explores the narratives of the early nation that are rooted in its founding documents, the evolving issue of slavery, and other forces that propelled the United States toward civil war. Class discussion, analytical essay writing, and close reading and annotation of primary source materials are integral to the course.
US History II: African American History (½ credit)
This course considers US history from the perspective of African Americans. Beginning with an examination of the West African slave trade and the origins of the Middle Passage during the sixteenth century, this course will consider key concepts and events in the racial history of the US. The development and spread of chattel and industrial slavery, the effects of emancipation and Reconstruction, the origin of Jim Crow laws, and the history of the struggle for civil rights up to the Black Lives Matter movement will be considered. Emphasis will be placed on examining the effects important events in US history have had on African Americans. Primary and secondary sources representing a Black perspective on US history will be utilized throughout the course. Class discussion, analytical essay writing, close reading and annotation of primary source materials, and the completion of an independent research essay are integral to the course.
US History II: The United States Comes of Age: The Civil War Through World War II, 1861–1945 (½ credit)
This course begins with the national trauma of the Civil War and the failures of the Reconstruction era. Students examine the political, economic, and social changes in the country between 1870 and World War I, focusing on the growth of industry, the labor movement, immigration, the Populist movement, the Progressive movement, and the early civil rights movements. Students explore the emergence of the United States as a global power, the Great Depression, and the country’s entry into World War II. Class discussion, analytical essay writing, and a close reading of primary source documents are emphasized.
Political Ideologies (½ credit)
Political ideologies offer a framework for how a society should be structured and a path for identifying and solving current societal issues. This senior elective course focuses on major political ideologies of the modern era. Through close readings of philosophical texts, primary sources, literature, and film, students will critically examine fundamental topics of modern-day society such as freedom, equality, security, and community. Students will examine how ideologies (including liberalism, conservatism, Marxism, socialism, anarchism, and fascism) emerge and why some thrive while others falter. Students will explore the opportunities presented by various ideologies as well as their limitations while also gaining a deeper understanding of how ideas develop in a historical context. Prerequisite: US History.
JUNIOR-SENIOR HISTORY ELECTIVES
Numerous history electives are offered to juniors and seniors. Students select courses based on individual interests. Not all electives are offered every year.
Women and Islam (½ credit)
This course begins with an overview of the history, culture, and beliefs of Islam as a religion, a culture, and a civilization. Students will be challenged to question their own assumptions, interrogate their own cultural knowledge, and approach the Islamic world with curiosity and humility. In a series of case studies from primary documents, eyewitness accounts, and modern journalism, we will explore the many roles of women in Islam, past and present, touching on various regions and traditions in the process. Students will hone their own skills as historians in several extended research projects and written historical essays. Prerequisite: completion of US History.
The History of Current Issues in the US (½ credit)
This course delves into the fundamental forces, civic structures, events, and people in US history since 1945. Students will identify critical issues and seek to understand them more fully through history. Examples will include civil rights movements, immigration, income inequality, climate change, voting rights, partisanship, issues of free speech, freedom of religion, health care, limited or expanded federal government, gerrymandering, the electoral college, and social media. Students will be asked to widen their lens and ways of thinking about topics and events as well as to understand the perspectives of different stakeholders on various issues. The intent of the course is to support students in their learning about the past as a window to the present, to assist them in becoming skilled in determining “the truth” to the best of their ability as they delve into myriad perspectives and sources, and to give them a foundation upon which they can seek to understand other issues in society. Students are expected to be conversant in current events and will take an active role in contributing to and leading class discussions. Open only to seniors and to juniors who are concurrently fulfilling their US History requirement.
Immigrants in the United States (½ credit)
In this course, students explore the experiences of diverse groups of immigrants to the United States, from colonial times to the present. Placing their individual and collective stories in the context of the history of America helps learners understand different struggles encountered as a result of settling in a new country, as well as the complexities of US immigration policies. The course also draws from the rich history of diverse populations and immigration to Portland to facilitate understanding of local history in national and global contexts. The class explores different aspects of immigration that America faces today and how diverse groups of people continue to redefine what it means to be American. In addition to developing their discussion and public speaking abilities, students are afforded opportunities to hone their research, writing, and reading comprehension skills.
Women in US History (½ credit)
This course will focus on the history of women in the United States from the colonial era to the late twentieth century. The course will include a discussion of the roles of women during the revolution and the early formation of the US government. The course will then investigate the changing norms and expectations of women from the Civil War to the Progressive era. From there, students will explore the successful women’s suffrage movement and the complexities of women’s lives in the 1920s. After learning about the impact of women in both world wars, the course will conclude with a study of the revival of the women’s rights movement of the 1960s and 1970s and the backlash to that movement. Class discussion, analytical essay writing, close reading and annotation of primary source materials, and the completion of an independent research project are integral to the course. Prerequisite: completion of US History.
The Great Twentieth-Century Crisis: World War II, 1939–1945 (½ credit)
As the deadliest and most widespread conflict in human history, World War II represents a fascinating and complex area of study. This course provides students with a multidimensional experience of some of the myriad narratives of this monumental war through the exploration of historical documents, film, and literature. Beginning with an introduction to the turbulent legacy of the Great War, students explore the rise of totalitarian regimes in Europe and Asia as well as the embattled status of democratic powers in the West. Topics discussed include Nazi racial theory, the rise of Imperial Japan, American isolationism, and the shifting role of the Soviet Union. Students are exposed to a variety of voices and narratives, including those of German civilians, Polish Jews, Japanese Americans, and members of the French Resistance. The course concludes with consideration of the far-reaching effects of the war, including the lessons of the Holocaust, the advent of the Cold War, and the implications of nuclear weaponry.
SCIENCE
The science department curriculum provides students with multiple and varied opportunities to explore the physical and natural worlds firsthand. Students acquire an understanding of the inherent value of the scientific method and knowledge of major scientific concepts. Additionally, students are encouraged to connect scientific principles to everyday experiences, incorporate mathematics into the study of science, write scientific reports and papers, present research to their peers, and evaluate society’s application of scientific discoveries. Instructional technological tools are used when they enhance the curriculum or allow students to employ alternative methods of experimentation and analysis.
GRADE 9
Biology or Biology Intensive (Full Year)
Required
GRADES 10–12
Chemistry or Chemistry Intensive (Full Year)
Physics or Physics Intensive (Full Year) Grade 11 or 12
Astrophysics Grade 12 ELECTIVES
Anatomy and Physiology Grades 10–12
The science department offers Upper School students courses in the fields of biology, chemistry, and physics. Scientific inquiry, creative problemsolving, mathematical analysis, and scientific writing are emphasized in the study of these disciplines. Students work in collaborative teams designing, conducting, and reporting on laboratory, field, and research investigations. Students use traditional lab equipment as well as electronic probes and sensors, graphing calculators, and computer software when collecting and analyzing experimental data. Intensive-level classes in biology, chemistry, and physics allow students to pursue topics in greater depth and require a higher level of independent problemsolving. As scientific literacy is a principal goal of the department, connections to current issues are woven into the curriculum of each course.
Marine Biology Grades 11–12 (Grade 10 by permission)
Environmental Science Grades 11–12
Advanced Biology Grade 12
Two years of science is required. Nearly all students take at least Biology and Chemistry. Most students take Physics as well. Students take Intensive classes by choice (along with recommendations from their teachers). Students are recommended for the following year’s science classes by their current teacher. The teacher’s recommendation will be grounded in the student’s grades and work in the course, though other factors (e.g., student’s overall workload) can be considered, as well as performance in math classes. Students may choose to take a class for which they were not recommended. In this case, they will speak with the science department chair to go over next steps, take a pre-assessment in the spring to identify areas that need improvement, and be offered summer coursework suggestions, based upon the pre-assessment. Science placements are communicated to students (via their science teacher) and to parents at parent conferences. New student placement recommendations in the science department are made after consultation with the student’s previous coursework at their current school. Final placement decisions are the student’s choice.
Biology (Full year, 1 credit)
Students in Biology develop critical-thinking skills and an ability to apply the scientific method through inquiry-based and teacher-directed labs, small-group activities, and student and teacher presentations. Students learn how to use spreadsheets and graphing software for data analysis and how to write formal lab reports. Content includes experimental design; the characteristics of living things; cell structure, function, and reproduction; DNA biology; genetics and evolutionary biology; and ecology and ecosystem functions. This course is also offered at an Intensive level.
Anatomy and Physiology I (½ credit)
This course is ideal for students eager to explore the human body and its systems in depth. It focuses on understanding the complex relationships between the structure and function of the body. The class includes a variety of learning methods such as lectures, hands-on labs, models, diagrams, dissections, and research projects. Topics covered in the firsrt semester include body planes and orientation, the integumentary system, the skeletal system, and the muscular system. Prerequisites: Biology and Algebra I.
Anatomy and Physiology II (½ credit)
A continuation of Anatomy and Physiology Part I, second-semester topics include the nervous system, the digestive system, the cardiovascular system, and the endocrine system. Prerequisites: Biology, Anatomy and Physiology I (or special permission), and Algebra I.
Chemistry (Full year, 1 credit)
Chemistry is designed for students who have strong algebra skills. It has a laboratory-based curriculum intended to give students a working knowledge of general inorganic chemistry. Topics include the properties of matter; problem-solving using dimensional analysis; atomic structure; chemical nomenclature; writing, balancing, and predicting the products of chemical reactions; the mole concept; stoichiometry; acid-base chemistry; the quantum model of atoms; chemical bonding; molecular structure; and intermolecular forces. This course is also offered in an Intensive format. Prerequisite: Biology (Algebra II recommended).
Chemistry Intensive (Full year, 1 credit)
See note about intensives above. Additional topics include average atomic weight and empirical formula calculations, limiting reagent problems, net ionic equations, and thermochemistry. Prerequisites: Biology and Algebra II (or permission from department chair).
Physics (Full year, 1 credit)
Physics is designed for juniors and seniors and explores motion through the use of laboratory and problem-solving activities. The course begins with a thorough study of Newtonian mechanics, including one- and two-dimensional kinematics, forces, work, energy, and momentum. Simple harmonic motion (waves), optics, electricity, and magnetism are explored in the second semester, as time allows. Strong math and problem-solving skills are required. This course is also offered in an Intensive format. Prerequisites: Chemistry and Algebra II.
Environmental Science: Ecology (½ credit)
With an extensive lab and field component, this seminar-style course brings together elements of biology and chemistry to teach students how ecosystems function. Topics include organization of the environment, flow of energy and matter, biogeochemical cycles, ecological pyramids, tolerance curves, evolution, population dynamics, ecological succession, and the geologic history of Maine. Prerequisite: Biology (completion of Chemistry is highly encouraged).
