Newark Academy

Newark Academy is a coeducational private day school located in Livingston, Essex County, in the U.S. state of New Jersey, serving students in sixth through twelfth grades. The school has been accredited by the Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Elementary and Secondary Schools since 1928.[9]

Newark Academy
Address
91 South Orange Avenue[1]

, ,
07039

United States
Coordinates40°46′44″N 74°21′40″W
Information
TypeIndependent Coeducational
MottoAd lumen
(Toward Enlightenment)
Established1774 (1774)
FounderAlexander Macwhorter
PrincipalTom Ashburn (Middle School)
Cathy Atwell (Upper School)[2]
Head of schoolDonald Austin[3]
Faculty86 FTEs[4]
Grades612
Enrollment674 (as of 2022-23)[4]
Average class size13[5]
Student to teacher ratio7.2:1[6]
Campus size68 acres (280,000 m2)
Color(s)  Red and
  Black[7]
Athletics24 sports[8]
Athletics conferenceSuper Essex Conference[7]
Team nameMinutemen[7]
RivalsMontclair Kimberley Academy The Pingry School
AccreditationMiddle States Association of Colleges and Schools[9]
New Jersey Association of Independent Schools[10]
Test averageSAT 1422[1]
ACT 31.0[4]
PublicationPrisms (literary magazine)[11]
LUMEN (alumni magazine)
NewspaperThe Minuteman[12]
YearbookPolymnian
School fees$1,820[13]
Tuition$47,120 (2022–23)[4]
Websitewww.newarka.edu

Newark Academy is one of several pre-Revolutionary War schools still operating in the United States and is considered the seventh-oldest private school in the country and the second-oldest day school in the state of New Jersey (behind Rutgers Preparatory School).[14] The Academy was founded in 1774 by Alexander MacWhorter, a prominent cleric and advisor to George Washington, and was located on Market Street in Downtown Newark. Newark Academy was briefly closed after it was burned by the British during the Revolutionary War. The school then reopened in new quarters in 1792. In 1802, the Academy opened a separate division for girls, but this program was closed in 1859. After 1929, it moved to First Street in the Roseville section of Newark. The Academy moved from Newark to its current location, a 68-acre (280,000 m2) campus in Livingston, in 1964, and became fully co-educational in 1971.[14]

For the 2022–23 school year, the school has an enrollment of 674 students and 78 classroom teachers for a student–teacher ratio of 7:1. Students of color represent 60 percent of the population.[4]

Niche.com ranked Newark Academy fourth in its "Best College Prep Private High Schools in New Jersey", fourth in "Best Private High Schools in New Jersey" and ninth in "Best High Schools for STEM in New Jersey."[4] The school received an A+ for teachers, academics, clubs & activities, and college prep.[4] Niche ranked it as the 12th best private high school in the New York City area.[15] Niche.com ranked the school as the 32nd best private high school on its list of the 2023 Best Schools in America.[16]

Campus

Newark Academy is located on a 68-acre (280,000 m2) campus in northern New Jersey.

The Upper School Academic Center opened in fall 2012 and encompasses 18,500 square feet (1,720 m2) of new construction and 2,500 square feet (230 m2) of renovated space and includes 13 classrooms, two science labs, a multi-purpose area, several small-group collaborative learning spaces and a commons area.

The Wilf Middle School wing opened in fall 2017 and houses two floors of classrooms, laboratories, offices and common spaces that accommodate Middle School teachers and students. Classrooms have Apple TV technology and SmartBoards, which have since been implemented throughout the school. During the construction of the new middle school, Newark Academy also renovated all of the sciences labs, starting with the second-floor natural science and chemistry rooms, and moving on to the first-floor physical science room. These rooms, as well as the laboratories in the middle school, include lab equipment.[17] As part of Experiential learning programs, middle schoolers of every grade go on a series of trips/excursions at the end of the year, called "Capstone" to such destinations as the United Nations.[18]

The Coraci Performance Hall, which opened in summer 2020, is a 700-seat facility that has been completely rebuilt to accommodate the increased size of the student body for Morning Meetings and to provide a performance space for student artists that take the stage for dance, choral, orchestral, jazz, and theatrical performances throughout the school year.[19]

The Cetrulo Family Fencing Center received several physical and technological renovations in summer 2019. The installation of new, specialized flooring and five strips, which provide electronic scoring, makes it one of the finest fencing centers in the country.

