The
Boston Latin School is a public exam
school founded on April 23, 1635, in
Boston
, Massachusetts
. It is both the first
public school and oldest existing school in the United States
.The Public Latin School was a bastion for
educating the sons of the
Boston
elite, resulting in the school claiming many prominent
Bostonians as alumni. Its curriculum follows that of the 18th
century Latin-school movement, which holds the
classics to be the basis of an educated mind. Four
years of Latin are mandatory for all pupils who enter the school in
7th grade, three years for those who enter in 9th. In 2007 the
school was named one of the top twenty high-schools in the United
States by
U.S.
News & World
Report.
History
The school's first class was in single figures, but it now has
2,400 pupils drawn from all parts of Boston.
It has produced four
Harvard
presidents, four Massachusetts governors, and five
signers of the United States
Declaration of Independence. William Lloyd Garrison,
Benjamin Franklin, and
Louis Farrakhanare its most famous
dropouts.
The school
was modeled after Boston Grammar School
in Lincolnshire, UK, from where many of Boston's
original settlers derived. Current students assert with pride that
Harvard
College
, founded a year later in 1636, was created for
Boston Latin's first graduates. Whether or not that is true,
Boston Latin had been a top feeder school for Harvard, and has
consistently sent large numbers of students to Harvard, recently
averaging about twenty-five students per year. More than 99% of
Boston Latin's approximately 300 annual graduates are accepted by
at least one four-year college.
Latin School admitted only male students and hired only male
teachers from its founding in 1635. The school's first female
student was not until the nineteenth century.
Helen Magill White was the school's first
female graduate and first American woman to earn a
Doctorate.
However, soon after White's graduation in
1877, Girls' Latin
School
was founded. For nearly a century, all
qualified female students would attend the all-girls institution.
It was not until 1972, when Boston Latin would admit its first
co-educational class.
Female teachers predated female students at Latin. In 1967 the
school appointed Marie Frisardi Clearyand Juanita Ponteas the first
two women in its academic faculty.
Cornelia Kelley, the school's first female Headmaster, served from
1998 to her retirement in 2007, after which Lynne Mooney Teta was
selected to become the school's 28th Headmaster. Mooney Teta is a
1986 graduate of Boston Latin, and was formerly an Assistant Head
Master at the school.
Academics
Boston Latin's motto is
Sumus Primi, Latin for
we are
first. This is meant as a
double
entendre, referring both to the school's date of founding and
its academic stature.
Boston Latin has a history of pursuing the
same standards as elite New England
prep
school while adopting the egalitarian attitude of a public school.
Academically, the school regularly
outperforms public schools in rich Boston suburbs, particularly as
measured by the yearly MCAS assessment required
of all Massachusetts
public
schools. In 2006, Brooklyn Latin School
was founded in New York City, explicitly modeled on
Boston Latin, borrowing much from its traditions and
curriculum.
Admissions
BLS ca. 1935, and a view of a classroom
Admission is determined by a combination of a student's score on
the
Independent
School Entrance Examination (ISEE) and recent grades, and is
limited to residents of the city of Boston. Although Boston Latin
runs from the 7th through the 12th grade, it only admits students
into the 7th and 9th grades. Consequently the higher grades have
fewer students than the lower grades, as a relatively large number
of students transfer out. The school has historically been
described as having a sink-or-swim environment, but in recent years
there have been notable efforts to create a more supportive
atmosphere.
Because it is a high-performing and well-regarded school in a city
school system that is among the worst in the state, Boston Latin
has been at the center of controversy concerning its admissions
process. Admissions are very competitive, and it is not uncommon
for fewer than 20% of applicants to be admitted. Before the 1997
school year, Boston Latin set aside a 35%
quota of places in its incoming class for
under-represented minorities. The school was forced to drop this
policy after a series of lawsuits involving non-minority girls who
were not admitted despite ranking higher than admitted
minorities.Boston Latin subsequently defeated a legal effort to do
away with its admissions process entirely and conduct admissions by
blind lottery. Since 1997, the percentage of under-represented
minorities at Boston Latin has fallen from 35% to under 19% in
2005, despite efforts by Boston Latin, the
Boston Public Schools, and the Boston
Latin School Association to recruit more minority applicants and
retain more minority students. Some advocate instituting a quota
for the number of students that must be admitted from Boston's
public middle schools.
