Trivium School Explained

Trivium School
Motto:Sed nomini tuo da gloriam (unofficial)
Motto Translation:"But to thy name give glory"
Established:1979
Type:Private Independent Catholic
Grades:7-12
Head Name:Headmaster
Head:William M. Schmitt
City:Lancaster
State:Massachusetts
Country:United States
Enrollment:80 students
Ratio:7:1
Patron:Sedes Sapientiae
Athletics:Basketball, Soccer
Colors:Red and Gold
Song:Trivium nostrum
Athletics Conference:Worcester County Athletic Conference (WCAC)
Website:http://triviumschool.com/

Trivium School is an independent Catholic college-preparatory school for boys and girls in grades seven through twelve. It is located in Lancaster, Massachusetts.

Background

Trivium School was founded in 1979.[1] Its first headmaster was John S. Schmitt. Schmitt studied education at Harvard University, taught briefly at Colorado Rocky Mountain School and Millbrook School, before founding Thomas More School in Harrisville, New Hampshire in 1959.[2] Mr. Schmitt also taught at Thomas Aquinas College in California from 1974-1979.[3] The School is named for the trivium, the first three liberal arts (Grammar, Logic, and Rhetoric). The students follow a unified curriculum that includes college preparatory studies with an emphasis on the intellectual virtues. The curriculum is influenced by the ideas of Mortimer J. Adler, Sister Miriam Joseph, and Dorothy L. Sayers in that its stated purpose is to develop the "tools for learning" instead of simply teaching subjects.[4] [5] The stated mission also includes the use of the Socratic method with small classes and a low student-teacher ratio. Students are required to participate in studios of music, visual arts, and drama and sing in the School chorus.[6]

External links

Notes and References

  1. Book: Lennon, Heather. Images of America: Lancaster. 2001. Arcadia. 9780738509044. 2014-03-16.
  2. Web site: In Memoriam: John Stuart Schmitt 1927-2012. Trivium Scripta, Winter 2012.
  3. Web site: John S. Schmitt, RIP. Thomas Aquinas College.
  4. Web site: Sayers. Dorothy. The Lost Tools of Learning. 2014-03-16.
  5. Web site: The New Classical Schooling . Leithart, Peter J. . 2008-01-29 . Intercollegiate Studies Institute . First Principles.
  6. Web site: The Trivium Curriculum. 2014-03-17.