Environmental Science: Current Issues (½ credit)
In this course, students learn about the underlying causes of environmental problems and are challenged to take action to bring about change. Readings are taken from current periodicals, scientific journals, and selected texts. The course also features outside speakers and field trips to local ecosystems. Students complete a research paper on an environmental issue in their own community. Topics include understanding human attitudes and behavior toward the environment, evaluating the validity of scientific claims, recognizing forms of scientific denialism in the media, land and water use, global climate change, and research into a variety of current environmental issues. This course is offered to juniors and seniors. Prerequisite: Biology (completion of Chemistry is highly encouraged).
Marine Coastal Ecology (½ credit)
Through classroom, lab, and field experiences, students examine the ecology of the major coastal ecosystems of the Gulf of Maine. The course begins with an investigation of basic oceanography and then moves on to the ecology of rocky- and sandy-shore ecosystems. In addition to field and laboratory experiences, students participate in ongoing field studies and use a case study approach to examine a number of current ecological issues in the Gulf of Maine. Prerequisite: Biology. Open only to juniors and seniors (and sophomores by permission).
Biology of Marine Organisms (½ credit)
This course begins with a focus on marine producers and then moves on to explore each major group of marine animals, including the biology of simple and complex invertebrates, and vertebrates including fish, birds, reptiles, and mammals. The course includes a significant lab component, video- and text-based assignments, and case studies that examine current ecological issues. Prerequisite: Biology. Open only to juniors and seniors (and sophomores by permission).
Astrophysics (Full year, 1 credit)
This course is offered to seniors who are interested in studying the physics of the universe and its components. The curriculum uses a combination of laboratory activities, problem-solving techniques, research projects, online data sources, computer-charting software, and field trips as tools for exploring the dynamic field of astronomy. Topics include the motions of celestial bodies, electromagnetic radiation, stars and stellar evolution, black holes, pulsars, relativity, and other topics in cosmology and modern physics, including the origin and fate of our universe. Open to seniors only. Prerequisites: Physics and Precalculus. At least one previous Intensive-level class is strongly suggested.
Advanced Biology (Full year, 1 credit)
This course is designed for seniors with strong science skills. In the first semester, topics include a review of inorganic chemistry and an introduction to organic chemistry and biochemistry, macromolecules, enzymes, and molecular genetics. In the second semester, students study cellular respiration and photosynthesis, Mendelian and population genetics, and evolution. Special topics include the lab identification of carbohydrates, protein modeling, the study of viruses, and antibiotic resistance. A college textbook, Campbell’s Biology, is used throughout and laboratory experiments include college-level and advanced placement investigations. This course is open only to seniors. Prerequisites: Biology and Chemistry. At least one previous Intensive-level class is strongly suggested.
COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING
Computer science and engineering courses are designed to prepare students to be active participants in the technology-filled world in which they are immersed. They will learn lifelong skills; develop a more resilient, problem-solving mindset; and become creators, not just consumers, of technology. Our inclusive curriculum includes coding, designing products for community awareness, problem-solving through design thinking, and hands-on programming of robots and physical devices. These courses empower students to excel in the future, make meaningful contributions to society, and understand the ethical impact of technology in the world.
Engineering Design and Methods (Semester)
Advanced Programming in Java I (Semester)
Advanced Programming in Java II (Semester)
Engineering Design Seminar (Semester)
Advanced Engineering – Statics (Semester) Grade 12 only
Upper School students who have an interest in computer science, engineering, and technology are able to choose semester-long courses that provide them with opportunities to learn and practice the skills needed to understand, use, and build new engineering and computer science technologies.
Intro to Computer Science and Programming (½ credit)
This course provides students with a foundation in computer science by examining topics ranging from the fundamentals of how computers function to binary number systems, algorithms, computational thinking and problem-solving, and programming. Using spreadsheets as well as Python and other programming languages, students learn the basic programming concepts of variables and assignments, Boolean statements, loops and iteration, and functions and classes. Students build a sequence of steps to solve problems and then translate those steps into a digital or technological solution. Students work both independently and collaboratively, provide feedback to classmates, and discuss/debate ethical questions related to current topics in computer science. This course is best suited for students who wish to gain exposure to computational methods, coding, and other tools of computer science and those who wish to take their skills in these areas to a new level and apply them.
Introduction to Computer-Aided
Design (CAD)
(Full year, two days a week, ½ credit)
This course teaches the tools students need to be successful, creative designers using advanced CAD modeling software. Students will learn to create, model, and iterate designs. Using CAD as a virtual prototyping tool, students can create more complex designs faster, with more precision and less waste. Students who desire can go on to take the OnShape associate exam—an industry standard used in many university programs. Students will then learn how to transform their virtual models into tangible objects using laser cutters and 3D printers.
Engineering Design and Methods (½ credit)
This course is designed to teach students to develop and utilize tools and models to solve complex problems. With project management and design thinking as foundational skills for solving all problems, students will learn to implement a number of other tools. Using Excel and programming macros, students will build complex statistical models to solve real-world problems. Using physical programming and Arduinos, students will design and build electrical components and scientific testing apparatuses. With the skills, knowledge, and experience of this class, students will be unafraid to tackle any problem because they will know how to find and acquire the necessary skills and tools. Prerequisite: Intro to CAD or Intro to Computer Science and Programming.
Engineering Design Seminar (½ credit)
The Engineering Design Seminar bridges the gap between theory and practice, offering students the opportunity to collaborate and apply their knowledge, skills, and creativity to tackle real-world challenges. This hands-on, multidisciplinary course immerses students in a collaborative engineering experience where they take the lead in defining and developing their own projects. Through guided exploration of the design process and the application of project management techniques, students learn how to plan and execute complex engineering tasks. Prerequisites: Engineering Design and Methods and Introduction to CAD.
Advanced Engineering – Statics (½ credit)
This is an accelerated engineering course built around statics, a foundational engineering course often taken during a student’s first or second year in college. Problem sets and tests are taken directly from college textbooks. Students learn to break down complex problems, develop strong study skills, and work in groups. In addition to completing problem sets, students use their creativity, resourcefulness, and newly developed skills to engage in design projects based on their interests. This course is designed to prepare students going into a college engineering program. Prerequisites: Engineering Design and Methods and Calculus, concurrently, or with permission from the department chair.
Advanced Programming in Java I (½ credit, open to grades 10–12)
This advanced programming course introduces students to Java through hands-on projects in software development and algorithm design. Students begin by learning the fundamentals of Java programming, including how to structure code, create and use objects, and develop programs that solve problems and perform meaningful tasks. As they progress, students develop programs that analyze text, process data, and create interactive applications, gaining experience with string manipulation, conditional logic, and graphical user interfaces. Prerequisite: Intro to Computer Science and Programming.
Advanced Programming in Java II (½ credit, open grades 10–12)
This course is a continuation of the first semester of Java programming. Students will engage in projects such as sentiment analysis, chatbot development, and game design as well as refine their problem-solving skills and learn how to structure efficient programs. Additionally, they will develop skills in the practice of software engineering, including documentation, debugging, and collaborative development. This is not an Advanced Placement course specifically, however students who enroll in both the first and second semester of Advanced Programming in Java may have sufficient preparation to sit for the AP Computer Science A exam. Prerequisite: Advanced Programming in Java I.
Cybersecurity (½ credit)
Cybersecurity is one of the fastest-growing sectors in technology. This field involves many aspects of technology, including hardware, software, the internet, coding, and the use of technology. In this course, students are introduced to selected topics in computer science through the lens of cybersecurity. They will use problem-solving, research, and computing skills to solve puzzles, build solutions, and compete in online challenges. Students investigate strategies to identify and protect against security threats, including hacking, eavesdropping, and network attacks. The basics of cryptography and logical reasoning will be explored. Handson labs and projects will provide practice in the areas of system configuration and the mitigation of system vulnerabilities. Ethics and real-world implications will be integrated throughout the course.
WORLD LANGUAGES
The world languages department offers sequential courses in modern and classical languages, including French, Latin, Chinese (Mandarin), and Spanish. Modern language courses develop core linguistic skills such as aural comprehension, speaking, reading, and writing. Classical language study focuses on developing students’ ability to read significant works of Roman authors in the original language. Each language course strives to provide students with an understanding of and an appreciation for world cultures. Upon completion of Level IV of their chosen language, students move into a cycle of advanced electives. Semester-long electives in French, Spanish, and Chinese are conducted almost entirely in the target language and encourage active student participation.
The Upper School world languages program offers beginning, intermediate, and advanced levels in French, Latin, Chinese (Mandarin), and Spanish. The sequence of courses in each language is designed to develop high-level linguistic competence, critical thinking, and cultural literacy.
Students are recommended for the following year’s world language classes by their current teacher, based on the competencies they have shown in their current course. Additionally, in the spring of their eighth-grade year, students take a placement test on which they must earn 70 percent or higher to enter level II of their current language in grade 9. Otherwise, students enter level I of any language in ninth grade. In some cases, if a student wants to select a course higher than what is recommended for them, summer work may be offered to support that placement. World language placements are communicated to students (via their world language teacher) and to parents at parent conferences.
New student placements in the world language department are made after consultation with the student’s previous coursework at their current school. Diagnostic tests are also given to most incoming students to help determine appropriate placement. If a student wants to select a course higher than what is recommended for them, summer work may be offered to support that placement in some cases.
CHINESE
Chinese I (Full year, 1 credit)
In this course, students develop a sociocultural context as well as a working knowledge of Chinese (Mandarin) by focusing on pronunciation, grammatical structures, and written characters. Students learn simplified Chinese characters and are introduced to elements of traditional characters and radicals as a means of familiarizing them with the roots and history of the written language. The main text used is Go Far with Chinese 1A , which is accompanied by a character practice and skills workbook. Students learn how to read and write approximately 200 Chinese characters. Interactive websites, dedicated Chinese character software, and more traditional audiovisual tools are utilized in this course. Elements of Chinese culture are also integrated into the curriculum.
Chinese II (Full year, 1 credit)
Students in Chinese II build on the foundation of first-year Chinese. Oral presentations, dramatizations, and expository writing exercises are used more frequently to help students become more competent communicators in Chinese. In this course, the main text used is Go Far with Chinese 1B and its accompanying workbook. Various interactive websites are used to reinforce classwork, enhance students’ mastery of pronunciation, and elevate their aural comprehension skills. By the end of the year, students will have developed a vocabulary of approximately 500 characters. Prerequisite: Chinese I or equivalent.
Chinese III (Full year, 1 credit)
In this course, students continue to expand their vocabulary and grammatical repertoire using Go Far with Chinese 2 as the primary text. Students will learn how to navigate more advanced translations, which will enhance their understanding of character combinations, radicals, and stroke order. Various interactive websites are used to reinforce classwork and strengthen oral and aural skills outside class. Oral presentations, dramatizations, and writing exercises help students become stronger communicators in Chinese. As always, elements of Chinese culture are integrated into the curriculum. By the end of the year, students will have developed a vocabulary of approximately 850 characters. Prerequisite: Chinese II or equivalent.
