Westminster School (Annandale, Virginia)

Westminster School
Location
Annandale, VA
USA
Information
Type Private, Co-educational
Motto Presenting challenge. Building character. Instilling confidence.
Religious affiliation(s) No religious affiliation
Established 1962
Headmaster Ellis Glover
Faculty 40
Enrollment 260
Average class size 15
Student to teacher ratio 11:1
Color(s) Purple Green & Gold
Athletics 5 Interscholastic Sports
Athletics conference Capital Athletic Conference
Mascot Griffin
Website www.westminsterschool.com

Westminster School is a coed kindergarten through eighth grade independent school located in a residential area of Annandale, Virginia. The Lower School encompasses grades K through 2, the Middle School is grades 3 through 6, and the Upper School is made up of grades 7 and 8. Students are taught in a manner that balances STEM education with studies in the Classics. It is a part of the Virginia Association of Independent Schools.

History

The school was established in 1962 by Jane Goll. Mrs. Goll grew up wanting to be a teacher after being instructed in a traditional, classical education in New York City. Her own educational background was combined with her experiences traveling throughout Europe with her husband to form an idea of how she would want to teach students. After being dissatisfied with her work in both public and private schools in the United States she decided to found her own school.

In 1962, Mrs. Goll opened a private Kindergarten class in St. Albans Episcopal Church in Annandale, Virginia. Throughout the early years, her school grew and soon she decided to give her school a new name. Her school kept expanding and a new building and wings were created between 1970 and 2003.

Mrs. Goll died on September 5, 1992 and her position of Headmaster was passed on to Ellis Glover.[1]

Campus

Academic classrooms at Westminster School include innovative technology such as smart boards, and are furnished with “executive style” or “tablet-arm” student desks. The 3rd and 4th grade academic classrooms are grouped together along a single corridor, and joins with a 5th and 6th grade corridor and one of the 7th and 8th grade corridors. These corridors along with the central hallway, which also houses 7th and 8th classrooms, form a central courtyard with a garden at the heart of the old school building. This central courtyard was constructed in the style of a classical atrium.[2]

The central hallway of the school building features “Shakespeare Windows,” or mounted wooden cabinet windows that use the stained-glass overlay method. The creation of the windows was a joint effort between Tourne and Peter Shipman. For over five years, the graduating eighth grade class has raised money in order to have a window created and donated to the school. The subject of the artwork was determined by the Shakespeare play that class performed in the seventh grade.[3][4]

The new section of the school includes the music studio, art studio, gymnasium and library. The spacious and well-lit gym allows for daily physical education classes. While most of the school is located on one floor, a wheelchair lift provides access to the gymnasium. The art studio is decorated with class art projects cultivated over the nine-year program. The music studio also includes space for private lessons. The windows of the library overlook wooded view and provide natural sunlight for students to browse and check-out the more than 25,000 books and audio-visual materials that the school has acquired. Inside the library is an additional resource center.[5]

Highlights of the school include a theater, playground, and recreational field. The theater is used for school productions that instruct students in presentation and technical aspects of the theater, as well as foster creativity in costume and set design.[6] The playground includes climbing structures, social stations, slides, swings, junior-sized basketball court, and plenty of running room.[7]

Academics

Students are taught a number of core subjects including language arts, mathematics, science and social studies. At different times throughout their time at Westminster, students also take courses on technology and geography. It is mandatory for students to participate in physical education, visual art, music and theater classes. Throughout all nine grades, students learn the French language and in their last two years at Westminster they are enrolled in a Latin course.[8]

The school also emphasizes personal presentation and etiquette.[9]

Extracurriculars

Westminster School maintains a theater program with all students at all grade levels performing in a play or musical each year. In 1981, students from the Middle School entered into a Folger Shakespeare Theater competition, affiliated with the Folger Shakespeare Library. This has led to an annual production of a Shakespeare play by the seventh grade class.[10]

Students in the Middle and Upper Schools compete in athletic competitions with other independent schools in the Northern Virginia Region. Westminster is a part of the Capital Athletic Conference, with other institutions such as Congressional Schools of Virginia, Green Acres School, Immanuel Christian School, The Langley School, National Presbyterian School, Norwood School, St. Patrick's Episcopal School, and Woods Academy.[11]

Community service is also an important extra-curricular activity for the students at Westminster. They have formed a "Builder's Club" that has volunteered throughout the school's neighborhood, and at organizations such as The Center for Multicultural Human Services.[12] Westminster’s Builders Club is sponsored by the Kiwanis organization of Fairfax.[13]

Additionally, the school sponsors a variety of clubs including Chess Club, French Club, Odyssey of the Mind, Mathcounts, and Science Olympiad.[14][15][16]

The Griffin Academy

Westminster School is affiliated with The Griffin Academy. This preschool is located at St. Alban’s Church in Annandale, Virginia. The Griffin Academy instructs three- and four-year-olds in academics and social learning in a nurturing environment. Throughout the day, children engage in both indoor and outdoor play, structured and non-structured time, and quiet and less reserved activities.[17]

Both three and four-year olds are taught a curriculum that fosters emotional, social, cognitive and physical growth. Emotional growth includes providing an environment of routine, instilling a sense of confidence, and development of a child’s education. Children learn to interact with classmates and form friendships, solve conflicts constructively, and expressing themselves verbally. Cognitive growth occurs with students learning pre-writing, exposure to the French language, and early math skills.[18]

References

  1. "Westminster History and Timeline". westminsterschool.com. Retrieved 10 April 2014.
  2. "Campus Tour". westminsterschool.com. Retrieved 30 July 2014.
  3. "Shakespeare Windows". westminsterschool.com. Retrieved 17 April 2014.
  4. "Light Through Yonder Window Breaks". The Washington Post. Retrieved 17 April 2014.
  5. "Campus Tour". westminsterschool.com. Retrieved 30 July 2014.
  6. "Curriculum Highlights: Arts". westminsterschool.com. Retrieved 30 July 2014.
  7. "Campus Tour". westminsterschool.com. Retrieved 30 July 2014.
  8. "Curriculum Highlights". westminsterschool.com. Retrieved 10 April 2014.
  9. "Curriculum Highlights: Enrichment". westminsterschool.com. Retrieved 10 April 2014.
  10. "Drama Program". westminsterschool.com. Retrieved 10 April 2014.
  11. "Sports Programs". westminsterschool.com. Retrieved 10 April 2014.
  12. "Westminster's Builders Club". pointsoflight.org. Retrieved 10 April 2014.
  13. "Kiwanis Fairfax: Service Leadership Programs". fairfaxkiwanis.org. Retrieved 17 April 2014.
  14. "NoVA North Odyssey of the Mind Region 9 Registered Schools". novanorth.org. Retrieved 17 April 2014.
  15. "Mathcounts VSPE – Northern Virginia Region Regional School List". nova-mathcounts.org. Retrieved 17 April 2014.
  16. "Science Olympiad". westminsterschool.com. Retrieved 17 April 2014.
  17. "The Griffin Academy Preschool". westminsterschool.com. Retrieved 17 April 2014.
  18. "Griffin Academy Curriculum". westminsterschool.com. Retrieved 17 April 2014.

External links

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