Curriculum
Declamation is the most time-honored of
the school's traditions. Pupils in the 7th to 10th grade are
required to give an oration in their English class three times
during the year. There is also Public Declamation, where pupils
from all grades, or classes, are welcomed to try out for the chance
to declaim a memorized piece in front of an assembly. During Public
Declamation, declaimers are scored on aspects such as
"Memorization" "Presentation", and "Voice and Delivery", and those
who score well in three of the first four public declamations are
given the chance to declaim in front of alumni judges for awards in
"Prize Declamation".

Front entrance
In addition to the well-known and time-honored tradition of
declamation in English classes, recently the Modern Languages
department instituted an annual "World Language Declamation"
competition. Once a year, during National Foreign Language Week
(usually the first week of March), students from grades 8 through
12 perform orations in languages other than English. Most students
choose to declaim in the modern language they are studying, though
some choose Latin, Greek, or their native tongue. Judges are
brought in from various institutions around the city, and mark the
students in similar categories to those used in Public Declamation.
Entrants are categorized by level, rather than language, such that
all students declaiming at the first-year level of various
languages are competing against each other, all students at the
second-year level compete against each other, and so on. Students
who regularly perform exceptionally well at World Language
Declamation are honored at Prize Night with the Celia Gordon
Malkiel Prize.
In a move that was controversial among some alumni, the school
decided in 2001 to decrease the requirement for students' Latin
instruction by one year, starting with the class of 2006. The
mandatory minimum period of Latin instruction was decreased for
students admitted for 7th grade from five years to four years, and
for students admitted for 9th grade from four years to three years.
This decision was made by the head of the school's Latin
department, in recognition of the fact that the requirement was
hampering students' ability to take enough courses in important
modern subjects such as Physics, Chemistry, Computer Science and
modern languages. However, students still retain the ability to
study Latin through their sixth year, and many do so, partly in
order to maximize the number of AP courses in which they are
enrolled.
In a 1789
codicil to his will,
Benjamin Franklin established a legacy to fund the Franklin Medals,
which are awarded to the school's top-ranking pupils at graduation.
The second most prestigious awards, the Dixwell Prizes, are given
to pupils excelling in Latin or Greek.
Publications
There are currently two main publications of the Boston Latin
School:
The Register is the school's literary magazine,
and
The Argo the school newspaper.
George Santayana founded
The
Register in 1881 to serve as the school newspaper. Over the
years, however, it evolved into a purely literary magazine,
publishing prose and poetry written by members of the student body,
as well as artwork. There are generally two editors-in-chief, and
it is published twice per year.
The Argo, the school's
newspaper, is far younger, having been founded after it was clear
that the
Register had become a purely literary magazine.
As of the 2006–2007 school year, it is published seven times a
year. Both the
Register and the
Argo are entirely
student-produced, and both have won awards from the New England
Scholastic Press Association.
The Boston Latin
Lampoon, a humor magazine, was published
only sporadically, and has not appeared since 2006. A science
publication,
The Catapulta, was published four times since
the Spring of the 2004-2005 school year, and a new edition is
planned.
In the 2003–2004 school year, a publication entitled "Plebeians
Speak" appeared once. The anonymous pamphlet featured articles that
might have been censored from
The Argo for being
controversial or inflammatory. Its title referred to its editorial
belief that students (and in some cases, teachers) were considered
common, insignificant folk by the administration.
Still another Boston Latin publication is "BLSA Bulletin", whose
President, David S. Weiner is the Boston Latin School Association.