ADVANCED CHINESE ELECTIVES
Chinese IV (Full year, 1 credit)
This full-year course offers an approach to fluency through all four of the linguistic skill areas: listening, speaking, reading, and writing. This course focuses on the practical use of Chinese in the context of everyday activities. Students will work to significantly expand their vocabulary and rigorously apply a wide range of advanced grammar patterns to engage in in-depth and authentic discussions on topics and themes that are of interest to high school students. Students read and analyze texts, write and edit short compositions, participate in roundtable discussions, and engage in various forms of creative expression. A combination of the Integrated Chinese series and the Go Far with Chinese series will be used to teach this course. Interactive websites and audio recordings are also used to enhance and reinforce skills. Prerequisite: Chinese III.
Advanced Chinese: Living and Studying in China (½ credit)
This course uses Integrated Chinese, Level 2 (a standard college-level text) and Ni Hao 4 to expand reading and speaking skills in a number of different contexts. Excerpts from each series are also used to teach students how to discuss various topics such as choosing a major, finding on- and off-campus housing, personal expression, cooking, ordering Chinese food, conducting several different transactions at a bank, and much more. In this highly practical course, students will gain the skills and confidence they need in order to live in China and navigate life there. Prerequisite: Chinese IV.
Advanced Chinese: China in Modern Society (½ credit)
This upper-level course involves the reading of authentic texts of modern Chinese society and culture. Students explore current cultural topics through stories, dialogues, videos, and songs using the text Discussing Everything Chinese by Rongzhen Li, along with multimedia materials ranging from internet content to television shows and films. Topics include the difference between Chinese and American educational systems, the impact that family expectations have on the educational lives of students, and the practical skills required to navigate the college landscape in China. Throughout the semester, students write short papers, discuss relevant video clips, and participate in oral discussions and debates. Prerequisite: Chinese IV.
Advanced Chinese: Chinese Legends and Chengyu (½ credit)
In this course, students focus on adaptations and selections from wellknown works in the Chinese literary and folk canon. Using the Tales and Traditions series, students deepen their cultural understanding and expand their linguistic skills as they read and discuss a selection of traditional Chinese fables, legends, and myths. In addition, students learn several well-known chengyu (four-character idioms), which deepens the cultural nuance with which students can communicate. Conversation, writing, and reading skills continue to be emphasized. Prerequisite: Chinese IV.
FRENCH
French I (Full year, 1 credit)
This course teaches the four language skills—speaking, listening, reading, and writing—with an emphasis on dialogue. Role-playing and skits are used as tools to increase oral competency. Writing practice includes short-answer responses and short descriptive pieces. Students work from a basal text that provides a variety of supplemental activities and reading selections.
French II (Full year, 1 credit)
Students build on the foundations of French I and enhance their corpus of vocabulary and grammatical form while developing the four primary linguistic skills. Written work includes students’ original narratives. Students work from a basal text. Additional short stories are used to develop further reading skills. Prerequisite: French I.
French III (Full year, 1 credit)
In this course, students continue to develop and hone their skills through in-depth grammar study, vocabulary acquisition, and extensive reading and writing practice. Students work from basal texts and supplementary literary readings, including short works by such authors as Maupassant, Gascony, and Kessler. Prerequisite: French II.
ADVANCED FRENCH ELECTIVES
Students who have completed French III may select from a variety of electives. They must take Advanced French IV: Grammar and Composition as a prerequisite to other electives unless granted a waiver by the department chair. All advanced electives are conducted in French. Not all electives are offered every year.
French IV: Advanced French Grammar and Composition (Full year, 1 credit)
This full-year course offers an approach to fluency through all four of the linguistic skill areas: listening, speaking, reading, and writing. Students broaden and deepen their current understanding of grammatical structures while learning new structures that allow them to add complexity and abstract thought to their verbal and written expression. Each unit introduces an aspect of cultural life along with thematic vocabulary, giving students the opportunity to practice and role-play. They read and analyze literature, write and edit short compositions, participate in debates and roundtable discussions, and engage in various forms of creative expression. Through online and in-class collaboration, students are exposed to authentic contemporary language and culture in context. The course also includes weekly discussions and feedback based on podcasts from France and elsewhere. Prerequisite: French III.
French History Through French Literature (½ credit)
Students in this course travel through time to examine various pieces of literature that relate to French history. The course begins with the French Revolution in 1789 and explores France’s place in history and in literature. Students move through the centuries, exploring selections from works by Voltaire and the philosophes, La déclaration des droits de l’homme et du citoyen from the French Revolution, naturalist and psychological novels from the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, and iconic works associated with surrealism, existentialism, and absurdism. Through these works, students explore how the French lived, progressed, and played a major role in European and world history. Prerequisite: French IV: Advanced French Grammar and Composition.
Life in French: Advanced Conversation and Phonetics (½ credit)
One of the barriers to fluency is the lack of immersion and exposure to all but the most common vocabulary terms and expressions. It’s hard to solve problems in situ because we need to have a specific vocabulary at our disposal and must be able to speak in precise terms about abstract situations. It can also be difficult to understand native speakers conversing at regular speed because their phonetic landscape differs from ours. Conducted entirely in French, this class will explore problem-solving and thematic vocabulary. Students will also practice diction where phonetic divergences occur between French and English. Prerequisite: French IV: Advanced French Grammar and Composition.
Découverte du monde francophone (½ credit)
This literature course is designed to acquaint students with the written works of authors from areas outside France where French is spoken. Students explore the historical, social, and cultural contexts that produced a variety of rich francophone literary traditions. Students watch and discuss films and read representative works from authors from North and Central Africa, Vietnam, Quebec, and the Caribbean. Selected prose and poetry by representative authors such as Camara, Condé, Bâ, Hébert, Leclerc, Kien Nguyen, Nha Ca, Bey, Chraïbi, Sebbar, and Césaire are studied. Prerequisite: French IV: Advanced French Grammar and Composition.
French Literature and Film (½ credit)
In this course, students explore a broad selection of French and francophone literature through readings, discussions, and watching films. By delving into selected works by authors such as Jean Giono, Marcel Aymé, Edmond Rostand, and Molière, students expand their French skills through analysis, critique, and discussion. Films are used to reinforce and support each piece of literature, to develop students’ listening comprehension, and to foster and heighten in-class discussion. Grammar and structure work are also emphasized throughout the semester to help students review, refine, and develop their writing and speaking skills. Prerequisite: French IV: Advanced French Grammar and Composition.
Advanced French: Le conte africain (½ credit)
This semester-long advanced course examines West African storytelling and the integration of traditional stories and oral culture into the French language. Students explore topics of culture and tradition, colonization and decolonization, and language (both as a tool and as a weapon). Students also examine how the tropes and structures of these stories persisted in later works in the postcolonial francophone world. This elective is conducted almost exclusively in French and involves reading literature, participating in class discussions, and writing expository/ analytical compositions in French. Prerequisite: French IV: Advanced French Grammar and Composition.
Advanced French: Le nouveau roman et la nouvelle vague (½ credit) After the devastation of WWII in Europe, the French grappled with shame, guilt, and envy of their American “saviors.” Writers underwent a profound moment of disillusionment—their attempts to overthrow the idea of narrative to create a new type of text led to the emergence of the nouveau roman. The Algerian War led to the nouvelle vague film movement, which showcased artists’ creative ways of addressing the war in a country where such discussion was taboo at best, criminal at worst. Students will examine the reasons for shame and the works that emerged from it, and will explore the question of how art, narrative, and war are linked in postwar Europe. This elective is conducted almost exclusively in French and involves reading literature, participating in class discussions, and writing expository/analytical compositions in French. We will also experiment with some creative writing. Prerequisite: French IV: Advanced French Grammar and Composition.
Les femmes écrivains (½ credit)
This course explores the contributions of women to France’s illustrious literary history. From the classic Enlightenment-era epistolary novel to the postcolonial coming-of-age novel of the twentieth century, this class examines the themes, politics, and styles of female writers of France and the francophone world. The readings and discussions are supplemented with films, contemporary media, and short historical texts. Prerequisite: French IV: Advanced French Grammar and Composition.
Twentieth-Century French Literature (½ credit)
In a century marked by two world wars, many writers questioned traditional social values. They experimented with new literary styles and reassessed the role of the novelist. In 1945, in Les temps modernes, Sartre proposed the concept of littérature engagée, arguing that the writer must be committed primarily to politics and social commentary. Students will explore this period of social and cultural revolution by reading selections from science fiction, the Theatre of the Absurd, and la Négritude, which includes francophone writers from the Americas and Africa. Prerequisite: French IV: Advanced French Grammar and Composition.
Théâtre du XVIe siècle (½ credit)
Sixteenth-century France saw the arrival of the Renaissance, when writers challenged medieval dogma and gave birth to new literary forms. Writers such as Rabelais reflected the humanist passion for knowledge and beauty and exalted the ideal of the individual. By contrast, the seventeenth century was “le grand siècle,” and absolute monarchy and grandeur were personified by Louis XIV, the Sun King. Classicism, with its emphasis on order, reason, and clarity, replaced the lyricism and individualism of the sixteenth century and the mystery, emotion, and drama of the Baroque style. Students explore the social, philosophical, and literary ferment of these two centuries through close study of works by sixteenth-century writers such as Rabelais, Ronsard, Du Bellay, and Montaigne. Representatives of seventeenth-century literature include Descartes, Corneille, Pascal, Molière, La Fontaine, and Racine. Prerequisite: French IV: Advanced French Grammar and Composition
Seminar in Translation (½ credit)
In this course, students read original works and works in translation to explore the fundamentals of translation. Which elements of the story must be preserved and which can be left out and the work still be considered the same story? Students read, analyze, and compare texts and produce their own translations. Translations are workshopped in class. Prerequisite: French IV: Advanced French Grammar and Composition.
LATIN
Latin I (Full year, 1 credit)
Through this introductory course in Latin, students learn how to decode language—any language—by focusing on grammar, vocabulary, parts of speech, and the nature and complexity of verbs in the present, imperfect, and perfect tenses. The text, Suburani, has a compelling storyline that moves students from learning to read Latin to learning how to read between the lines and extract meaning from what is unspoken or unwritten. Greek and Roman mythology, Roman history, and Roman cultural practices are essential elements of the course. Students will discover what life was like for the average person in Rome around the year 64 CE. They will unpack how the enslavement of conquered peoples enabled Rome to become an economic and military powerhouse, how Rome expanded its empire into Europe, and what life was like in the newly acquired provinces of Gaul (modern-day France) and Britain.
