Menlo School

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Menlo School
Menlo School logo.png
Address
50 Valparaiso Avenue

,
94027

Coordinates37°27′12″N 122°11′30″W / 37.4533°N 122.1917°W / 37.4533; -122.1917Coordinates: 37°27′12″N 122°11′30″W / 37.4533°N 122.1917°W / 37.4533; -122.1917
Information
TypeIndependent
Established1915
Head of SchoolThan Healy
Faculty106
79 full-time
27 part-time
Grades6–12
Number of students800 total
580 upper
220 middle
Average class size15 students upper
18 students middle
Color(s)Navy and gold   
MascotKnight
Annual tuition$49,110 ['19/'20]
Websitewww.menloschool.org

Menlo School, also referred to simply as Menlo, is a private college preparatory school in Atherton, California, United States, near the heart of Silicon Valley. Menlo comprises a middle school that includes grades 6–8 and a high school that includes grades 9–12. Both the middle school and high schools are located in close physical proximity, but they operate as semi-autonomous units with select overlapping administration.

Menlo was established in 1915 and is located at 50 Valparaiso Avenue, across the street from Menlo Park. During its early years, the school included a junior college that became a college bearing the name Menlo College. In 1994, Menlo School and the College formally separated, but they continued to share their dining hall until 2017. Menlo School is accredited by the Western Association of Schools and Colleges and is a member of the National and California Associations of Independent Schools. The middle school consists of approximately 230 students; the high school is significantly larger, with roughly 570 students.

History[]

Founded in 1915, Menlo School originated as the William Warren School, an all-male military school with an inaugural enrollment of just 13 boys. In 1924, Warren, headmaster and founder, sold the school to a group of interested parents. The parents dropped the military focus and formed a new corporation, and the Menlo School for Boys was inaugurated.

In 1927, Menlo became a non-profit governed by a newly created board of trustees. The original two-year junior college, Menlo College, was fashioned in that year as an intended expansion of the Menlo School for Boys. During its early decades, this expansion hybridized a prep school with a junior college. Students attended Menlo for the latter two years of high school and then enrolled for two years at the college; after graduating, they transferred directly into four-year universities as upper-division students.

Since the late 1970s, Menlo has undergone a substantial transformation. In fall 1979, Menlo School began its transition from a male-only school with a small boarding program to a coeducational day school. In the 1993–1994 academic year, Menlo further moved to increase the upper school’s enrollment, added grade 6 to the middle school, and further expanded its female enrollment.

The college and school were split on June 30, 1994, with further, more specific separations that followed. Menlo School and Menlo College became formally independent entities, with separate boards, administrations and faculties. In 2008, the School and College further agreed to the formal legal subdivision of their hitherto shared land into two separate parcels. The only area of the campus that continues to be jointly owned and managed is the Menlo Athletic Quad, consisting of the athletic fields and track.

Following a fundraising effort beginning in the late 1990s, both the middle and upper school campuses have been mostly rebuilt. These projects were completed in 1999 and 2004, respectively. The renovated campus includes science laboratories, a dedicated college counselling facility, offices for faculty, a large lecture hall, library, student café, Smart Boards and Astroturf. A new athletic center was completed in August 2010, followed by the Creative Arts and Design Center in August 2012. Construction of a new performing arts center started in March 2019.

Student life[]

Menlo offers over 50 student clubs in the upper school and 25 in middle school. These clubs include a chapter of FBLA (Future Business Leaders of America), Model United Nations organization, Junior Classical League, Mock Trial, chess club and environmental club. Menlo Middle School and Menlo Upper School both maintain active student councils.

Student publications[]

The Upper School's student-run newspaper, The Coat of Arms, has won numerous awards, including Top Honors – First Place with Special Merit from the .[1] The Coat of Arms releases roughly eight issues in a year as well as producing daily content for its online site and Twitter.

The Menlo Bard is a student-produced digital news magazine about arts and lifestyles. It is published about five times each year, since 2012. It is known for strong design and exploring a wide variety of topics, some of them controversial.

Mock Trial[]

Menlo's Mock Trial team has won ten San Mateo county competitions (in 2008, 2009, 2011, 2012, 2013, 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017 and 2018). From 2011-2018 (ongoing) Menlo has a perfect 80-0 record in San Mateo County.[2] The team has won the California State Championship one time (in 2014), defeating the three-time defending champion La Reina High School of Ventura County.[3] They went on to finish fourth at the National High School Mock Trial competition in Madison, Wisconsin. The team was second at the California State Finals in 2016, third in 2009 and 2013, and fifth in 2012 and 2017. Outside of California, the mock trial team won the Providence Cup, a national mock trial tournament held in Denver, Colorado, in 2011, 2012, 2014, 2015, and 2016. The team won the American Championship Invitational in 2009, a tournament for states' second and third place squads. Menlo won the Gladiator Individual World Championships in 2016, with graduating Senior Andy Parker taking the title.[4] Menlo also plays host to the annual NorCal Mock Trial Invitational, the first tournament in California outside of the normal CRF competition to be scored; they have won the tournament five times[5] (in 2011, 2012, 2015, 2018, and 2019).