In the Fall 2008 issue are alumni profiles, Alumni Awards, Reunions
mentioned, Alumni News, Development News, a letter from the Chair
of the BLSA Board of Trustees with a listing of same, BLSA
Financials, Class Notes, and a Retrospective.
Athletics

A wolf's paw is the logo for Boston
Latin's athletic teams
Boston Latin's teams are known as the Boston Latin Wolfpack; their
colors are purple and white.
Boston Latin has played rival Boston English in Football every Thanksgiving since 1887, the oldest continuous high school rivalry
in the United
States
.Historically, Boston Latin's hockey,
volleyball teams, both boys' and girls', have been very good; for
the most part, however, titles have been few and far between since
the school left the Boston Public Schools league in Division V
which it had dominated. Boston Latin now competes in Division II
Dual County League against suburban schools with better facilities
and greater funding. In 1995, the girls' soccer team won their
first game after 11 years of losses.The girl's hockey team won the
Division 1 State Championship in 2001 and has won the Dual County
League for the past 9 years, and in doing so have become one of the
most competitive girls hockey teams in the state. In 2001 Boston
Latin Girls Tennis won their first ever Division I State
Championship. They continued to dominate for the next two years and
became the first team to go three seasons undefeated; gaining two
more State Championships in both 2002 and 2003.Led by the Paul
Hynes Wrecking Crew in 2005, The Boston Latin Boys Hockey team won
the school's first ever boys ice hockey Division II State
Championship.
Boston Latin defeated the two time defending
state champion Saugus
. This feat was remarkable considering
Boston Latin was the first ever exam entrance school to win the
State Championship.
Extracurricular activities
NUTRONS Robotics Team
Founded in 1998, the NUTRONS FIRST robotics team is a high school
robotics team based out of Northeastern University, which competes
world wide, designing and building robots over a six week period to
compete in a specific task. In 2001 the NUTRONS won the National
Championship with students from Boston Latin School. In 2007 the
NUTRONS won the Boston Regional Competition and received the Delphi
Driving Tomorrow's Technology Award in 2008 and 2009.
Boston Latin Mock Trial Team
Boston Latin has participated in the Mock Trial program sponsored
by the Massachusetts Bar Association since the programs' founding
in 1987. The team has since won the State Championship twice: the
first in 1987 and then again in 2006. BLS went on to rank 24th in
the Nationals at Oklahoma City in 2006. The team receives a mock
case each year and prepares drafts of openings, directs, crosses
and closings for both prosecution and defense. They then compete at
regionals in order to advance to the Championship series. In 2006,
the team advanced and won the State Championship with the help of
three lawyer coaches who were all alumni of BLS: Lauren McDonough,
Michael Tumposky and Sean Cronin.
BLSTV
The internal television station of Boston Latin School is
BLSTV; it has been
broadcasting since 2003. Every day BLSTV broadcasts the daily
bulletin to all of BLS. All of the broadcasters are students, in
either their Junior or Senior years. BLSTV also appears at most
school events, filming and archiving all of their footage. Many of
the producers of BLSTV are studying to become film and television
producers in college. BLSTV's current producer is Maya Jonas-Silver
(I).
Boston Latin Theatre Company
Boston Latin School's Theatre Company produces three to four plays
per academic year, including a spring musical. Traditionally, the
school also showcases a one-act play in the
Massachusetts High School
Drama Guild Festival. The 2007 entry, Jordan Harrison's
Kid
Simple: A Radio Play in the Flesh, advanced to the semi-final
level of the festival where it won multiple awards for acting,
lighting design, and sound design. In 2004, the student director
was awarded for Excellence in Directing, for Jon Klein's
Dimly
Perceived Threats to the System. Other BLS entries in the
MHSDG Festival have included Tristine Skyler's
The Moonlight
Room (2006), Craig Lucas'
Reckless (2005), A.R.