Latin II (Full year, 1 credit)
In the second year of Latin, students continue their study of the language, adding the future and pluperfect tenses. They will also begin using the passive voice (a key Latin construct) and relative clauses. Active and passive participles are introduced, as is the subjunctive. Continuing with the Suburani series, students will study life in Pompeii and Carthage in Roman Africa. Cultural topics include business practices, the process of becoming a citizen, views of death and the afterlife, and gladiatorial combat. Historical topics include
the elimination of pirates from the Mediterranean Sea, the principate and the Roman Civil War, and Rome’s interaction with Numidia and the Kingdom of Kush. Greek and Roman mythology will continue to be explored, including the story of Aeneas and Dido in their nationchanging encounter following the Trojan War. Prerequisite: Latin I.
Latin III (Full year, 1 credit)
In this course, students will finish the second book of the Suburani series and begin reading original authors through modified texts. They begin with result clauses, indirect questions and indirect commands, ablative absolute, and comparatives. The future perfect tense is introduced, in addition to future participles and all passive verb forms. As the storyline moves to Greece, linked cultural topics include philosophy, art, architecture, sports and the body, music, and medicine. Religious practices, including the reading of the omens, emperor worship, magic, and augury, are explored. Historical topics include the differences between the East and the West, interactions with the Parthians, and legionary service. Mythology continues to be ever present in students’ studies, including the story of Circe. Prerequisite: Latin II.
ADVANCED LATIN ELECTIVES
Students who have completed Latin III may select from a variety of semester-long electives. Not all electives are offered every year.
Advanced Latin: Catullus’ Carmina (½ credit)
A lyric poet of great power and feeling, Catullus was the author of 116 poems that range from satire to hymns on topics from love to hate. He belonged to a coterie of writers called novi poetae, or the new poets, who greatly influenced the next generation of Roman authors, including Vergil and Horace. Class participants translate a large number of his poems and work on understanding this modern ancient poet. Prerequisite: Latin III.
Horace (½ credit)
In this course, students learn about the poetry of Quintus Horatius Flaccus. Readings include poems that constitute the basis for Horace’s continuing fame in modern times. The Odes are highly sophisticated lyrical poems that were greatly inspired by Greek models like Pindar, Alcaeus, and Callimachus. Throughout this course, students translate and analyze a collection of these poems and familiarize themselves with the usage of standard vocabulary, poetic meters, and the historical and literary backgrounds of Horace’s work. Prerequisite: Latin III.
Ovid: Metamorphoses (½ credit)
Drawn from many well-known Greek and Roman myths, Ovid’s Metamorphoses is a collection of mythological stories written in the author’s unique and creative style. Within these myths, the themes of transformation and literal metamorphosis are essential elements to a thorough understanding of the story. In this course, students translate some of the more prominent transformation myths, which may include the stories of Daphne and Apollo, Pyramus and Thisbe, Baucis and Philemon, and Actaeon and Diana, among others. Students discuss the themes of these stories as well as elements of Ovid’s style, tone, and poetic art. Prerequisite: Latin III.
Cicero: In Catilinam or Pro Caelio (½ credit)
This course’s goals are for students to develop an appreciation for Cicero’s prose style and to synthesize their grammar and vocabulary through the study of one of these two great works: In Catilinam or Pro Caelio.
In Catilinam: In the fall of 63 BCE, during the consulship of Cicero, Rome’s most famous orator, Lucius Sergius Catiline, plotted to murder all the senators and overthrow the republic. Assisted by assassins, brigands, and scofflaws, Catiline nearly succeeded, but he was foiled by Cicero. In his best-known and most widely read oration, Cicero delivered a lively and trenchant speech to the senators and alerted them to the impending coup, thereby saving the Senate and turning the clandestine insurrection into open civil war.
Pro Caelio: In 56 BCE, Marcus Caelius was facing various charges, including murder and poisoning. Cicero and Crassus came to his defense (Cicero being motivated by a personal vendetta against the Clodius family, which was instigating the lawsuit). Cicero’s so-called defense of Caelius spends little time on any actual facts but instead veers into a humorous character assassination of Clodia, the manipulative and powerful woman with whom Caelius had a romantic affair. Students in this course learn the foundations of classical rhetoric and analyze Cicero’s deft use of the tricolon, anaphora, chiasmus, synchysis, litotes, hyperbole, homoioteleuton, and anadiplosis. Prerequisite: Latin III.
Livy: The Punic Wars (½ credit)
The Punic Wars were the defining conflicts for the future of the Roman Empire. One of the most feared and respected Punic leaders the Romans faced was Hannibal Barca, the famed general from Carthage (in modern-day Tunisia). Students translate and read selections from later books of Ab urbe condita, which contain tales of elephants crossing the Alps, brilliant battle tactics, and the expansion of the Roman Empire during the Punic Wars. Students translate and read selections from Livy’s work, and they explore the triumphs and defeats of the Punic Wars in which Rome battled Carthage. Students also discuss Livy’s representation of the three Punic Wars and their impact on the next period of Roman history. Prerequisite: Latin III.
Caesar: De bello Gallico (½ credit)
In this course, students read selections from Julius Caesar’s De bello Gallico, his account of his military campaigns in Gaul in the 50s BCE. Through a combination of charismatic leadership, military strategy, and sheer ruthlessness, Caesar conquered lands throughout the region north of Rome, enlarging the empire by roughly one-third. Students explore the wars fought between Caesar’s Roman troops and their neighbors by translating selections of his commentaries, reading supplemental articles, mapping his journey, and discussing his strategies and intents. Students also peel back the layers of Caesar’s biased narrative to analyze his actions and writing against the backdrop of the precarious political climate in Rome. Prerequisite: Latin III.
Vergil’s Aeneid: Book II (½ credit)
In this course, students read Book II of Vergil’s Aeneid in its entirety. Book II is the only ancient source for a description of the fall of Troy and the infamous Trojan horse in timeo Danaos et dona ferentes. Vergil describes with great pathos the destruction of the city, the death of its king, Priam, and the innumerable losses suffered at the hands of the Greeks. Students discuss Vergil’s use of poetic tropes to enhance the suffering of his characters and also compare Vergil’s sense of heroism with the Homeric models from the Iliad Prerequisite: Latin III.
Vergil’s Aeneid: Book IV (½ credit)
In this course, students focus on Book IV of Vergil’s Aeneid. Touted as Vergil’s best work of characterization and drama, Book IV depicts the love affair between Aeneas and Dido, queen of Carthage. Through heartfelt descriptions and wrenching dialogue, Vergil weaves a fragile portrait of love. In this work, Vergil poses his most difficult questions: To what extent must the individual sacrifice for the good of the commonwealth? Can personal love outweigh the needs of the common? With translation,
analysis, and discussion, students delve into the mind of Vergil and the relationship between Aeneas and Dido. Prerequisite: Latin III.
Advanced Latin: Pliny’s Epistulae (½ credit)
This course focuses on the Epistulae, a collection of letters written by Pliny the Younger to the emperor Trajan during Pliny’s time as the governor of Bithynia in 103 CE. The letters detail the daily routines and the responsibilities of a Roman governor as well as important historical events, such as the eruption of Mount Vesuvius and the suppression of Christianity (considered a dangerous cult at that time). This course may also include a study of Latin epistolography, drawing on the surviving letters of authors like Cicero, Seneca the Younger, and others. Prerequisite: Latin III. Requires permission of the instructor.
Latin Prose Composition (½ credit)
This course begins with the most basic Latin prose styles and develops students’ command of grammar and syntax as they think deeply about Latin prose. Through the study and emulation of the prose styles of Caesar, Cicero, Livy, and Sallust, students develop their own Latin prose style while employing the many rhetorical devices available to the classical author. Students write simple sentences in Latin and gradually move on to more complex translations of English prose. Issues of more vernacular interest are also addressed in the advanced part of this course. Prerequisite: Latin III. Open only to juniors and seniors.
Seneca: Epistulae morales (½ credit)
In this course, students will read selections from Seneca the Younger’s philosophical works. Seneca served as tutor to Nero, supporting the rise of this Roman emperor by serving in his administration and writing his early speeches. Retired after ten years of service, he wrote what would become the final literary work of his life: his moral epistles. In these letters, Seneca explores some of the most important questions of our existence: How do we live an ethical life? What, if anything, is worth sacrificing for our principles? What is death, and how do we live with the knowledge that we will die? Is overexercising a problem? While reading the letters and grappling with these questions themselves, students will read selections from other ancient Stoic philosophers, learn about the broader philosophical landscape of the early Roman Empire, and consider the resurgence of popularity of Stoicism in self-help guides of the twentyfirst century. Prerequisite: Latin III. Open only to juniors and seniors.
Advanced Latin: History of Latin Literature I (½ credit)
Beginning with the earliest known example of the Latin language—a talking safety pin!—this course will offer a survey of Latin literature from its origins in the third century BCE to the late republic. Students will learn about the history of individual genres, the careers of major authors, and the relationships between literary developments and social/political changes during an era when Rome grew from a regional power to an intercontinental empire. Students will read excerpts of Latin poetry and prose from a variety of authors, genres, and time periods. Authors may include Ennius, Plautus, Terence, Cicero, Caesar, Catullus, and Lucretius. Prerequisite: Latin III.
Advanced Latin: History of Latin Literature II (½ credit)
This course offers a survey of Latin literature from the Augustan Age through the Imperial period and beyond. Students will learn about the history of individual genres, the careers of major authors, and the relationships between literary developments and social/political changes during an era when Rome was navigating what it meant to be an empire. Students will read excerpts of Latin poetry and prose from a variety of authors, genres, and time periods. Authors may include Vergil, Horace, Ovid, Livy, Seneca, Petronius, Martial, Statius, Juvenal, Pliny the Younger, and Suetonius. Excerpts of Renaissance Latin or Neo-Latin authors may also be read. Prerequisite: Latin III. Students are not required to have taken the History of Latin Literature I elective in the fall to take this class.
SPANISH
Spanish I (Full year, 1 credit)
Students in Spanish I develop proficiency in the four linguistic skill areas: speaking, listening, reading, and writing. The course emphasizes the importance of communicative competence through activities such as roleplaying, rhyming, storytelling, and skits. Writing exercises include shortanswer responses and descriptive pieces in the present tense. The student text ¡Qué chévere! is a primary resource, along with active collaboration on Schoology and numerous supplemental materials. Internet tools such as Quizlet and Conjuguemos are also used to increase proficiency and understanding. Students are encouraged to use the target language and to explore the world languages’ “5 C’s”: communications, cultures, connections, comparisons, and communities.
