The Ross School
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The Ross School in East Hampton, New York is the largest private K-12 school in the Hamptons.
The school was founded in 1991 by Courtney and Steven J. Ross to follow the concepts of Naturalist Intelligence espoused by Howard Gardner.[1] The school expanded as their daughter Nicole Ross advanced through the school until she graduated.[2]
In the 2006-07, the school had 380 students enrolled in grades 5-12 on its leafy campus on Goodfriend Drive. [3]. Since it is in the Hamptons its alumni include children of prominent New Yorkers who have houses on the east end such as Billy Joel.
As part of the holistic approach to teaching the school offers two vegetarian meals in its cafeteria each day and bans vending machines. Students are graded unsatisfactory, satisfactory (which was added in the 2006-07 school year), proficient, or distinguished.
In September 2003 Education Update described the campus:[4]
- The school sits on 140 wooded acres in East Hampton founded by Courtney Ross Holst, whose first husband, Steve Ross, was head of Time Warner. Seeing Ross is to appreciate the truth of the cliché about the best that money can buy. The school is stunningly handsome, a new and renovated architectural wonder with interiors likely to stagger even a designer’s imagination. It also boasts—justifiably—superb high-end technology, including sophisticated projection systems, state-of-the-art pavilions, seminar rooms, smart boards, laptops for all, and knockout multimedia enhancements everywhere. Libraries abound, nothing is single or merely decorative. Classrooms recreate environments under study—the art and artifacts of a period, its textures, colors, materials, though the pervasive influence, warm and subtle earth tones, is Swedish and Asian. And would you believe a hall showing the history of art by way of vinyl reproductions done to scale?
Expansion attempts have dragged the school into the front pages of New York City area newspapers.
In 2000 the school proposed a 50-building, 600,000 square foot expansion to its 140-acre campus which would have made it one of the biggest complexes in the Hamptons. Enraged environmentalists charged the Courtney Ross was polluting the debate by paying to protest proposed expansion of the Pine Barrens protections into East Hampton.[5]. The school eventually backed down on the expansion and in 2006 the same critics of this expansion were to applaud its "green" initiatives.
The Ross School homepage can be found at www.ross.org
In 2006 the school was picketed by residents of New York City when city residents protested its plans to locate the Ross Global Academy, a Charter School on the Lower East Side (with residents particularly fearing that the new school would take away space for the New Explorations into Science, Technology and Math school). The debate was ultimately decided when the school moved to the Tweed Courthouse.
[edit] Other Steven J. Ross Schools
- Related: Ross Global Academy (a New York City charter school)
- Unrelated: Steven M. Ross School of Business at University of Michigan
[edit] References
- ^ Interview with Howard Gardner, Harvard University educationupdate.com
- ^ Courtney Sale Ross - The Future of Science
- ^ East Hampton; Green School Back in Good Graces - Newsday - August 17, 2006 (reprinted on thegreenguide.com
- ^ The Ross School: Rich in Ideas by Joan Baum
- ^ Largest Project Ever Proposed for South Fork - The Pine Line - Spring/Summer 2000
[edit] External links
- Official page
- Maps and aerial photos
- Street map from Google Maps, or Yahoo! Maps, or Windows Live Local
- Satellite image from Google Maps, Windows Live Local, WikiMapia
- Topographic map from TopoZone
- Aerial image or topographic map from TerraServer-USA