Trinity Episcopal School of Austin
Trinity Episcopal School is a K-8 independent co-ed day school in Austin, Texas. The school was founded in 1999 in a rented blue house near the University of Texas campus. Since that inaugural year, the school has grown from 13 students to nearly 500, moved to a 15-acre (61,000 m2) campus in West Lake Hills and built six buildings. Trinity Episcopal School is accredited by the Southwestern Association of Episcopal Schools.[1]
Trinity's graduates attend some of the nation's public and independent high schools, including St. Stephen's Episcopal School, St. Andrew's Episcopal School, St. Michael's Catholic Academy, The Hockaday School for Girls, Choate Rosemary Hall, Avon Old Farms School, and the Liberal Arts and Science Academy (LASA) High School.
Academics
Trinity's Lower School uses a workshop approach for the teaching of reading and writing. Developed by Lucy Calkins of Columbia University, the workshop approach develops writers who have confidence in their own voices and fluency with a number of different formats and styles. Trinity's math program develops math fluency, treating the subject as a language to understand rather than a series of facts to memorize. The vertically integrated curriculum embeds basic algebraic and geometric concepts into the earliest math education and incorporates the workshop approach developed by Catherine Fosnot of the City College of New York. Students also take Think Tank, a program ordinarily offered in gifted & talented programs; Classroom of the Earth, a hands-on science program; music; art; Spanish; and physical education. Third and fourth grade students participate in Project Expert, a major research project that incorporates organization, writing, and presentation skills.
In the Middle School, students have an opportunity to complete both Algebra 1 and Geometry by the end of their 8th grade year. Students can also earn high school credit for a number of other classes, including Latin, Speech, and Integrated Physics and Chemistry.
Trinity's Head of School is Marie Kidd. Ms. Kidd is a distinguished independent school educator who began her teaching career in 1978 and who has extensive teaching and administrative experience in strong K-8 schools. She has taught all levels of elementary education and has served as a middle school head and assistant head before assuming her current leadership role in 2007. Marie holds a Master of Arts in Education from Occidental College and is currently completing requirements for a PhD in Education from the University of Southern California.
Episcopal Tradition
As members of the National Association of Episcopal School, Trinity embraces the NAES description of Episcopal schools in a recent brochure, "In an Episcopal school, faith and reason are partners in an ethos that places learning solidly in the context of each person's lifelong search for truth. Within a Christian tradition of tolerance and open inquiry, an Episcopal education teaches students to welcome and respect diverse and differing points of view." Trinity offers daily chapel in both the Lower School and the Middle School. The Chaplain is the Rev. Brin Bon.
Athletics
The Trinity Tornado competes in the Austin Inter Parochial League (AIPL) in the following sports:
Girls: Cross-Country, Volleyball, Basketball, Lacrosse, Soccer, Tennis, Track, Golf
Boys: Cross-Country, Tackle Football, Flag Football, Basketball, Soccer, Lacrosse, Tennis, Track, Golf
Trinity is known for having a very high-standard athletics program. Having many great athletes such as Cayleb Jones (University of Arizona) planning on going to high caliber athletic programs.
Arts
Trinity has a robust arts program that incorporates both elective courses and extracurricular activities. The school hosts a school-wide art show each spring, has several choirs and solo opportunities, and a drama department that produces a fall drama and a spring musical. Trinity's Varsity Choir won the Best in Class trophy at the 2009 Lone Star Showcase choral competition in Dallas. The school newspaper, "Eye of the Tornado," is student-led and produced.
References
- ↑ "SAES School Members". Southwestern Association of Episcopal Schools. Retrieved 2012-04-29.