Spanish II (Full year, 1 credit)
In this second-year course, students expand their oral, listening, reading, and writing skills through storytelling. They learn to express their ideas in the present, past, and future tenses and begin to delve into advanced structures, consolidating and building on the foundation established in Spanish I. Using VoiceThread and SoundCloud, students demonstrate their growing skills through oral presentations and dramatizations both in class and on the internet. They also continue to improve their writing skills through expository and creative writing exercises. Students use multiple resources to help them learn, including a basal grammar text and workbook, online study sites, and an anthology of readings from the fantastical to the autobiographical. Prerequisite: Spanish I.
Spanish III (Full year, 1 credit)
This course is designed to review and refine skills learned in Spanish II while weaving in more advanced grammatical structures in the context of cultural readings, dialogues, music, film, shorts, and short literary pieces. Student focus on development and practice of the world languages’ “5 C’s” (communications, cultures, connections, comparisons, and communities) to allow students more time to play with the language. Texts include Breaking the Spanish Barrier 2 and selected short readings, legends, news articles, and Spanish and Latin American shorts. Students demonstrate their growing oral skills through presentations and dramatizations both in class discussions and on the internet, using Flipgrid, and develop writing skills on shorter written reflections and summaries. They work on a semester-long guided project in the target language with monthly opportunities to present to their classmates. Prerequisite: Spanish II.
Spanish III Intensive (Full year, 1 credit)
At this advanced-intermediate level, students refine grammatical and communicative skills, moving beyond situation-based proficiency to more sophisticated expression and analysis. The curriculum emphasizes the acquisition of complex structures necessary for higher-level communication and literary analysis. Texts include Breaking the Spanish Barrier and selected literary and journalistic sources, as well as films and short videos from across the Spanish-speaking world. Students demonstrate their growing oral skills through presentations, dramatizations, discussions in small groups, and classroom conversations. They develop writing and reading skills through traditional and web-based expository and creative writing projects as well as close reading of complex texts. Special emphasis is placed on skills-based learning that encourages students to be lifelong and self-directed language learners. Prerequisite: Spanish II.
ADVANCED SPANISH ELECTIVES
Students who have completed Spanish III may select from a variety of electives. Students must take Spanish IV as a prerequisite to other Spanish electives unless granted a waiver by the department chair. All advanced electives are conducted in Spanish. Not all electives are offered every year.
Spanish IV (Full year, 1 credit)
This yearlong course is designed for students who wish to continue to expand and review vocabulary and refine grammar structures in a conversation-based setting beyond Spanish III. Students will be encouraged to play with the language and will experience language through the study of cultures while making connections and comparisons to their native language and developing communication skills in the target language. Activities will include student-led dialogue, authentic readings about current events around the Spanish-speaking world, advanced listening selections, and written communication with a focus on contemporary cultures in the Hispanic world. In addition, students will explore and practice the three key Spanish verb moods: the indicative, the imperative, and the subjunctive. They will work on a semester-long, student-selected cultural investigation in the target language and develop it throughout the second semester, presenting to classmates periodically. Prerequisite: Spanish III.
Spanish IV Intensive: Advanced Spanish Grammar and Composition (Full year, 1 credit)
This full-year advanced course offers an approach to fluency through all four of the linguistic skill areas: listening, speaking, reading, and writing. Students work to broaden and deepen their current understanding of grammatical structures while learning new structures that allow them to add complexity and abstract thought to their verbal and written expression. Each unit introduces an aspect of cultural life along with thematic vocabulary, giving students the opportunity to practice, churn, and play. Students read and analyze literature, write and edit short compositions, participate in debates and roundtable discussions, and engage in various forms of creative expression. Through online and in-class collaboration, students are immersed in authentic contemporary language and culture. The course also includes weekly discussions and feedback based on podcasts from Spain and elsewhere. Prerequisite: Spanish III Intensive.
Advanced Spanish: Actualidades del mundo latino (½ credit)
This course offers a nonliterary approach to language study. Harnessing the power of the internet, students explore real-time sociopolitical issues in Spain and Latin America and gain an international perspective through which to examine those same issues in the United States. Expansion of vocabulary and development of higher-level speaking and writing skills are stressed through frequent in-class discussions, debates, blogs, and student-generated web pages and news broadcasts. Advanced grammar topics are explored in the context of readings and articles. Prerequisite: Spanish IV or Spanish IV Intensive: Advanced Spanish Grammar and Composition.
La realidad irreal (½ credit)
This course is designed to provide a practical application of the communicative abilities of advanced Spanish students. Through the use of course materials such as short stories, novels, and films, students will engage in rich discussions and reflections. This class will explore the interplay of realism and fantasy—a recurring thread in Spanish-language literature and storytelling—as the central theme connecting the selected resources. Each unit will focus on an aspect or presentation of la realidad irreal shared across multiple literary examples. While direct grammar instruction will be limited in this course, students will reflect on their in-class discussions and personal thoughts on the course texts through weekly journal entries, which will be edited by their instructor to ensure ample feedback. At the end of each unit, students will lead their peers in discussions to further synthesize their analysis of the material. This course is conducted almost entirely in Spanish and the students’ commitment to participating solely in the target language is expected.
Advanced Spanish: Indigeneidad y ambientalismo en América Latina (½ credit)
This course will explore the rising global issues of environmentalism and climate change in the context of Indigenous Latin American culture and communities. Students will explore the beliefs and culture of Indigenous communities, climate effects of deforestation, displacement, agribusiness, and environmental activism through the voices of Indigenous communities. The class will review intermediate and advanced grammar topics learned in previous classes, and work to develop expository, narrative, and persuasive writing techniques in Spanish. Students will read news articles, watch short films, and study novel excerpts to immerse themselves in authentic sources and a range of written styles and authors. They will select a specific Indigenous group to study in depth over the semester, becoming experts on their chosen community and presenting their findings to the class. Prerequisite: Spanish IV or Spanish IV Intensive: Advanced Spanish Grammar and Composition.
Advanced Spanish: El cine español (½ credit)
Through the medium of cinema, students explore the development of modern Spanish society from the 1930s to the present as it passed rapidly through periods of civil war, dictatorship, and socialism to full-fledged democracy. Students analyze and evaluate the cultural changes that have taken place and what it means to be “Spanish,” focusing on the national and individual effects of civil war, the Franco legacy, and the modern Spanish Constitution. Class discussions, written responses, student videos, and web-based interactive projects, all conducted in Spanish, are the vehicles for instruction and assessment. Prerequisite: Spanish IV or Spanish IV Intensive: Advanced Spanish Grammar and Composition.
Lorca, su poesía y teatro (½ credit)
A study of Federico García Lorca, the famous twentieth-century Spanish poet and playwright, begins with selected poems from his Canciones, Romancero gitano, Poema del cante jondo, and Poeta en Nueva York. The class then explores several of his plays, including Yerma, Bodas de sangre, and La casa de Bernarda Alba. Students move through discussions of theme and style in Lorca’s works while practicing and honing their closereading skills and sharpening their critical-thinking abilities. Active participation and collaboration on the class Google site are required, and other online tools such as VoiceThread, Audioboo, and Explain Everything are used to develop proficiency and understanding. Prerequisite: Spanish IV or Spanish IV Intensive: Advanced Spanish Grammar and Composition.
La novela mexicana (½ credit)
This course examines the novel form that grew out of the Mexican Revolution and charted the rise and demise of the hopes and dreams of the Mexican revolucionarios. Students analyze the different literary styles and recurring themes presented in works by representative authors, including Azuela, Fuentes, Esquivel, Pacheco, and Poniatowska, and deepen their understanding of the Mexican experience. Prerequisite: Spanish IV or Spanish IV Intensive: Advanced Spanish Grammar and Composition.
Advanced Spanish: Voces caribeñas (½ credit)
This course offers a survey of narratives, including short stories, essays, and memoirs by representative Cuban, Dominican, Puerto Rican, Colombian, and Venezuelan writers. Students explore a variety of themes, including race, gender, politics, colonialism, exile, and cultural identity. Literary works are supplemented by films, music, and visual art that reiterate themes studied in the texts. Class discussions, written responses, student-led discussions, journal writing, and blog posts are the vehicles for instruction and assessment and are all conducted in Spanish. Advanced grammar topics are explored in the context of readings and articles. Prerequisite: Spanish IV or Spanish IV Intensive: Advanced Spanish Grammar and Composition.
Advanced Spanish: Movilización social en América Latina (½ credit)
This course is a survey of human rights, social justice, and popular resistance across the Latin American region. Through the use of journalism, academic texts, art, film, music, and literature, students explore the complexity of the region’s social fabric and the inspiring efforts of its people to work toward a more equitable society. Topics include Indigenous rights and sovereignty, racial justice, LGBTQ+ rights movements, and the cycles of democracy and dictatorship. Daily class discussions in Spanish, accompanied by oral presentations, blog posts, and written reflections, help support students’ continued language study and provide ample opportunity for reinforcing advanced grammar topics and vocabulary. Prerequisite: Spanish IV or Spanish IV Intensive: Advanced Spanish Grammar and Composition.
Conversaciones, culturas y temas avanzados (½ credit)
This semester-long elective is designed for students who wish to strengthen their overall proficiency in Spanish, improve oral skills in different communicative situations, and acquire a more profound understanding of Hispanic cultures. The course will also provide exposure to the other language skills (reading and listening comprehension, writing, vocabulary acquisition, sociocultural competence) that are integral to developing speaking fluency. Students will continue to learn how to express themselves in Spanish in formal and informal settings while discussing a variety of topics, including science, sociology, films, music, performing arts, politics, and literature. Students will practice building strong arguments, structuring oral presentations, and self-correcting during a conversation. Prerequisite: Spanish IV or Spanish IV Intensive: Advanced Spanish Grammar and Composition.
VISUAL ARTS
The mission of the visual arts department is to engender lifelong participation in the arts, to develop skills of perception and execution, and to create an appreciation for the craft and aesthetics of contemporary and historical cultures. Waynflete’s studio art classes allow students to problem-solve in an environment where there is more than one correct answer, and they provide a venue for nonverbal modes of expression where learning takes place using multiple intelligences.
GRADES 9–12
Foundations of Art (Full Year)
2x per week. Only for students taking another 2x week course.
Foundations of Art (Semester)
Drawing: Skills and Exploration (Semester)
Sculpture (Semester)
Ceramics I (Semester)
GRADES 10–12 Only
Ceramics II (Semester)
Painting: Skills and Exploration (Semester)
Foundations of Art is a prerequisite for all other visual arts classes, as it provides a basic understanding of both two- and threedimensional design principles while exposing students to a wide variety of media and processes. In addition, students learn visual arts vocabulary that is used throughout all the upper-level visual arts electives. After completing Foundations of Art, students can choose from more specific studio disciplines, which include drawing, painting, printmaking, ceramics, sculpture, applied design, and book arts. Digital imaging is woven into several of these disciplines.
