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Kent State University School

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Kent State University School
Location
,
44242

Information
TypeLaboratory school
Founded1913 (elementary)
1915 (high school)
Closed1972 (high school)
1978 (junior high)
1982 (elementary)
GradesP–12
LanguageEnglish
CampusSuburban
Color(s)Blue and White
   
Athletics conferenceTrolley League (1919–37)
Metro League (1937–53)
Portage County League (1960–72)
Team nameBlue Devils (until 1956)
Statesmen
RivalsKent Roosevelt Rough Riders
YearbookHilife, Devil's Diary, The Statesman[1]

Kent State University School ("KSUS") was a laboratory school located in Kent, Ohio, United States, on the campus of Kent State University. The school included grades K–12 and was divided into elementary, junior high/middle, and high school levels with the high school known as Kent State University High School or Kent State High School (abbreviated "KSUHS" or "KSHS"). Originally developed as a teacher training school, it later evolved into a selective laboratory school connected with the Kent State University College of Education. It was initially housed at Merrill Hall when it opened in 1913 before moving into Kent Hall in 1916. In 1926 it relocated to the William A. Cluff Teacher Training Building, now known as Franklin Hall. The school was moved to a new building at the corner of Morris Road and East Summit Street in 1956. This building is today known as the Michael Schwartz Center and houses several student services and administrative offices. The university closed the school in phases, starting with the high school portion (grades 10–12) in 1972. The junior high school (grades 7–9) was closed in 1978, and the elementary school closed in 1982.

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Transcription

History

Franklin Hall, built as the Cluff Training School, home of the University School from 1926–1956

A "Teacher Training School" was part of the original plans at the establishment of the Kent State Normal School in 1910 as the modern practice of placing student teachers in the schools was not yet developed. Providing 250 students for a training school was one of the many stipulations the state of Ohio gave the village of Kent in order to secure the school.[2] The first classes were held in 1913 at the newly completed Merrill Hall and covered grades 1–8 with a kindergarten class at the nearby DePeyster School a few blocks west of campus. Kent State also operated what was known as a "model school" at the schoolhouse near Brady Lake, just east of Kent. The model school was intended to give teachers training in a rural setting.

The high school was established in 1914, adding one grade level per school year. The first class graduated from the Kent Normal High School in 1918. In 1916 the school was moved into the new Science Hall (renamed Kent Hall in 1938) before finally getting their own building in 1927 with the completion of the William A. Cluff Teacher Training building, which was renamed Franklin Hall in 1956. In 1956, the school moved to a new building on the southwestern corner of campus. This building, originally known as the University School building, was renamed the Michael Schwartz Center in the 1980s.[3]

By the 1960s the school was no longer using education students as teachers and the school was used more as a research opportunity for students and faculty than a training school. Some of the educational innovations developed at the school included the team-teaching concept, integrative curriculum, block and modular scheduling, and middle school organization. The innovations and the school's reputation for focusing on the individual student attracted students from the region, though most of the student body was made up of local students in and around Kent.[4][5][6]

Budget constraints in the 1970s, exacerbated by the university's enrollment decline following the Kent State shootings, led to the gradual closing of the school beginning in 1972 with the senior high school (grades 10–12). The junior high school grades (7–9) followed in 1978 and the remainder of the school was closed in 1982 over fierce protests from parents and alumni.[4]

Student body

The agreement with the state of Ohio required the city of Kent to provide 240 students for a teacher training school. Initially, the student body came from a specific area in Kent, which was determined in coordination with the Kent City School District. A 1915 Kent Courier article defined the area as being between Main Street and Williams Street, east of the railroad, but also included students from northeast Kent.[7] By 1931, the school had an enrollment of 265 students in grades K–6 and 303 students in grades 7–12. The high school enrollment included 105 students from Brimfield and Franklin Townships as neither district had a fourth year of high school available, a common occurrence for many rural schools in the early to mid-twentieth century.[8][9]