The Hawkes Memorial Library, opened in 1974, houses a 23,000-volume collection, as well as a vast periodical and microfilm collection.

The Elizabeth B. McGraw Arts Center, which opened in 1992, contains three studio art classrooms (ceramics, drawing, and painting), a darkroom, a band/orchestra room, a choral room, a dance studio, a "black box" theater and an art gallery.

The William E. and Carol G. Simon Family Field House, or the "new wing" opened in 2001. This 57,000-square-foot (5,300 m2) athletic center houses a gymnasium with three basketball courts, a six-lane pool with a spectator area, a four-lane track and a fitness center. Wrestling and fencing gyms are located in the main building.

Newark Academy's outdoor facilities include courtyards with seating areas, two baseball diamonds, a softball field, an all-weather track, a field hockey area, two lacrosse and soccer fields, two football fields, one basketball half-court, a cross country course and 10 tennis courts.

Newark Academy's campus is bordered by woods along the Passaic River. In September 2002, the school marked the opening of The Carol J. Heaney Nature Trail, a 2.5-mile (4.0 km) system of hiking trails and outdoor classrooms.

The school has embarked on initiatives to minimize its impact on the environment. Current initiatives include increased recycling efforts, the introduction of energy-efficient lighting, the exploration of renewable energy options, the Passaic River clean-up and maintenance of a campus vegetable garden.

Faculty and administration

Newark Academy's faculty has an average of 17.5 years of teaching experience, and 90 percent of the 92 teachers and administrators have advanced degrees; 14 have earned doctorate degrees.[20]

In 2007, Donald M. Austin was appointed as the 49th Head of School for Newark Academy. He previously served as resident director for School Year Abroad in Rennes, France. He earned an undergraduate degree in English and French from Georgetown University and a master's of philosophy in French studies from New York University.

Austin's team of administrators includes Cathy Atwell, upper school principal; Tom Ashburn, middle school principal; Pegeen Galvin, dean of students; and Traci Osterhagen Brock, dean of faculty.[21]

Student body

For the 2022–2023 school year, Newark Academy has students from over 90 communities in grades 6–12. There are 470 students in the Upper School and 204 students in Middle School. Students of color represent 60% of the student population.

Academics

Graduation requirements

In order to graduate students must complete four years of English, three years of humanities, three years of mathematics, three years of laboratory science, proficiency in a second language (level 3), one year of arts, three June Terms, an immersion trip, 40 hours of community service, and a senior project.

Academic offerings

Newark Academy offers a wide variety of classes across disciplines and at many different levels. Newark Academy offers many IB and AP classes, in addition to other college-level classes in Multivariable calculus, Differential Equations, Linear algebra, Non-Euclidean geometry, and Number theory.

Newark Academy is part of the Malone Schools Online Network, a group of 26 elite independent schools across the country that offer a selection of 36 classes available online via webcam in conjunction with one another, run by teachers at the member schools.[22] MSON offers many college-level and elective classes such as "Are We Rome?," "Creative Writing in the Digital Age" and "Positive Psychology."[23]

Newark Academy also offers an Independent Studies program for seniors. Seniors may elect to take a self-designed full-year course on a topic of their choosing. Students work with a faculty advisor, and often one other student who helped design the course, throughout the year researching the topic at hand and culminating in a final project. Courses in the past have focused on feminism, and American modern judicial history, amongst other subjects.[22]

Advanced curricula

Newark Academy is the only independent school in New Jersey that offers both the Advanced Placement (AP) and International Baccalaureate Diploma (IB) programs.[24][10]

Advanced Placement

The College Board's Advanced Placement Program (AP) offers high school students the opportunity to do college-level work. Successful achievement on the culminating exams may result in credit or advanced placement upon matriculation to college.[25] Newark Academy offers coursework leading to 21 AP exams in all five academic disciplines.