GRADES 11–12 Only
Advanced Studio (Semester)
Alternative Photographic Processes (Semester)
Real-World Design (Semester)
Foundations of Art (½ credit)
This course explores the basic principles of the visual arts through introductory experiences in design, drawing, painting, printmaking, and sculpture. Foundations of Art is designed to help students of all abilities develop their creative and perceptual skills. The concepts and vocabulary learned in this course serve as a common body of knowledge for all other visual arts electives.
VISUAL ARTS ELECTIVES
Not all electives are offered every year.
Ceramics I (½ credit)
This course emphasizes the development of hand-building and modeling techniques with clay while providing opportunities to learn about a variety of surface treatments and glazing options. Work may be functional, sculptural, or a combination of both. Students will be exposed to the work of ceramic art and artists, both contemporary and historical. Prerequisite: Foundations of Art.
Ceramics II (½ credit)
Students will build on the hand-building skills they learned in Ceramics I and will also be introduced to throwing on the wheel. Work may be functional or sculptural and may combine hand-built and wheel-thrown techniques. Prerequisite: Foundations of Art and Ceramics I. Open to juniors and seniors, and sophomores with the permission of the instructor.
Drawing: Skills and Exploration (½ credit)
In this course, students will work in both black and white and color. While observational drawing and the principles of composition will be emphasized, students will also complete work that is imaginative, abstract, or experimental. A variety of media will be used, including pencil, blackand-white charcoal, pastel, colored pencil, and India ink. This course is excellent preparation for Painting: Skills and Exploration, Creative Printmaking, and Advanced Studio. Prerequisite: Foundations of Art.
Painting: Skills and Exploration (½ credit)
Students will build on the color knowledge they gained in Drawing: Skills and Exploration while learning how to manipulate paint. Topics will include the relative strength of pigments, color mixing, opacity, transparency, composition, quality of edges, and a variety of application and blending techniques. While acrylic paint will be the primary medium, watercolor may also be used. Subject matter may be observational, abstract, or nonobjective. Prerequisites: Foundations of Art and Drawing: Skills and Exploration.
Alternative Photographic Processes (½ credit)
This course will explore and adapt historical photo processes to contemporary image making. Inkjet and toner transfer methods will be examined, and students should expect to work with some combination of digital imaging, the photocopier, the ultraviolet light box, and the printing press. Students will explore techniques as well as the aesthetics of photographic imagery, including subject matter, narrative, composition, light, focus, and the role of cropping. Historical and contemporary purposes of photography will be examined. Prerequisite: Foundations of Art. Preference given to juniors and seniors.
Sculpture (½ credit)
This course explores thinking and creating in three dimensions using a variety of media that may include plaster, cardboard, wire, found objects, and wood. In addition to the elements of art and principles of design, students also work on understanding specific sculpture principles such as mass, volume, space, light, time, and location. Prerequisite: Foundations of Art.
Creative Printmaking on and off the Press (½ credit)
Students will explore the many creative opportunities that are available to the printmaker. Techniques will include monotype/monoprint, relief, etching, silkscreen, and collagraphy, with variation in materials, ink types, and supporting processes that can vary from drawing and carving to painting and digital imaging. Students will print by hand and use printing presses. The class includes both technical instruction and nonobjective, abstract, observational, personal narrative, or social justice content. Students will have the opportunity to work with singular imagery or in serial formats. Prerequisites: Foundations of Art and Drawing: Skills and Exploration.
Real-World Design (½ credit)
In this class, students will explore the principles of design as they apply to contemporary, real-world applications. Using graphic design, architectural design, and industrial (product/furniture) design will allow students to work in both two and three dimensions. Assignments will include manual and digital work while referencing modern art and design history. Focusing primarily on matters of form and function, the class will also examine the use of design as a communication tool in contemporary society. Prerequisite: Foundations of Art and at least one other studio elective. Preference given to juniors and seniors.
Advanced Studio (½ credit)
This course offers the advanced art student an opportunity to work on skill development and formal thinking and to develop creative solutions to aesthetic and conceptual challenges. While the course emphasizes visual image making, it’s not necessarily limited to strictly two-dimensional work. A variety of techniques, materials (both traditional and experimental), and colors are used. Subject matter may vary greatly, from the observed to the constructed to the imagined. Most important, the class focuses on different ways to think about the how and why of making art. Students taking the course should feel confident about their drawing skills. Prerequisites: Foundations of Art, Drawing: Skills and Exploration, and one other studio art course. Open only to juniors and seniors.
PERFORMING ARTS
PERFORMING ARTS ENSEMBLES
Upper School Band
Upper School String Orchestra
Chorus
Dance Technique and Composition
Jazz Combo
Danceflete Collective (during PE block)
PERFORMING ARTS CLASSES
Music Theory*
Digital Music Production*
Theater Lab
Real-World Performing Arts
* Earn PA credit but do not meet the minimum ½-credit requirement for a performance-based experience
PERFORMING ARTS THEATER PRODUCTIONS
Rehearsals and crew calls are 5 days per week after school
Fall Play* (cast and crew)
Winter Play (cast and crew)
Spring Play (cast and crew)
* Earns PA credit but does not meet the minimum ½-credit requirement for a performance-based experience
Waynflete’s performing arts program is an essential part of the school’s curriculum, helping foster the artistic, intellectual, and social-emotional growth of our students. Our diverse classes, ensembles, and cocurricular theater program builds students’ foundational skills and artistic understanding and supports the ongoing artistic education of those who wish to immerse themselves at a deeper level. We believe that every student can discover and develop their unique “voice” as they invest in the creative process, work collaboratively with their peers, and embrace the arts as both a powerful vehicle for selfexpression and a window to understanding humanity.
The Upper School performing arts curriculum includes a range of offerings in dance, music, theater, and production technology. These include formal semester classes, yearlong ensembles, and other electives.
SEMESTER COURSES
Music Theory (½ credit)
Students gain a foundational understanding of Western music theory while also exploring a wide variety of musical traditions from around the world. Units in this course include listening, tonality, intervals, scales, rhythm, meter, harmony, and form. These concepts are actively applied through listening, playing, singing, improvisation, composition, and analysis. Students build on previous musical knowledge and experience to build new skills and understandings. This course is designed for aspiring performers, composers, songwriters, and producers to gain a new appreciation of the music they love, widen their perspective, deepen their understanding, and help them pursue their musical goals. There is no prerequisite for this course, although it is presumed that students will have a strong interest in music.
Real-World Performing Arts (½ credit)
In ancient Greece, the performing arts were a platform for civic debate. The performing arts, or storytelling with words, music, and movement, were seen as a necessary part of a democratic society. From Sophocles to The Laramie Project and from Bob Dylan to Kendrick Lamar, stories arise from artists needing to share their particular truths and hoping they serve as catalysts for change. This semester-long experiential class will focus on the power of the performing artist as activist and agent of change. Students will take on many roles: historians and critics; interpreters of existing monologues, scenes, dances, and songs; and creators of a multi-arts performance piece designed to spark action. This course is open to students in grades 10–12.
Theater Lab (½ credit)
Theater Lab is an experiential performance and design course. Students have the opportunity to become theater-makers as they delve into this multidisciplinary creative art form. The focus is on developing skills as actors, designers, and technicians whose shared goal is to fill that universe and tell a story—expressively and collaboratively. Students will discover the actor’s instrument by tuning up their bodies, voices, and imaginations with a variety of exercises that demystify the acting process. Students will toggle between acting and theatrical design (allowing each aspect of the creative process to inform the other) and will expand their cultural literacy through exposure to a variety of theater genres. Actor-designers will collaborate on culminating projects by making theater together, from the first reading of a dramatic text to designing, building, and rehearsing—all in service of a short play.
Digital Music Production (½ credit)
This project-based course is a hands-on exploration of musical concepts through the use of music production technology, inviting students to create any type of music they are interested in, using GarageBand as the primary digital audio workstation. Topics include audio concepts, multitrack recording, MIDI, songwriting/composition, mixing, and sampling. Students will develop skills with wide-ranging real-world applications, from professional recording engineering and home studio recording to podcasting and other media. The course provides a unique insight into music and digital culture as students explore the development of recording technology and the way technology has shaped genres such as hip-hop and EDM. Music listening will be a crucial aspect of this course as students learn about musical innovators and their creative use of technology. While not a prerequisite, Music Theory is a beneficial prelude to this course.
ENSEMBLES
Instrumental Ensembles (Full year, two days a week, ½ credit) Instrumental Ensembles are open to all Upper School string, wind, brass, percussion, and bass players. Students provide their own instruments. The group begins the year working as a string ensemble or a wind ensemble to allow foundational work on instrumental technique and ensemble skills. Members of the wind ensemble are invited to join the string ensemble for an orchestral repertoire and other special projects. The string ensemble begins with a Baroque repertoire to develop students’ collaborative musicianship and rhetorical skills and adds music of other styles throughout the year. The wind ensemble explores a traditional band repertoire as well as various styles of jazz. In addition to building technical skills, all students expand their understanding of music theory and develop their music-reading skills. There is a strong emphasis in the wind ensemble on developing improvisational skills. In addition to formal concerts in the winter and spring, ensembles perform at school events and members may audition for Maine Music Educators Association All-State and District 2 festivals and ensembles.
Chamber Music (Full year, two days a week, ½ credit)
Chamber Music is open to a small number of players who demonstrate a superior level of commitment to Western art music performance and musicianship. Chamber Music membership is by invitation and is determined in September. Students must also be members of one of the Upper School instrumental ensembles. Chamber music is an intimate form of music-making without a conductor and with one player to each unique and important line of music. Students work with a coach to explore a repertoire for small ensembles with a special emphasis on balance, tuning, stylistic interpretation, and individual leadership as the music demands. Chamber Music members will perform in two formal concerts per year and additional informal performances on campus and in the community. The repertoire is selected and adapted for the specific instrumentation available. Members may also audition for Maine Music Educators Association All-State and District 2 festivals and ensembles.
Chorus (Full year, two days a week, ½ credit)
Chorus is open to interested students who share a passion for choral singing. No prior experience is required. The curriculum emphasizes building a cohesive community, vocal training, part singing, stylistic interpretation, music literacy, and musical understanding. Singers will explore music from various styles, cultures, and traditions, including contemporary a cappella and musical theater. The concert season consists of winter and spring concerts, additional performances for the school community, the New England Youth Identity Summit Kickoff Program, and collaborative performances with musicians from other ensembles and/or schools. Members are also eligible to audition for Maine Music Educators Association All-State and District 2 honor choirs.