By the early 1960s, the University School became a laboratory school with a selective enrollment and no formal attendance district. Franklin Township schools merged with the Kent City School District in 1959 and while high school students initially continued to attend KSHS, they eventually were transferred to Theodore Roosevelt High School. In Brimfield, the Field Local School District was created January 1, 1959 and Brimfield high school students were transferred to the new Field High School when it opened in late 1961. Through a selective admissions process, the student body was made up of a variety of students from the areas in and around Kent, attracting students as far away as Cleveland. The school had a policy that classes could not exceed 50% of children of KSU faculty, staff, or students unless there were no names on the waiting list. Priority in admission, however, was given to local students and those who had siblings already attending.[4]

Campus and facilities

All grade levels of the University School were held in the same building. The first two buildings that housed the school—Merrill and Kent Halls—were also home to other university programs and departments. Merrill Hall, for instance, was the first building built on the KSU campus, while Kent Hall—known until 1938 as Science Hall—initially served as the home of the science classes. The school's first exclusive home, known as the William A. Cluff Teacher Training Building, would serve as the school's home for nearly 30 years. Athletic fields for the high school first appear in the 1942 map of campus and were on the opposite side of the campus from the Cluff building.[10] The school had its own athletic facilities once it moved to what is now the Schwartz Center, as the building included its own auditorium and gymnasium. Athletic fields were located just to the east of the building along Summit Street and included a running track.[11]

State championships

Notable alumni

See also

References

  1. ^ "Kent Normal / Kent State High School yearbooks, 1918-1972". Kent State University. May 19, 2000. Archived from the original on September 21, 2011. Retrieved November 7, 2011.
  2. ^ Shriver, Phillip R. (1960). The Years of Youth: Kent State University 1910-1960 (2nd ed.). Kent, Ohio, USA: Kent State University Press. p. 21. LCCN 60011074.
  3. ^ Hildebrand, William (2009). Most Noble Enterprise: The Story of Kent State University, 1910–2010. Kent, Ohio: Kent State University Press. p. 240. ISBN 978-1-60635-030-0.
  4. ^ a b c Darrow, Ralph, ed. (1999). Kent, Ohio: The Dynamic Decades. Kent, Ohio, USA: Kent Historical Society. pp. 168–169.
  5. ^ "3-grade phase-out to begin". Daily Kent Stater. Vol. XVI, no. 41. December 10, 1971. pp. 1–2. Retrieved June 10, 2017.
  6. ^ Taylor, Joel (April 7, 1972). "KSU's College of Education only one in state with K-12 lab school". Daily Kent Stater. Vol. XVI, no. 87. p. 13. Retrieved June 10, 2017.
  7. ^ "Next Tuesday's Day the Bell Rings". Kent Courier. September 3, 1915.
  8. ^ Grismer, Karl H. (1932). History of Kent (2001 Revision ed.). Kent, Ohio: Record Publishing (1932), Kent Historical Society (2001). p. 190.
  9. ^ Di Paolo, Roger (19 March 2006). "New chapter for old school". Record-Courier. p. A5.
  10. ^ Kent State University 1942 Campus Map (Map). Kent State University. 1942. Retrieved 20 August 2010.
  11. ^ Kent State University Development Plan (Map). Kent State University. 1959. Retrieved 20 August 2010.
  12. ^ "Cook, Robert Eugene, (1920-1988)". Biographical Directory of the United States Congress. United States Congress. Retrieved 20 August 2010.
  13. ^ Nethken, Laura (June 16, 2009). "Lt. Gen. Gould earns promotion". Record-Courier. Retrieved January 14, 2012.
  14. ^ Statesman 1971 (Yearbook). Kent, Ohio, USA: Kent State High School. 1971. p. 75.
  15. ^ Gigenbach, Cara; Walton, Theresa (2008). Kent State University Athletics. Charleston, South Carolina, Chicago, Illinois, Portsmouth, New Hampshire, and San Francisco, California: Arcadia. p. 59. ISBN 978-0-7385-5176-0.
  16. ^ "Kent's Betty Jean Maycock Cops Gold Medal in Russia". Daily Kent Stater. Vol. XLVII, no. 13. October 13, 1961. p. 3.

External links

This page was last edited on 20 September 2023, at 16:34
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