St. Ursula Academy (Toledo, Ohio)
St. Ursula Academy | |
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File:SUA crest.png
Glory to God Alone
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Address | |
4025 Indian Road Toledo, Ohio, (Lucas County) 43606-2226 United States |
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Information | |
Type | Private, College-prep, All-Girls |
Religious affiliation(s) | Roman Catholic |
Established | 1854 |
Founder | Ursuline Sisters (1854) |
President | Mrs. Mary Werner '74 |
Chairman | Mrs. Marsha Manahan '73 |
Principal | Mrs. Nichole Flores '89 |
Grades | 6–12 |
Enrollment | 563[1] (2014) |
Color(s) | Blue and Gold |
Athletics | 15 varsity sports, 4 club sports |
Athletics conference | Three Rivers Athletic Conference |
Mascot | Arrows |
Newspaper | The Ursuline |
Director of Admissions | Mrs. Rita Hayes |
Athletic Director | Mr. Mike Donnelly |
Director of Campus Ministry | Mr. Kevin Shannon |
Website | http://www.toledosua.org/ |
St. Ursula Academy is Toledo’s oldest, all-female, Catholic fully accredited, college preparatory school serving girls in grades 6-12 and has been in business since 1854. The mission of St. Ursula Academy is to educate young women to develop their spiritual, intellectual, physical, and emotional well-being in light of the values found in the Gospel and reflected in the life of St. Angela Merici. St. Ursula Academy bases its philosophy of Catholic education on the premise that it exists to prepare today's young women for the present, the future, and eternity. The school provides a process by which a student may develop her potential to lead a full and productive life both for her own personal enrichment and for the enrichment of others.
St. Ursula's motto is "Soli Deo Gloria" meaning "For the Glory of God alone".
Contents
History
In December 1854, four Ursuline nuns arrived in Toledo, Ohio. Several days after their arrival from nearby Cleveland, Ohio, they began to operate classes on Cherry Street in downtown Toledo. These classes were offered roughly two hundred students, ranging in grade level. The nuns moved into a property located on Cherry and Erie streets in 1859.[3] The early curriculum consisted of courses in English, German, French, history, art, music, natural sciences, mathematics, cooking, and sewing. There were two primary departments in the school: elementary and collegiate.
In 1905, the school relocated to Collingwood Boulevard to a recently-purchased facility that included a new convent and academy. As the school began to expand and Mary Manse College opened in 1922, the Ursulines decided to move to a new location on Indian Road. The new building opened for the first time for classes in 1959. Renovations in 2000 included the addition of the Mary Ann LaValley Activities Center, which added four new classrooms, athletic offices, a state-of-the-art field house, fitness center and a dance studio.[4]
Academics
SUA operates on the collegiate block schedule (also referred to as the 4x4 block). Students take four 80-minute classes [5] in each semester and rotate most classes at the end of the first semester. Exceptions to this are extended AP courses or 9-week, "term-long" classes. In the middle of the day, students also have a "seminar" period in which they can work on homework, seek assistance from teachers, and collaborate on group projects.
Core courses provide a student with 23 academic credits for graduation, out of 31.5 units of academic credit required: English (4.5 units), Math (4 units), Social Studies (3 units), Science (3 units), Foreign Language (2 units), Theology (4 units), Computer Application (.5 unit), Health (.5 unit), Fine Art (1 unit), Physical Education (.5 unit), and Personal Finance (.5 credit).[1]
Eighteen of these classes are offered in honors, such as English, American Literature, Pre-Calculus, Algebra, Geometry, Chemistry, Biology, Physics, Anatomy & Physiology, World History, French, German, Satellite Remote Sensing, Spanish, Vocal Music, and Instrumental Music. Sixteen classes are offered at an AP level as well, including Calculus, Chemistry, English Literature, Human Geography, Psychology, Statistics, Latin, US Government, and US History.[6]
SUA also offers many elective courses, including Engineering, Film, Speech, Science and Literature, Economics, Geoscience, Computer Web Page Design, Single Survival Life Skills, Psychology, Women's Health, and Minority Voices.
Student Life
Campus Ministry
As a Catholic school, SUA is devoted to developing women in all areas of life, including spirituality. Campus Ministry focuses on spiritual growth and sponsors Lenten Projects, supports Catholic Heartwork mission trips, and plans annual class retreats, including Kairos. Campus Ministry encourages students to reach out by volunteering and helps them to earn 60 hours of volunteer credit required for graduation.[7] In 2006, SUA students volunteered more than 11,000 hours working in nursing homes, tutoring underprivileged children, and assisting with disaster relief.