Gurney's
The Dining Room (2003), Jean-Claude van Itallie's
T.V. (2002) and
Interview (2001),
Elaine May's
Adaptation (2000),
Steve Martin's
WASP (1999), Peter
Shaffer's
Black Comedy (1998), and
The Romancers
(1997). In Winter 2008, the Boston Latin Theatre Company produced
Tilt Angel, which reached the State Finals of the 2008
MHSDG Festival, the first finals appearance
since 2004.
Tilt Angel won numerous awards for individual
and ensemble acting, as well as for sound, makeup, and lighting
design.
Tilt Angel was also selected by the
MHSDG to be one of two Massachusetts representatives
at the 2008 New England Drama Festival, the first time BLS has
advanced so far. In Spring 2008, the company produced
The Secret Garden. In 2009,
they produced
Dark Play or
Stories for Boys, which was their production for the
MHSDG.
The Boston Latin Theatre Company currently
has alumni studying at Harvard College
, Emerson
College
, New York University
's Tisch School
of the Arts, Northwestern University
, Boston
College
, Boston University
, and the University
of Southern California
's School of Theatre.In addition, Boston Latin
School has its own student-created, student-run improvisational
theater group, the Yellow Submarine Improv Troupe, known for its
practice of letting any student join without an audition. It
was founded by three students, Josh Michel ('02), Michael Guerra
('03) and Jack Ferris ('02) in 1999.
Musical arts
Boston Latin School also has an extensive music program.
Introductory, Junior, and Senior Concert Bands, Concert Choir, and
String Orchestras are elective classes (although these grades do
not contribute to GPA). After-school vocal ensembles include the
a cappella Wolftones and Wolfettes, Show
Choir, and Chamber Choir. Instrumental ensembles include Football
Pep Band, Big Band, Junior Big Band, Flute Ensemble, and the Honors
Orchestra.There are also fully academic music classes (for which
grades
are factored into the GPA), such as Introduction to
Music Theory, and a very rigorous
Advanced Placement Music
Theory class.
The Wolftones and Wolfettes are the only completely student-run
musical groups at Boston Latin. The Wolfettes have been awarded the
National Honor Society Best Vocal Group Award by the president of
the National Honor Society, Nicholas Brown Parker. The Wolftones
received honorable mention. The Wolfettes most recently sang Happy
Ending, arranged by Emily Wean, and Say My Name, arranged by Elodie
Paquette. The two groups organize an annual a cappella evening to
raise money for STAND, an anti-genocide group.
Each year, all of the musical groups display their talents at
Boston Latin School's Holiday Concerts and Music Nights. The former
is two nights in mid-December and the latter two nights in Spring,
where students perform several selections of music that they have
been working on for those who wish to attend.
Musical groups from Boston Latin School also perform at the
Massachusetts Instrumental & Choral Conductors Association
festival in April. In 2006, the Boston Latin School Senior String
Orchestra received a gold medal for the second year in a row while
the Senior Concert Band and Concert Choir received bronze medals.
In 2007, the Senior Strings received a gold medal while the Wind
Ensemble received a silver medal.
The Boston Latin Big Band has made it to
the International
Association for Jazz Education State Finals six years in a row
and has placed as high as second in the Berklee
College of Music
High School Jazz Festival. In 2007, the Big
Band won a gold medal at the IAJE state finals.
Visual arts
The Boston Latin School visual arts program, while not as
extensively funded as the music program, still commands a viable
part of the workload. Seventh and eighth grade students are
expected to take regular basic art classes, meant as introductions
to the visual arts. Older students then have the option of taking
an elective arts course, including a regular foundations class and
a rigorous two year
Advanced
Placement course designed to prepare students for art college
and build portfolios.
The Boston Latin School visual arts program boasts three large 2D
art studios, a firing
kiln, a computer lab, and
a photography lab (although no photography classes are currently
available). The program is staffed by two teachers, Mr. Stephen
Harris and Mr. Carlos Byron, with additional pottery classes taught
after school from alumna Kaitlyn Jolly. The art program hosts an
Arts Night, similar to the Music Nights, which is dedicated to the
work of students in the Advanced Placement program.