Dance Technique and Composition (Full year, two days a week, ½ credit)
Open to all interested dancers, this class is also geared toward students whose athletic commitments preclude them from participating in Danceflete Collective during Upper School PE time. Students develop and improve their dance technique and expand their skills as choreographers and contributors to a creative choreographic process. Barre, floor, and center work will be emphasized to develop and refine technique, increase flexibility, and build strength and stamina. Compositional tools will be explored through short studies and longer solo and group projects. Students will have the opportunity to create and perform in new works for the Winter and Spring Dance Concerts.
Jazz Combo (Full year, two days a week, ½ credit)
Jazz Combo is open to a small number of players who are part one of the instrumental ensembles and who demonstrate a superior level of commitment to jazz performance and musicianship. Membership is by invitation and is determined in September. The repertoire consists of contemporary jazz arrangements from a range of styles that provide opportunities for students to develop improvisational skills. The Jazz Combo performs at two formal concerts a year as well as school and community events such as Convocation and the New England Youth Identity Summit, and often participates in the Maine Music Educators Association District 2 Jazz Festival and the UNH Clark Terry Jazz Festival.
OTHER PERFORMING ARTS ELECTIVES
Cocurricular Theater (¼–½ credit)
One theatrical production is staged during each season. The program includes a range of genres (comedy, drama, musical, student-written, one-act) and represents diverse playwrights. Actors and stage crew members receive academic credit for participating in these cocurricular productions.
Danceflete Collective (¼ credit)
Dancers may elect to participate in Danceflete Collective during the physical education block for any/all of the athletic seasons per year. The fall season focuses primarily on technique. Dancers in the winter and spring seasons build on that technical foundation to generate and rehearse works for the Winter and Spring Dance Concerts. Dancers completing two seasons of Danceflete Collective in a single year meet the minimum performing arts requirement.
OTHER ELECTIVES
A variety of additional courses offered in the Upper School enables students to study subjects not typically found in traditional disciplines. These courses are often interdisciplinary. Unless otherwise noted, the courses below are offered to students in grades 10–12.
Global Ethics and Public Policy (½ credit)
As our populations grow and “shrink” the planet, our need to understand and accept one another grows exponentially. Seeking insight into what makes an “other” and how people can thrive by embracing differences, this course will examine the impulse to embrace nationalism, the limits of globalism, and the allure of “NIMBY-ism” (among other inclinations), and how understanding these concepts will lead to growth. Beginning with a discussion of the UN Global Goals and an inquiry into universal ethical issues, students will explore topics such as poverty, security, immigration, cultural appropriation, nongovernmental organizations (NGOs), global health, and diplomacy. Field trips to agencies with a global footprint and local speakers who can address problems and solutions firsthand will comprise a significant part of the course. Intended for motivated, organized learners who want to understand the complexity of the world we now live in and what it means to engage in a central tenet of Waynflete’s mission—“responsible and caring participation in the world”—this is an opportunity for rigorous study of student-designed topics within the framework of the overall curriculum. Open only to juniors and seniors (sophomores by permission).
Poverty, Marginalization, and Public Service (½ credit)
This course is an in-depth exploration of the root causes of poverty and homelessness in Greater Portland. We will investigate the ways marginalized members of our community are pushed to the edges and face many obstacles to well-being. Race, immigration status, gender identity, sexual identity, and mental health status are all factors that can influence outcomes for thriving in any community. Based on readings and in-class speakers from the community, students will identify an area of particular interest and partner directly with a social service agency, NGO, or other organization that is actively working on solutions in that area of need. Regular contact and work with and for the agency will lead to community service credit for all students who successfully complete the course. Open only to juniors and seniors (sophomores by permission).
Introduction to Psychology (½ credit)
This course provides broad coverage of the field by presenting basic theories, research, and applied uses of psychology while also providing students with the tools necessary for the study of psychology and a sampling of the major areas of psychology research. The course begins with an overview of how psychology developed as an academic discipline and an introduction to some of the principal methodologies commonly deployed in its study. These areas will be approached from both theoretical and applied perspectives as students focus on wellsubstantiated research and current trends within research methodology, cognition, biological bases of behavior, human development, and social psychology. The course equips students with a solid background from which they may pursue more advanced psychology courses. Open only to juniors and seniors (sophomores by permission).
Economics and American Capitalism (½ credit)
This course explores the roles and effects of economics and capitalism on American consumers and businesses. Through the lens of economicsbased decision-making processes, the goal is to examine why entities (individuals, entrepreneurs, businesses, the federal government, the Federal Reserve, etc.) make the decisions that they do and to analyze the impact of those choices. Throughout the course, students will investigate economics, inflation, key economic theories, influential economists, the role of business in the economy, the stock market, and entrepreneurship. By the end of the course, students will be able to articulate and apply key analytical tools to choices they will face in their various roles in the US economy (consumer, investor, employee, entrepreneur, etc.). This is a valuable course for those interested in economics, business, entrepreneurship, finance, and/or investing in stocks.
Personal Finance (½ credit)
This class deepens students’ understanding of how the decisions we make affect our financial freedoms. By focusing on both current and future financial situations, students explore loans, taxes, investing for retirement, types of insurance, credit, and the importance of budgeting. By the end of the semester, students will have a strong understanding of their money flow and the steps they can take to improve their financial well-being. Open only to juniors and seniors (sophomores by permission).
The History of Medical Terminology Through Linguistics (½ credit)
Medical and scientific terminologies are based on an ordered system that is best understood through the linguistic principles of Greek and Latin. By learning the building blocks—the linguistic roots, prefixes, and suffixes used in modern terminology—students will learn to codebreak what seems impenetrable. As students take an etymological tour of the human body and the principles of scientific nomenclature, they will understand why systems, diseases, and processes are named as they are. Along the way, students will study a few ancient medical authors in translation and compare the medical practices of antiquity with our own. Open to all students.
ATHLETIC PHILOSOPHY AND PROGRAM
Waynflete athletes are successful both in competition and in sportsmanship. Through the physical education and athletic programs, students develop positive values, physical skills, and personal ethics. Waynflete athletes understand the importance of commitment, selfdiscipline, and perseverance.
Waynflete coaches are educators. Knowledgeable and passionate about their sports, they are dedicated to teaching young people about the joys of athletic participation and the importance of being well-rounded student-athletes.
Waynflete’s athletic program is based on the belief that athletics should be rewarding, challenging, and fun and the knowledge that mutual respect among parents, coaches, and athletes is of the utmost importance.
Middle School
The goals for the Middle School physical education program are to achieve a high level of participation, teach fundamental skills and strategies, develop a sense of teamwork, and foster responsibility and commitment. Every student participates and plays.
Middle School students are required to participate in either interscholastic athletics or a dance class each season and choose from a set of offerings in fall, winter, and spring. Practices take place four times a week and are built into the daily schedule. Most practices conclude in time for students to take regularly scheduled transportation home and are not held on Wednesdays or Saturdays. Games are scheduled for weekday afternoons and go past the scheduled transportation home. Waynflete’s Middle School is a member of the Triple C Conference.
Middle School Sports Options
FALL WINTER SPRING
Cross-Country Basketball Baseball
Dance Dance Dance
Field Hockey Nordic Skiing L acrosse
Soccer Swimming Ultimate Frisbee
Tennis*
* Not available to grade 6 students
Upper School
Waynflete believes that student-athletes benefit greatly from learning to balance the challenges of their academic and athletic schedules. For this reason, students are required to participate in either interscholastic athletics or physical education classes during all three seasons. Options for Upper School students include participating at the varsity or junior varsity level in a wide range of sports, choosing from a variety of physical education options, or developing an individualized athletic program.
Upper School Sports Options
FALL WINTER SPRING
Cross-Country Basketball Baseball
Field Hockey Boys Ice Hockey* Crew
Golf Girls Ice Hockey* L acrosse
Soccer Nordic Skiing Tennis
Crew (club) Swimming Track (co-op)*
Football (co-op) Indoor Track (co-op)* Ultimate Frisbee (club)
Volleyball (co-op)
* Additional equipment/transportation fee required for participation.
Interscholastic Athletics
Wayn flete offers varsity or junior varsity team sports for boys and girls during all three seasons. The programs stress developing sportsmanship, skills, and team strategies. All athletes who try out for a varsity sport will be added to either a varsity or junior varsity team. Freshmen teams are fielded if numbers allow. Fall sports meet two to four weeks before the school year begins. Practice for competitive teams is held during and after the school day. Varsity and junior varsity teams have practices and/or games scheduled Monday through Saturday.
Physical Education Options
Physical education classes are geared toward students who have athletic interests other than interscholastic competition. They are an integral part of the school’s athletic program. There are several options to choose from. These change each season and include dance, weight training, and yoga. They take place on Tuesdays and Thursdays, concluding in time for students to take regularly scheduled transportation home.
Individualized Athletic Program
The third choice for Upper School students is individualized athletics. This allows a student to pursue activities of special interest that the school does not offer. Activities vary and have included rock climbing, dance, fencing, and fig ure skating.
Proposals for individualized programs must be submitted and approved prior to the start of the season. Waynflete encourages ninth graders to participate in either interscholastic athletics or physical education classes as part of their transition to Upper School.
TESTING, EVALUATION, AND ACADEMIC SUPPORT
As an independent school, Waynflete goes to great lengths to ensure that students are successful in our rigorous academic program. This begins with small classes, engaged advisors, out-of-class support from classroom teachers, and short-term support from the director of support services.
For those students who need more assistance in meeting requirements, the school offers additional academic support at an extra cost to families. In the end, however, there are students for whom the school is not a good match and for whom another learning environment may be in their best interest. The testing and evaluation information requested in the Release of Educational Records section is designed to help the school and parents make informed decisions about the appropriateness of Waynflete for their child.
General Academic Support
Support is available to Waynflete students who may need intervention to develop skills and meet the demands of the curriculum. Waynflete provides short-term academic support for students who, in the school’s opinion, need assistance in meeting Waynflete’s academic standards. This support may include extra help sessions with teachers, short-term assistance from the director of support services (in the areas of study skills, executive function, essay writing, lab reports, research papers, and foundational math), the use of assistive technology, and access to supervised free periods. If a student needs more extensive assistance, additional services and/or tutoring with a member of the academic support faculty may be recommended. The support services department can also recommend outside services if needed. All tutoring requests must go through the student’s advisor and the director of support services.
Parameters of Support at Waynflete
Helping each child grow and learn with a sense of purpose and belonging is our mission. While we do not specialize in providing individualized instruction and programming for students with diagnosed learning differences or behavior challenges, our teachers engage a diversity of learners who are developing at variable expected levels. Waynflete is committed to making all reasonable modifications in policies, practices, and services for students with disabilities, unless doing so would fundamentally alter the nature of the services or programs or create a direct threat to the safety of the student or others, in our efforts to create a safe, equitable, and inclusive environment.