Other activities[]

Artistic groups include a chamber orchestra, the Knight Dancers, and three different choruses. Every year, Menlo School hosts the dance concert, a dance show put on by the Knight Dancers, and continues to be the school's most exciting artistic tradition. In addition, the musicals and plays put on by the school help bring the entire community together in the newly constructed Spieker Center for the Performing Arts.

Athletics teams include baseball, basketball, cross-country, football, golf, lacrosse, soccer, softball, swimming, tennis, track, water polo, and volleyball. The Knights previously competed in the Peninsula Athletic League (PAL), and now compete in the West Bay Athletic League (WBAL). Every varsity athletic team in the fall of 2009 won its respective league championship, and the varsity football team was not only a CCS Championship runner-up, but also earned the CCS Scholastic Team Championship for the highest GPA among all competing teams[citation needed]. During the 2009-2010 school year, every varsity team participated in post-season competition, and some went on to state competitions. The boys' tennis team claimed the national tennis title at the National High School All-American Foundation in the spring of 2010, placed second in 2011, and emerged victorious once again in 2012.[6]

M-Term[]

M-Term is an end of year enrichment opportunity for the freshman, sophomore, and junior class; it replaced what used to be called Knight School and has activities ranging from camping in Yosemite to artificial intelligence. M-Term is around 3 weeks long.

Buildings at Menlo[]

Menlo has some notable buildings. The athletic center contains two basketball courts, one of them a full-size court. The courts have drop-down volleyball nets. The gym also has athletic training rooms, a dance room, conference rooms, offices, workout facilities, and locker rooms. The new Creative Arts and Design Center contains some large spaces for artists in the upper school, and orchestra, choir, and band rooms. The upper floor includes drama, photography and technology spaces. The newest construction project, which was completed in 2017, includes a new dining hall, student center and library that were added on to Stent Hall.

Stent Hall, once a mansion, is the most recognizable icon of Menlo School. The immense, snow-white building once called Douglass Hall was damaged badly in the 1989 Loma Prieta earthquake and was closed for several years. At first Menlo wanted to demolish it, but protests convinced Menlo restore it. To keep it safe from falling down, Menlo inserted a new library on the side to keep it stable. Metal supports rooted 50 feet in the ground also support the sides.

Academic programs[]

In order to graduate, upper school students are required to complete 10 community engagement credits each year, which involve participating in community service events put on by Menlo or another organization.[7] Peer leadership and advocacy programs give freshmen the opportunity to make connections with upperclassmen and faculty members as they begin their time at the school.

Menlo has implemented programs designed to encourage lifelong learning. Menlo had a special academic week known as "Knight School" once a year where students substitute traditional classes for alternative intellectual explorations. Past Knight School activities have spanned from volunteer trips to work with Habitat for Humanity in New Orleans to cooking classes and video game design seminars.

As of the 2017-2018 school year, Menlo replaced Knight School with M-Term, which focuses on educating freshmen and sophomores about the communities around the school and the issues they face. Juniors choose a selection of interdisciplinary classes not offered during the school year. Seniors either work as a TA for one of the junior's classes, or work on their senior projects. Senior projects allow seniors to explore an academic focus of their own choosing, which culminates with a public presentation of their findings. M-Term is currently a week long program required for graduation in May after finals have finished, but Menlo may extend the duration to 2 or 3 weeks in the future.[8]

Teachers[]

The majority of the faculty hold advanced degrees. The Menlo School full-time faculty includes more than 60 Master's, 10 Ph.Ds, and two J.D.s. In addition, Menlo School has academic trainers who serve as support systems both academically and mentally to the students.

Coaches[]

Menlo has many highly trained athletic coaches. The Director of Athletics is Earl Koberlein, who joined Menlo in 2017.[9]

Notable alumni[]

See also[]

References[]

  1. ^ "American Scholastic Press Association". Asan.com. Archived from the original on 2010-10-28. Retrieved 2012-02-27.
  2. ^ "Results + History". 22 July 2017.
  3. ^ http://www.vcstar.com/news/education/schoolwatch/la-reina-loses-state-mock-trial-competition
  4. ^ "Chinese tech firm LeEco agrees to buy Vizio TV maker for $2B".
  5. ^ "NorCal History". 28 July 2017.
  6. ^ http://www.paloaltoonline.com/news/show_story.php?id=24697 "Menlo School boys win prestigious tennis title"
  7. ^ "Upper School Community Engagement".
  8. ^ "M Term".
  9. ^ "Athletics".
  10. ^ https://www.linkedin.com/in/andrewtategrauer/
  11. ^ Actress returns to Menlo to discuss her career. Palo Alto Online. Retrieved on 2013-08-20.
  12. ^ "2015-16 BOYS SOCCER ALL-LEAGUE TEAM". wbalsports.org. Retrieved May 11, 2021.

External links[]

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