Athletics
St. Ursula has summer camps, a personal trainer, and a brand new fitness room to support its fifteen varsity sports, including basketball, bowling, crew, cross country, dance, diving, golf, gymnastics, lacrosse, soccer, softball, swimming, tennis, track, and volleyball. SUA had been a member of the Toledo City League for all athletic competition until joining the Three Rivers Athletic Conference in 2011. SUA also has many club sports, such as broomball, equestrian, fencing, and sailing teams.[8]
State championships
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- Dance - 2014 (Pom and Jazz), 2015 (Pom, Jazz, and Hip Hop) [9]
- Volleyball - 2004, 2010 [10]
- Softball - 2004 [11]
- Swimming - 1983 [10]
Clubs
At the beginning of each new school year, SUA students sign up for activities. Some of these activities are designed to provide insights into career choices, while other clubs are just for fun.
There are language and culture clubs, such as the Afro-American Club, German Club, Anime Club, Chinese Club, Hispanic Club, Latin Club, Spanish Club, and French Club. Government and law clubs include the Mock Trial Team, Model UN, Peace and Justice Club, Princeton Model Congress, and Student Council. There are several fitness clubs, as well: Dance Team, Fencing Club, Equestrian Team, Sailing Club, and Yoga Club. Academic and leadership clubs are available, such as Go Girl Leadership Club, Quiz Bowl, Future Teachers of America, JETS, National Honor Society, and. Technology, and Teen Institute. A few clubs even do performances, such as the Hip hop Club, Drama Club, and Speech Team.
Many other clubs are created each year. Some of these include the Art Club, Fashion Club, Knitting Club, Video Club, Website Design, Yearbook, Zonta Club, Newspaper, Harry Potter Club, Science Club, Spirit Club, and Architecture Club.[12]
ALTA
ALTA (Arrows Listening To Arrows) is a weekly small group gathering of students, faculty, and staff. These gatherings are meant to be community-building experiences that connect an adult faculty/staff member to each student in a non-academic setting. It is also intended to create bonds across grade levels with all students benefitting from shared wisdom. It speaks to the school's strong expression of Christian values while encouraging participants to positively approach and encounter fellow Arrows of different religious, racial, cultural, ethnic, and economic backgrounds.[13]
Campus
SUA's campus on Indian Road sits on a property adjacent to the Ursuline Center, which is home to many Ursuline sisters and other residents. The school campus includes the school building, a softball field, and a multi-use recreational field. Soccer and lacrosse games take place on this space in the fall and spring, respectively.
Notable Alumnae
- Marcy Kaptur '64 - US Representative
- Joyce E. Jesionowski '65 - author of D. W. Griffith: Thinking in Pictures
- Dr. Linda Sheidler Doyle '67 - Retired President and CEO of Harvard Business School Publishing Company
- Dr. Joan Breton Connelly '72 - American classical archaeologist and Professor of Classics and Art History at New York
- Elizabeth Witherell '73 - editor-in-chief of the The Writings of Henry D. Thoreau[14]
- Tricia Martineau Wagner '74 - author or African American Women of the Old West
- Laurie Winters '77 - Milwaukee Art Museum curator[15][16]
- Philana Marie Boles '94 - author of Glitz, Little Divas, In the Paint, and Blame It on Eve
- Leah D'Emilio '02 - Face of Fox Toledo, Host of Mahalo Daily, TV host/producer of BCSN's "The Light Side",[17] and producer of New York's "Rocketboom"
See also
- Ursulines
- Roman Catholic Diocese of Toledo
- Beaumont School (Ohio)
- Ursuline Academy (Cincinnati, Ohio)
References
- ↑ 1.0 1.1 [1]
- ↑ [2]
- ↑ Ursuline Center: History
- ↑ SUA School History
- ↑ [3]
- ↑ [4]
- ↑ SUA: Christian Service Program
- ↑ [5]
- ↑ [6]
- ↑ 10.0 10.1 Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
- ↑ [7]
- ↑ SUA ALTA
- ↑ UCSB Library Waves
- ↑ MAM - Exhibition Details
- ↑ toledoblade.com - Drawing on ability: Former Toledoan Laurie Winters is making her mark as curator at the Milwaukee Art Museum
- ↑ Spotlight on Actors: Leah D’Emilio
External links
- Pages with broken file links
- Pages using infobox school with deprecated parameters
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- Roman Catholic Diocese of Toledo
- Roman Catholic secondary schools in Ohio
- Girls' schools in Ohio
- High schools in Toledo, Ohio
- Educational institutions established in 1854
- 1854 establishments in Ohio