A 'university-preparatory school' or 'college-preparatory school' (usually abbreviated to 'preparatory school', 'college prep school', or 'prep school') is a
secondary school, usually private, designed to prepare students for a college or university education. Some schools will also include a junior, or elementary, school. This designation is mainly current in North America. In many parts of Europe, such as
Germany, the
Benelux and
Scandinavia secondary schools specializing in college-preparatory education are called
Gymnasiums.
North America
There are three types of preparatory schools in the
United States and
Canada. Some have living quarters (dormitory, dining room) where students reside (known as
boarding schools); most are day schools, and some boarding schools also admit local students who seek the benefits of the prep school life. Some admit students of only one sex; others are
co-educational. Prep schools are selective, academically challenging, and largely independent of state and local control. Yet, such controls, the primary, defining characteristics of public, government-operated (elementary and secondary) schools, have contributed to the private support, and growth, of prep schools, because said controls are viewed by prep school proponents as an unacceptable burden on schooling, education, and eventual university matriculation.
Parents of top-tier prep school students pay fees comparable to
Ivy League university tuition. Among the principal benefits of prep schools is a very low student-to-teacher ratio, hence, smaller class sizes than in public schools. The tuition allows schools to hire highly-qualified teachers and retain them in
tenure. These schools often have significant
endowments financing scholarships permitting demographic heterogeneity.
Preparatory schools place a strong emphasis on
sports (see
The Ten Schools Admissions Organization,
Independent School Leagues or
Ivy Preparatory School League). In many private schools students are required to participate in one or more of the school's sports teams. University-preparatory education is also often associated with the
preppy subculture.
In Canada, preparatory schools blend the American and British traditions. The schools generally focus on all aspects of the "well rounded" human being (honoring a classical ideal many see expressed in the Latin phrase "
Mens sana in corpore sano"); including rigorous academics and athletic programs. University-preparatory schools also focus on many other opportunites such as elaborate plays and musicals, and many other clubs and leadership opportunites that prepare the students for University.
In the United States, prep schools have drawn upon British precursors but over time developed their own American tradition. Some notable former prep school attendees include
U.S. Presidents
George H. W. Bush,
George W. Bush,
Franklin Delano Roosevelt,
John F. Kennedy, and other prominent figures such as
John Kerry,
Daniel Webster,
William Carlos Williams,
William Randolph Hearst, Ambassador
John R. Bolton, and
Dan Brown.
Controversy
The term "prep school" has been applied to several schools that the NCAA has ruled insufficient in their academic standards in determining eligibility for intercollegiate athletics. Athletes attending these schools were declared academically ineligible for NCAA athletic participation after graduation from high school.
[1]
Europe
France
In
France, certain private or public secondary schools offer special postgraduate classes called
classes préparatoires, equivalent in level to the first years of
university, for students who wish to prepare for the competitive exams for the entrance in the
Grandes écoles. French classes préparatoires are exceptionally intensive and selective, taking only the very best students graduating from high schools but generally not charging fees.
United Kingdom
In the
United Kingdom schools are classified in other ways. The term
preparatory school, more commonly "prep school", is used to describe schools which traditionally prepare younger students for
independent schools, although not all preparatory-school students continue their education within the independent-education sector, and not all students at independent secondary schools have started theirs at preparatory schools.
External links
★
National Association of Independent Schools
★
Independent Schools Association of the Southwest
★
Canadian Association of Independent Schools
★
The Association of Boarding Schools
★
Wilbraham & Monson Academy
Notes
1. http://sportsline.com/general/story/10041226