翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ St. Paul Cathedral (Yakima, Washington)
・ St. Paul Catholic Church (Center, Missouri)
・ St. Paul Catholic Church (Highland, Illinois)
・ St. Paul Catholic High School
・ St. Paul Christian Academy
・ St. Paul Church (Cambridge, Massachusetts)
・ St. Paul Church (Connecticut)
・ St. Paul Church (Over the Rhine)
・ St. Patrick Catholic School (Miami Beach, Florida)
・ St. Patrick Catholic Secondary School
・ St. Patrick Church (Imogene, Iowa)
・ St. Patrick Church (Kennett Square, Pennsylvania)
・ St. Patrick High School (Chicago)
・ St. Patrick High School (New Jersey)
・ St. Patrick High School (North Platte, Nebraska)
St. Patrick High School (Portland, Michigan)
・ St. Patrick High School (Thunder Bay)
・ St. Patrick Hospital and Health Sciences Center
・ St. Patrick Mission Church
・ St. Patrick Street
・ St. Patrick's
・ St. Patrick's (Wicklow) GAA
・ St. Patrick's Academy
・ St. Patrick's Anglo Indian Higher Secondary School
・ St. Patrick's Basilica, Montreal
・ St. Patrick's blue
・ St. Patrick's C.Y.F.C.
・ St. Patrick's Cathedral
・ St. Patrick's Cathedral (Manhattan)
・ St. Patrick's Cathedral, Thunder Bay


Dictionary Lists
翻訳と辞書 辞書検索 [ 開発暫定版 ]
スポンサード リンク

St. Patrick High School (Portland, Michigan) : ウィキペディア英語版
St. Patrick High School (Portland, Michigan)

St. Patrick High School is a private, Roman Catholic high school in Portland, Michigan. It is located in the Roman Catholic Diocese of Grand Rapids.
St. Patrick School was established as a grade school in 1906 by the Sisters of St. Joseph. The high school was added in 1951.
The school currently teaches preschool through high school in a Catholic environment. It is one of the few preschool-12 schools supported by a single parish. The school has served families from Portland and the surrounding area since 1906, providing them with the opportunity to give their children a quality Catholic education. The school's mission statement is: We Pray. We Learn. We Achieve. The standardized test scores are regularly the highest of all schools in the Ionia County area.
==History==
THE FIRST SCHOOL BUILDING: 1906 The first school in 1906 was two-stories of cement block, 59½ x 42½, with cement block basement and an interior finished with Southern Pine. The newspaper article about the new school noted that it was lighted with electricity. “The rooms are 12½ and 13 feet in height, airy, pleasant and commodious, both upstairs and down and the school altogether has pleasant surroundings. There are plenty of radiators in each room and the heater and boiler is of such capacity that there is no doubt that the building will be properly warmed,” said the column in the Portland Review and Observer. This building was sufficient for the first forty years.
NEW SCHOOL ERECTED: 1950's In 1945, when new pastor Father Louis Flohe arrived, he found an overcrowded school. He purchased the rest of the property on the block and replaced the original school with a building that could accommodate more grades. Now students could remain at St. Pat’s through graduation. The new school, which had the largest and best gymnasium in the entire area, opened in 1951. By the end of the 50’s, the classrooms once again were filled to capacity, and there was a waiting list of students who wanted to attend St. Pat’s. Father Flohe initiated another building campaign, to which the people of the parish again responded. The new addition opened in 1961, adding eight classrooms and a lower level cafeteria.
FINAL BUILDING PHASE: 2002 As the 20th century drew to a close, the parish recognized that the school once again needed to be enlarged. Father Charlie Hall oversaw another pledge drive, and within twelve weeks the money was raised. On St. Patrick’s Day, 2002, the groundbreaking ceremony took place. In November 2002, an addition, including two state-of-the-art computer labs, an art room, a music room, two new classrooms and a library/media center was completed.
EARLY DAYS: THE STUDENTS The first St. Patrick School enrolled 60 students. The three teachers (and one housekeeper) were nuns who came to St. Patrick’s from Nazareth convent near Kalamazoo. It would be more than forty years before lay teachers arrived in the classrooms. There were no extracurricular activities at St. Patrick’s. The students were there to learn, and their days were filled with academics, catechism, and the Palmer Method of Penmanship. The only exception was music class and a few occasions when Sr. Lucille took the students outdoors, lined them up in rows and had them perform some exercises.
EARLY DAYS: DISCIPLINE The priest and nuns were strict disciplinarians about behavior. Every morning, children did their early chores at home and walked to school for 8 a.m. Mass. Students were expected to be on their best behavior. They walked two by two in perfectly straight lines, and were not allowed to speak to each other at all. The students were “frightened like the dickens” of Father O’Rourke, pastor from 1922-34. He handed out report cards, then he would call a name, and that child would stand next to him while he reviewed their grades. He was known to spank kids whose grades were not up to par.
EARLY DAYS: DRESS CODE The dress code was very rigid in the early 20th century. Boys wore long sleeved shirts and ties; sleeves could be rolled up while on playground, but had to be rolled back down when they re-entered the school. The girls wore long sleeved dresses and long cotton stockings under them. No skin showed other than hands and faces.
Upon graduation from 8th grade in 1906, there was no ceremony, no diploma, no celebration. The students were expected to go out into the world to begin working. Very few students continued their education beyond that level.

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
ウィキペディアで「St. Patrick High School (Portland, Michigan)」の詳細全文を読む



スポンサード リンク
翻訳と辞書 : 翻訳のためのインターネットリソース

Copyright(C) kotoba.ne.jp 1997-2016. All Rights Reserved.