Junior Classical League
Since 2000, Boston Latin School has been an active participant on
the local, state and national levels of the
National Junior Classical
League, formed in 1936, fostering a tradition of deeper
academic study of the classics, along with creative expression
through visual and creative arts. Boston Latin School hosts a
certamen scrimmage (much like a quiz bowl
competition) each year in late November or early December, and
sends delegates to the State Convention in April, and often the
National Convention, which takes places in July or August. In the
past years, Boston Latin School's JCL chapter has grown
substantially since its founding; Boston Latin School often
contributes dedicated certamen players to represent Massachusetts
on a national level in certamen.
Recently, the Boston Latin School JCL sent eight delegates to the
MassJCL State Convention, held at Barnstable High School. There,
the advanced certamen team won 1st place, and the intermediate
certamen team won 2nd place. Olivia Schwob won 1st place overall in
Art, and Jacob Meister won 1st place overall in Academics; he was
elected as MassJCL's 2nd Vice President for the 2007-2008 school
year and MassJCL's President for the 2008-2009 school year. On a
more recent note, the Boston Latin School JCL attended the National
Junior Classical League Convention, held in Knoxville, Tennessee,
from July 24 to July 29, 2007. Two Latin School delegates, Olivia
Schwob and Jacob Meister, placed 10th and 3rd respectively in
overall individual achievement; Olivia Schwob won 5th overall in
Art, and Jacob Meister won 3rd place in Academics and creative
contests.
Other activities
There are also many other extracurricular activities, such as
Red Cross Club, Wolfpack
Volunteers, Youth Climate Action Network, Clay Club, Invisible
Children Club,
Dungeons &
Dragons Club, the
Gay/Straight
Alliance, a
Robotics team, the Youth
Diversity Alliance (a newly-founded social justice club, as of the
2009-2010 school year), a
ski club and
more.
|
List of Extracurricular Activities at Boston Latin
School |
African Cultural Society,Amnesty
International,Anime Culture Club,Aporia
Philosophy Club,Argo (School Newspaper),Art Club,Asian Sisters
Participating in Reaching Excellence (A.S.P.I.R.E.),Asian Students
In Action (A.S.I.A.),Ballroom
Dancing,Bible Club,BLSTV,Blue Line
Club,Boston Latin Community Development Corps (BLCDC)Business
Society,Cape Verdian Club,Caribbean Club,Catapulta (science
publication),Chess Club,Child
Corps,Chinese Arts and Crafts,Chinese Culture and Language
Society,CineMasters,Classical International Films and
Trivia,Computer Construction and Repair,Computer Society,Cooks Who
Care,Cultural Orientation Dance,Dance Dance Revolution,Debate
Team,Environmental Club,Fashion Modeling Life (FML) Club,Fashion
Talent Club,Fencing Club,Film Appreciation Society,French
Club,Gaming, Etc.,Gay/Straight Alliance,German Club,Girls'
Group,Greek Cultural Society,Haitian Studies Club,Hope Through
Crafts,International Culture Club,International Performing
Arts,Invisible Children Club,Irish Historical Society,Italian
Club,Jewish Cultural,Junior Classical League,Key
Club,Learntoquestion.com,Liber actorum (year book),Mahjong
Club,Martial Arts Club,MassPep,Mathcounts,Mock Trial Team,Model
United Nations,NSb1 Junior Chapter,Nu-Trons,Outdoor
Club,Photography Club,Photoshop Club,Premedical Society,Project
Book-Net, Inc.,Recycling Committee,Red Cross,Register (The
school literary magazine),Roots and Shoots,Russian Culture
Club,Spanish Club,Supporting Aids Victims Everywhere
(S.A.V.E.),Science Olympiad,Society, Earth, Animals, Life (SEAL)
,Ski Club,Songwriters Club,Speech Team,Spoken Word**,STAND,Strategy
Games,Student Council,Table Tennis Society,Talented and Gifted
Hispanic Program (T.A.G.)***,Theatre Company,Think Tank of
Geopolitics,Ultimate Frisbee Club,Vietnamese Student
Society,Walt Disney
Club,Ward Society,Witeout Project,Wolfpack Productions,Wolfpack
Volunteers,Writer's Block,Writing Club,Yellow Submarine Improv Troupe,Young
Conservative Leaders of America,Young Leaders of Color,Youth
Action,Youth Diversity Alliance,Yu-Gi-Oh
Club. |
|
Popular culture
- In Season 1, Episode 18 of The West Wing, Rob Lowe's character, Sam
Seaborn mentioned Boston Latin School in a discussion of public
school reform and school vouchers. He said, “Boston Latin, the oldest public
school in America, is still the best secondary school in New
England.” Mallory O'Brien replies
"They all can't be Boston Latin and Bronx
Science
."