For a student to thrive at Waynflete, a partnership of trust between our teachers, students, and caregivers is required. Waynflete is a private school, and as such, it is not subject to the Individuals with Disabilities Education Act, which allots certain federal funding for the creation of specialpurpose programs in public schools. While Waynflete does not discriminate against students with disabilities, it does not have the same obligations as public schools to create programs or accommodate students’ needs. Sometimes students need more help than we can provide. Waynflete is not a specialpurpose school and does not provide separate programs for students with disabilities. We expect that a family’s relationship with the school will be based on an honest assessment of a student’s abilities and acknowledgement of the reasonable accommodations limits.
The following essential eligibility criteria are meant to help you assess your child’s readiness to learn at each program level at Waynflete.
There may be times when a currently enrolled student is no longer able to meet the essential eligibility criteria for a given program. In that case, we reserve the right to reassess the enrollment agreement for the current or following school year.
In general, we expect that Waynflete students will be able to follow applicable student conduct policies, particularly (without limitation) those relating to harm to others, including policies on violence, physical boundaries, bullying, hazing, harassment, discrimination, sexual misconduct, and retaliation. Waynflete also expects that its students will have a baseline ability to understand and follow policies and instructions from teachers and others, particularly (without limitation) those relating to health and safety.
Waynflete acknowledges that some students require an array of support and services in order to be successful. As an independent school, Waynflete provides reasonable accommodations to students with documented learning disabilities or learning challenges. While some services are available on campus at an individual cost and must be coordinated by the support services department, the school does not provide:
• CLASSROOM PARAPROFESSIONAL SUPPORT such as educational technicians or classroom aides;
• HEALTH SERVICES beyond the health care set forth in the Waynflete Handbook;
• INTERVENTIONS such as speech and language, occupational, and physical therapies; or an
• INDIVIDUALIZED SOCIAL SKILLS CURRICULUM
Waynflete does not provide educational or diagnostic testing, but may offer to conduct informal screenings for reading, writing, and math. If it appears a child would benefit from formal evaluation, parents are encouraged to contact the director of support services to discuss options or to obtain
a referral list of evaluators in the Greater Portland area. Portland Public Schools may also provide information about evaluation services. Any recommended adjustments to a child’s academic program must be consistent with the criteria outlined and approved by the appropriate division director.
Students with Diagnosed Disabilities
Parents of students who have been evaluated and found to have learning challenges or a diagnosed disability under the Americans with Disabilities Act (including, but not limited to, learning disabilities, ADHD, emotional disorders, and speech and language disorders) may request that Waynflete provide reasonable accommodations. The decision to permit or deny requested accommodations will be made on a caseby-case basis in keeping with the school’s academic program by the department of support services and the appropriate division director and consistent with applicable law. Such decisions will also take into consideration:
• the nature and extent of the child’s documented learning difference;
• all current diagnostic, academic, and psychological testing and evaluations;
• recommendations from a licensed provider;
• the information generated through the IEP/ISP process by any public educational institution;
• the student’s educational history, including behavioral history and prior use of accommodations; and
• whether such accommodations can be provided without fundamentally altering the nature of a program or creating a direct threat to the safety of the student or others.
Documentation of all testing and evaluations must be shared with the school and be current (in most cases, conducted within the past three to four years) for academic accommodations to be approved. If these criteria are met, the department of support services will create an academic or emotional support plan for the student, which will be shared with the student’s teaching team. For students’ ongoing eligibility for accommodations, evaluations and documentation must be updated every three to four years and provided to the school.
Release of Educational Records
As a condition of enrollment consideration, parents must sign a release authorizing the student’s prior school to release all of the student’s educational records and to permit Waynflete officials to discuss the student’s educational history with representatives of the previous school. In submitting a student’s educational records, parents must ensure that all diagnostic and educational testing of any kind is provided regardless of whether the testing took place at a prior school or was arranged by parents and conducted by a private evaluator. Falsifying or withholding relevant educational records may be grounds for termination of the student’s enrollment. For more information concerning current students, please contact Waynflete’s director of support services at 207.774.5721, ext. 1289.
THE MARJORIE ROBINSON THAXTER LIBRARY
The Marjorie Robinson Thaxter Library strives to support Middle and Upper School students in developing a deeper understanding of themselves and their world through stories, histories, and informational media. Faculty and students of all grade levels use the library to explore the world of ideas offered both within its walls and through our collections of digital resources.
Waynflete’s librarians believe that literature is a doorway to understanding both the individuality and universality of the human experience. Thus, the librarians engage students in reading a wide variety of authors representing stories that reflect (and expand on) a student’s individual experience. Throughout the year, Thaxter librarians highlight good stories through book talks, reading programs, displays, posters, presentations, and simply conversing with students about what they are reading. Students also recommend
COLLEGE DESTINATIONS (2021–25)
American University (3)
Bard College (3)
Bates College (14)
Bennington College (3)
Bentley University (3)
Boston College (3)
Boston University (7)
Bowdoin College (16)
Brandeis University
Broward College
Brown University (6)
Bryn Mawr College (3)
California Polytechnic State University, San Luis Obispo
Carleton College (4)
Case Western Reserve University
Champlain College (6)
Clark University
Clemson University
Colby College (12)
College of Charleston
College of William & Mary (2)
Colorado College (4)
Colorado School of Mines
Connecticut College (6)
Cornell University (4)
Culinary Institute of America
Dalhousie University
Dartmouth College (2)
Davidson College (6)
Denison University
Dominican University of California
Drew University
Drexel University
Duke University (2)
Eckerd College
Elon University (4)
Emerson College (2)
Emory University
Endicott College (2)
Furman University
Grinnell College
Hamilton College (3)
Harvard University (2)
Haverford College (2)
Howard University
Iona University
Ithaca College (2)
Lafayette College (2)
Lehigh University (2)
Lewis & Clark College
Macalester College (4)
Massachusetts College of Art & Design
Massachusetts College of Pharmacy and Health Sciences
Massachusetts Institute of Technology (2)
Middlebury College (5)
Mount Holyoke College
Northeastern University (6)
Northwestern University
Occidental College (7)
Pomona College
Providence College (2)
Rensselaer Polytechnic Institute
Rhode Island School of Design
Roger Williams University (2)
Rome City Institute
Royal Northern College of Music
Salve Regina University
books to the librarians, creating a community of readers with stronger connections to one another and a deeper understanding of that which connects them to the broader world.
The teaching faculty collaborate with the librarians on class projects that both deepen content knowledge and foster the growth of students’ research and information literacy skills. These projects provide meaningful experiences in identifying the best sources of information to answer students’ research questions as well as the best evidence to support their arguments. As students grow, they become increasingly independent in their research skills and more proficient in their use of information technologies, gaining the tools to become lifelong learners and proficient navigators of the information environment.
Sarah Lawrence College (4)
School of Visual Arts
Scripps College (2)
Sewanee: The University of the South
Skidmore College (6)
Smith College (6)
Southern Maine Community College (2)
St. Anselm College
St. Lawrence University
Stevens Institute of Technology
Stonehill College (2)
Suffolk University
SUNY at Purchase
Swarthmore College
Syracuse University (3)
The American University of Paris (2)
The George Washington University (3)
The New School (3)
The University of Alabama
The University of Arizona
The University of Tampa (2)
The University of Utah
Trinity College
Trinity College Dublin
Tufts University (7)
Tulane University
University College Dublin
University of Colorado Boulder (3)
University of Denver (3)
University of Hartford
University of Maine, Orono (6)
University of Miami (2)
University of New England (2)
University of New Hampshire
University of Notre Dame
University of Pennsylvania (2)
University of Rhode Island (2)
University of Richmond (2)
University of Southern California (2)
University of Southern Maine (3)
University of St Andrews, Scotland (3)
University of Tennessee –Chattanooga
University of Toronto
University of Vermont (4)
University of Victoria
University of Virginia (3)
University of Washington
Utah State University
Vanderbilt University
Vassar College (5)
Villanova University
Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University
Wake Forest University
Washington & Lee University
Washington University in St. Louis (2)
Wellesley College (8)
Wentworth Institute of Technology
Wesleyan University (4)
Western New England University
Wheaton College
Whitman College
Williams College
Worcester Polytechnic Institute (4)
Yale University (2)
Statement of Beliefs
We are devoted to the healthy development of the whole person—mind, body, and spirit. Believing that young people are naturally curious about the world, we engage our students with a rich variety of academic and cocurricular experiences, allowing them to explore their own interests, talents, and ideas. Learning flourishes when students are challenged to discover, to create, to take intellectual risks, and to invest themselves passionately in areas both familiar and new.
We believe that diversity is one of the conditions of excellence for our school. We value the individuality of our students, recognizing that each will take a different path through life. We also believe that every person can be a responsible member of the community and that this sense of responsibility deepens when we treat our students and one another with trust and respect. It is out of respect for each individual that true community arises—a community of diverse human beings who value the challenges of honoring differences and resolving conflict. We believe that personal freedom and mutual support should be tightly interwoven, and that working with others is as important as striving to achieve one’s own goals. By making these connections, we create an atmosphere in which self-confidence, resilience, and strong relationships can grow.
We believe that our responsibility as educators is to collaborate with one another, with our students, with their families, and with the wider community as we strive to fulfill the mission of our school.
Statement of Goals
Our goals include a commitment: to nurture in students a sense of wonder and a lifelong love of learning; to promote an appreciation for the liberal arts and sciences, while teaching skills of quantitative reasoning, critical and reflective thought, and aesthetic understanding; to develop a school community enriched by cross-age connections, interdisciplinary opportunities, and an understanding of the range and richness of human history and culture; to help students adopt healthy values and acquire new skills in an ever-changing world; to encourage students’ individual initiative and active responsibility for their own learning; to guide students to become active participants in the community as well as stewards of the environment; to be a bias-free community that embraces diversity and fosters a positive identity for all persons; to support students in developing a strong framework for ethical decision-making; and to inspire students to strive for excellence and integrity in all aspects of their lives.
Nondiscrimination Policy
Each applicant receives equal consideration regardless of gender, cultural, ethnic, or economic status. Waynflete works to create and sustain an equitable and just environment for all members of our school community. It is school policy not to discriminate on the basis of race, color, religion, national origin, gender, age, sexual orientation, or disability.
We believe there is no place for racist or biased language, attitudes, behavior, or actions at Waynflete. Thus, we actively confront any form of racism, racist behavior, or other bias as part of our effort to foster a safe and respectful learning environment.
This commitment should permeate all programs, actions and relationships at Waynflete—curricular and cocurricular, personal, and professional. Waynflete is committed to making it possible for each member of the community to feel valued and to participate in all aspects of school life.