International Baccalaureate

In 1991, Newark Academy became the first school in New Jersey to grant the International Baccalaureate diploma.[26] The I.B. diploma is awarded following the successful completion of a rigorous two-year curriculum. 47 members of the Class of 2021 pursued the full IB diploma. Approximately 95 percent of the Class of 2023 is enrolled in at least one IB course.[20]

Athletics

The Newark Academy Minutemen[7] compete in the Super Essex Conference, which is comprised of public and private high schools in Essex County and operates under the supervision of the New Jersey State Interscholastic Athletic Association (NJSIAA).[27] Before the NJSIAA's 2010 realignment, the school had previously participated in the Colonial Hills Conference which included public and private high schools covering Essex County, Morris County and Somerset County in west Central Jersey.[28] With 315 students in grades 10-12, the school was classified by the NJSIAA for the 2019–20 school year as Non-Public B for most athletic competition purposes, which included schools with an enrollment of 37 to 366 students in that grade range (equivalent to Group I for public schools).[29] The school was classified by the NJSIAA as Non-Public Group B (equivalent to Group I for public schools) for football for 2022–2024, which included schools with 64 to 223 students.[30]

Newark Academy offers a total of 25 varsity sports programs over the course of the school year:[31]

  • Fall sports: boys' and girls' cross country, field hockey, football, boys' and girls' soccer, girls' tennis, and girls' volleyball.
  • Winter sports: boys' and girls' basketball, fencing, boys' and girls' fencing, boys' and girls' swimming, winter track and boys' wrestling.
  • Spring sports: baseball, boys' and girls' golf, boys' and girls' lacrosse, softball, boys' tennis and boys' and girls' track and field.

Middle School students are required to participate in at least one sport each season. Students in the Upper School are not required to play a sport but approximately 87% choose to do so.[20]

The boys' fencing team was the overall state champion in 2020 and was the foil team winner in 2014 and 2016.[32] Head Coach Daniel Bailey-Yavonditte was named the USA Fencing 2020 High School Coach of the Year.[33]

The girls' tennis team won the Non-Public Group B state championship in 1992, 1993, 1996-2002, 2010, 2011, 2013-2016 and 2021. The team won the Tournament of Champions in 1993 (defeating runner-up Moorestown High School in the finals), 1996-1998 (vs. Millburn High School all three years), 1999-2001 (vs. Moorestown all three years) and 2002 (vs. Cherry Hill High School East). The program's 16 state championships are the fourth-most in the state and the eight ToC titles are ranked second.[34]

The boys' tennis team was the Non-Public state group champions in 1992-2007, 2009, and 2011-2021. The program's 27 state group titles are the most of any school in the state and the streak of 16 consecutive titles from 1992 to 2007 is the state's longest. The team won the Tournament of Champions in 1995-2001, 2003-2005, 2009, 2016 and 2021. The program's 14 ToC titles are the most in New Jersey.[35] The 2021 team won the program's record 27th state title with a 5-0 win in the Non-Public tournament final against Pingry School.[36]

The wrestling team won the Non-Parochial Group B state sectional championship and the Non-Parochial B state title in 1997.[37]

The boys' soccer team won the Non-Public Group B state championship in 2007 (defeating runner-up Holy Cross Preparatory Academy in the final of the tournament) and 2015 (vs. Moorestown Friends School).[38] The 2007 team won the Non-Public B state title with a 1-0 win against Holy Cross in the championship game.[39]

The boys' cross-country team won the Non-Public Group B state championship in 2015, 2018, 2019 and 2021.[40]