- On January 8, 2002, President George
W. Bush visited Boston Latin
School after signing the No
Child Left Behind Act earlier that day.
- In Season 1, Episode 12 of Studio 60 on the Sunset
Strip, Matthew
Perry's character Matt Albie
mentioned that his nephew had a 3.8 GPA at Boston Latin. While this
was portrayed as a top-notch GPA, the school's use of above-4.0
grade point averages for its many honors and
AP classes would actually put
such a student in the second quarter of his class, and would thus
be an unlikely Merit Scholar, as the show claims.
Alumni
Boston Latin has graduated notable Americans in the fields of
politics (both local and national), religion, science, journalism,
philosophy, and music. Of the 56 men who signed the
Declaration of Independence,
five were educated at Latin: Adams, Franklin, Hancock, Hooper.
Graduates and students fought in the
Revolutionary War,
American Civil War,
World War I,
World War
II, and the
Vietnam War, and plaques
and statues in the school building honor those who died. The last
student to attend school still attired in knickers (family legend)
was
Arthur M. Menadier who later married a direct
relative of
Buffalo Bill Cody
before years later retiring in 1971 from 25yrs guiding Johnson
& Johnson ad account as a "Mad Man" (colloquial, now).
Hall of Fame
The Hall of Fame, known casually as "The Wall," refers to the upper
frieze in the school's auditorium, where the
last names of famous alumni are painted. These names include
Adams,
Bernstein,
Fitzgerald,
Franklin,
Hancock,
Hooper,
Kennedy,
Mather,
Paine,
Quincy,
Santayana,
Winthrop, and many others. The
most recent name,
Wade H. McCree Jr., was added to the
frieze in 1999, and the selection of the name
involved a conscious effort to choose a graduate of color. There
are no names of female graduates, mostly because females have
attended the school for just 34 years and the honor is only
bestowed
posthumously.
Currently there is only space for one more name, and the Head
Master enjoys telling incoming students that if they work hard
enough, one of their names might end up on "The Wall" some day.
There is also a lower frieze with the names of many other
distinguished graduates, and a place on the lower frieze can be
awarded while the person is still alive.
Alumni Association (BLSA)
Boston Latin has benefited enormously from the efforts of the
Boston Latin School Association (BLSA), a private charity dedicated
to fostering involvement by and donations from the school's
substantial alumni base. The BLSA recently completed its major
Pons Privatus (Private Bridge) fund-raising campaign,
which raised nearly $37 million in donations from alumni and an
additional $20 million in planned gift intentions. At the time, it
was the largest fundraising effort in the history of public
secondary education. This endowment is mostly supplementary, on top
of the roughly $10 million per year in untaxed operating grants the
school receives from the
Boston
Public Schools, which covers most teacher salaries and
maintenance. The school also received a $34.6 million multiyear
grant in the late 1990s for a major expansion project.
References
- Letter to the editor.
- Kate Stevenson (2008). National Foreign Language Week
- Prizes and Scholarships, BLS Web Site
- Includes scans of first Argo edition, 1969.
- Boston Public Schools 2006 Budget
See also
External links