Ojai Valley School

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Ojai Valley School
Location
,
United States
Coordinates34°27′0″N 119°9′38″W / 34.45000°N 119.16056°W / 34.45000; -119.16056Coordinates: 34°27′0″N 119°9′38″W / 34.45000°N 119.16056°W / 34.45000; -119.16056
Information
TypePrivate, Boarding, Day
Established1911
PresidentMichael J. Hall-Mounsey
Faculty60
Campus size425 acres (1.72 km2)
Color(s)Green and White
MascotSpud
Websitewww.ovs.org

Ojai Valley School is a co-educational independent boarding school in the Ojai Valley near the city of Ojai, California, United States. The school was founded in 1911 and offers pre-kindergarten through 12th grade education. [1]

The motto of the school is Integer Vitae. In English it means, "wholeness of life" or "symmetry of life".[2]

Ojai Valley School was one of the first boarding schools in the Western United States to establish English as a Second Language (ESL) programs for all ability levels.[3]

Campus and facilities[]

The school is located on two campuses in the Ojai Valley. The Lower Campus, located near downtown Ojai, enrolls day and resident students in grades pre-kindergarten to eight. The facilities include a performing arts center, cottage-style classrooms, dormitories, library, art studio, woodshop, technology center, athletic fields, a swimming pool, and stables for the equestrian program.

The Upper Campus, located seven miles (11 km) from downtown Ojai, is nestled amid orange groves and rolling hills in the east of the valley in Upper Ojai. The 195 acres (0.79 km2) campus enrolls day and resident students in grades nine to twelve. The campus is situated on a former cattle ranch and features dormitories, classrooms, athletic fields, climbing wall and ropes course, a swimming pool, as well as art and ceramics studios. The academic program on both campuses is challenging and well-rounded, encouraging students to explore their interests, know themselves, and develop a respect for others. Students participate in outdoor education, equestrian, fine and performing arts programs, as well as athletics and community service.

History[]

In the early part of the 20th century, an Eastern couple settled in the Ojai Valley and opened a small private school. Edward Yeomans, a Chicagoan educated at Phillips Academy and Princeton University, had written a series of articles in the Atlantic Monthly on the need for educational reform. The articles caught the eye of a wealthy businessman, Frank Frost, who persuaded Yeomans to move to Ojai and create a school that would embody his modern ideas.[4]

At the core of Yeomans’ beliefs was the concept that children learn best through experience. Yeomans considered his own education to have been dull and stifling, and wanted to establish a school that would emphasize experiential learning and a love for the outdoors. He envisioned a place where music, art, and woodshop would be taught alongside math, history, and languages. Yeomans declared that “Integer Vitae” – meaning the wholeness of life, symmetry of life, and soundness of life would become the school’s motto and philosophy. The school has grown from a one-room classroom serving 12 pupils to a two-campus boarding and day school for more than 300 students in pre-kindergarten to 12th grades.[5]

The school was heavily damaged by the Thomas Fire in December 2017. The fire destroyed two buildings on Upper Ojai campus, a dormitory and a science and technology building.[6][7]

References[]

  1. ^ Boardingschoolreview.com Stats
  2. ^ Privateschoolreview.com Information
  3. ^ Boardingschoolsusa.com Information
  4. ^ "Yeomans, Edward (1866-1942) · Jane Addams Digital Edition". digital.janeaddams.ramapo.edu. Retrieved 2020-10-12.
  5. ^ "The Ojai Valley School – Ojai History". ojaihistory.com. Retrieved 2020-10-12.
  6. ^ D'Angelo, Alexa (December 8, 2017). "Thomas Fire hits Ojai Valley School: 'It's a miracle there's anything left at all'". Ventura County Star. Retrieved 2017-12-09.
  7. ^ Hamilton, Matt (December 6, 2017). "Fire damages Ojai Valley School's upper campus, but administrators are determined to reopen for spring semester". LA Times. Retrieved 30 December 2017.

External links[]

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