The volleyball team won the program’s first-ever NJSIAA Non-Public B state championship in 2021, defeating Immaculate Conception High School in the finals.[41][42]

From 1984 to 1989, Newark Academy was the site of the Livingston Open, a Grand Prix tennis circuit tournament. The Grand Prix was the only professional circuit from 1985 until it was succeeded by the ATP Tour in 1990. The tournament was won by Andre Agassi in 1988, earning him the seventh title in his career.[43]

Publications

Currently, Newark Academy has four publications: the student newspaper, The Minuteman in publication since 1941; the newspaper's annual magazine Minuteman Life; the yearbook, The Polymnian; and the literary magazine, Prisms. Newark Academy also publishes an alumni magazine, Lumen, twice a year.

Notable alumni

References

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  3. From the Head of School, Newark Academy. Accessed November 22, 2022.
  4. Newark Academy, Niche. Accessed November 22, 2022.
  5. Quick Facts, Newark Academy. Accessed March 30, 2016.
  6. School data for Newark Academy, National Center for Education Statistics. Accessed October 20, 2017.
  7. Newark Academy, New Jersey State Interscholastic Athletic Association. Accessed October 20, 2020.
  8. Home Page, Newark Academy Minutemen. Accessed November 22, 2022.
  9. Newark Academy, Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools Commission on Elementary and Secondary Schools. Accessed February 9, 2022.
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  35. Nalwasky, Chris. "Newark Academy is the NJ.com boys tennis Team of the Year, 2021", NJ Advance Media for NJ.com, June 28, 2021. Accessed June 20, 2022. "Newark Academy, the No. 1 team in New Jersey, stepped off the bus and expected to win. That’s all it did this season as the Minutemen went 25-0 and won the Super Essex Conference - American Division, the Essex County Tournament, the Newark Academy Invitational, the Bryan Bennett Memorial Tournament, the North Jersey, Non-Public state tournament, the Non-Public group tournament, and the overall Tournament of Champions title.... In fact, they lead the state in most T of C titles (14) and Group titles (27). "
  36. Nawalsky, Chris. "Boys Tennis: No. 1 Newark Academy wins Non-Public crown over No. 3 Pingry to keep streak alive", NJ Advance Media for NJ.com, June 8, 2021. Accessed March 28, 2023. "The only thing that prevented Newark Academy from winning another group title last year was a pandemic. Back at Mercer County Park this time around, the No. 1-ranked Minutemen kept the train going by defeating No. 3 Pingry, 5-0, in the Non-Public final. It is their 10th title in a row and state-high 27th all-time. This season, due to many opt-outs within the private school ranks, North Jersey and South Jersey Non-Public A and B shrunk down to North, Non-Public and South, Non-Public so there is only one team representing that side of the lane this year."
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  40. NJSIAA Boys Cross Country State Group Champions, New Jersey State Interscholastic Athletic Association. Accessed May 1, 2023.
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  42. Potter, PJ. "Newark Academy’s composure lifts team to Non-Public B championship", NJ Advance Media for NJ.com, November 13, 2021. Accessed December 14, 2022. "Newark Academy as a whole would go on to finish the second set on a 7-4 run to earn the Non-Public B title in the NJSIAA JAG-ONE Physical Therapy Girls Volleyball Championship 25-18, 25-22 over Lodi Immaculate at William Paterson University."
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  49. "James Mapes Dodge", The Iron Age, p. 1368, December 9, 1915. Accessed November 22, 2022. "James Mapes Dodge was eduacated at the Newark Academy, at Newark, N.J., and subsequently studied at Cornell University and Rutgers College."
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  51. Maynard-Parisi, Carolyn. "Maplewood Rolls Out Red Carpet for Local Movie Stars; Maplewood Theater hosts a premiere of Wes Anderson's Moonrise Kingdom, featuring two hometown boys." Archived December 14, 2012, at the Wayback Machine, SouthOrangePatch, June 12, 2012. Accessed November 19, 2012. "South Orange teen Jared Gilman and Maplewood resident Wyatt Ralff, actors in the critically acclaimed Wes Anderson film Moonrise Kingdom, will be on hand for a special local premiere of the film on Thursday, June 14 at 6:30 p.m. at the Maplewood Theater.... A 6th-grader at Newark Academy and a student of Acting with Emily on Baker Street, Gilman has been performing for years but this is his first movie role. Not too shabby, considering that his co-stars include the likes of Bill Murray, Bruce Willis and Frances McDormand."
  52. Seeges, Sandy. "Last Open for Gimelstob: New Vernon tennis player has tough match in Roddick", Daily Record, August 28, 2007. Accessed September 3, 2007. "The 30-year-old Gimelstob, a graduate of Newark Academy, has known for a while that his career was coming to an end."
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  54. Walter Granville-Smith,National Academy of Design. Accessed November 2, 2022. "Walter Granville-Smith grew up in Newark, New Jersey, and there attended the Newark Academy."
  55. "Amazing!", Newark Academy, January 8, 2006. Accessed March 28, 2023. "Asher Grodman, Brian Gerrard, Zane Grodman and Eric Hintz Fenced with heart and soul to take 2nd place in a strong field of 37 teams."
  56. Kuperinsky, Amy. "Meet Ghosts stars Asher Grodman and Richie Moriarty, N.J.’s pantsless finance bro and arrowed scout leader", NJ Advance Media for NJ.com, September 28, 2022. Accessed March 28, 2023. "Grodman, an alum of Newark Academy in Livingston and American Conservatory Theater in San Francisco, first studied film and English at Columbia University, then sought training as an actor at the Royal Academy of Dramatic Art in London."
  57. Wilson, Dennis. "Matt Gutman to Be Honored by National Football Group", Scotch Plains-Fanwood Times, March 21, 1996. Accessed September 9, 2017. "Westfield's Matt Gutman will be honored by the Essex County Chapter of the National Football Foundation and Hall of Fame at the annual Scholar-Athlete Awards Banquet to be held at Mayfair Farms in West Orange. A senior at Newark Academy in Livingston, Gutman is the Minutemen's honoree for the Chapter's prestigious scholar-athlete awards which are presented to 28 outstanding players who excel not only on the gridiron but also in the academic classroom."
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  62. "Jamieson Named Student Editor", West Essex Tribune, July 15, 1982. Accessed November 19, 2020. "Denise Jamieson, a Livingston student at Newark Academy, has been named associate editor of the Minuteman, the student news magazine, for the coming academic year."
  63. Colonel E. Lester Jones, NOAA. Accessed December 20, 2007. "He received his educational training at the High School in Orange, New Jersey and at Newark Academy."
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  80. Staff. "Newark Academy begins 215th year", Bernardsville News, September 8, 1988. Accessed March 30, 2016. "The speaker will be the Judge Franklin S. Van Antwerpen, a 1960 graduate of Newark Academy, who was appointed a U.S. District Judge by President Reagan."
  81. "Cortlandt Whitehead, B.A. 1863." in Obituary Record of Yale Graduates 1922-1923, p.28. Yale University, 1923. Accessed November 22, 2022. "Cortlandt Whitehead was prepared for college at the Newark (N. J.) Academy and at Phillips Academy, Andover, Mass."
  82. Ragozzino, Joe. "Jocelyn Willoughby signs with University of Virginia", Essex News Daily, November 20, 2015. Accessed April 19, 2020. "Newark Academy senior Jocelyn Willoughby had cause to celebrate on National Letter of Intent Signing Day this month. Joined by family, friends and coaches, the East Orange resident signed her National Letter of Intent to play basketball for University of Virginia."
  83. Carl Zigrosser papers, Philadelphia Area Archives. Accessed November 22, 2022. "Soon after the family's arrival in Newark, Carl was enrolled in Newark Academy, from which he graduated in 1908."
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