Yearly results edit

Year Champion Runner-up Third place Fourth place
2018-2019 Brown Union St. Cloud State Robert Morris
2017 Providence Robert Morris Lake Superior State Arizona State
2016 Robert Morris Quinnipiac Boston College Ferris State
2015 Robert Morris UMass Lowell Penn State Clarkson
2014 Colgate Robert Morris Western Michigan Penn State
2013 Boston College Penn State Bowling Green Robert Morris
2012 Robert Morris Miami Penn State Ohio State

2018/2019 edit

First Round
January 4
Championship
January 5
    
Union 7
  2
Brown 6
Union 3
Robert Morris 4
Brown 7 Consolation
St. Cloud State 5
Robert Morris 2

2017 edit

First Round
December 29
Championship
December 30
    
Arizona State 0
Providence 6
Robert Morris 1
Providence 2
Robert Morris 5
Lake Superior State 0 Consolation
Lake Superior State 4
Arizona State 1

2016 edit

Consolation game between Ferris State and BC was decided in a shootout for the tournament, however the game was officially a tie. BC def. Ferris in the shootout 2-1

First Round
December 29
Championship
December 30
    
Boston College 1
Quinnipiac 3
Robert Morris 5
Quinnipiac 2
Robert Morris 1
Ferris State 0 Consolation
Boston College 2
Ferris State 1

2015 edit

First Round
December 28
Championship
December 29
    
UMass Lowell 3
Clarkson 0
Robert Morris 5
UMass Lowell 3
Robert Morris 6
Penn State 4 Consolation
Penn State 5
Clarkson 1

2014 edit

On Day 1 (December 29), the Colgate Raiders defeated the Western Michigan Broncos 2-1,[1] and the Robert Morris Colonials beat the Penn State Nittany Lions by a margin of 4-2.[2]

On Day 2 (December 30), in the consolation game, the Western Michigan Broncos beat the Penn State Nittany Lions 4-1.[3] In the championship game the Colgate Raiders beat the Robert Morris Colonials 6-1, to win their first title.[4]

First Round
December 29
Championship
December 30
    
Colgate 2
Western Michigan 1
Colgate 6
Robert Morris 1
Robert Morris 4
Penn State 2 Consolation
Western Michigan 4
Penn State 1

2013 edit

On Day 1 (December 27), the Boston College Eagles beat the Bowling Green Falcons 5-0,[5] and the Penn State Nittany Lions beat the Robert Morris Colonials 3-2.[6]

On Day 2 (December 28), in the consolation game the Bowling Green Falcons beat the Robert Morris Colonials 3-2.[7] In the championship game the Boston College Eagles beat the Penn State Nittany Lions 8-2, to win its first title.[8]

First Round
December 27
Championship
December 28
    
Boston College 5
Bowling Green 0
Boston College 8
Penn State 2
Penn State 3
Robert Morris 2 Consolation
Bowling Green 3
Robert Morris 2

2012 edit

On Day 1 (December 28), the Robert Morris Colonials beat Penn State Nittany Lions 6-0,[9] and the Miami RedHawks beat the Ohio State Buckeyes 1-0.[10]

On Day 2 (December 29), in the consolation game, the Penn State beat the Ohio State Buckeyes 5-4.[11] In the championship game, the Robert Morris Colonials beat the Miami RedHawks 1-0, to win their first title.[12]

First Round
December 28
Championship
December 29
    
Robert Morris 6
Penn State 0
Robert Morris 1
Miami 0
Miami 1
Ohio State 0 Consolation
Penn State 5
Ohio State 4

Recent results edit

The following table shows the results of the U.S. national team in official test matches during the previous 24 months, as well as upcoming fixtures.

Date Opponent Result Venue Attend Event Top U.S. Scorer
2018-02-03   Argentina XV W (17-10)   StubHub Center ARC
2017-11-25   Georgia L (20-21)   Mikheil Meskhi Stadium 20,000 end-of-year tests J. Taufete'e (10)
2017-11-18   Germany W (46–17)   BRITA-Arena, Wiesbaden 3,150 end-of-year tests AJ MacGinty (21)
2017-07-01   Canada W (52–16)   Torero Stadium 5,000 2019 RWC qualifying AJ MacGinty (12)
2017-06-24   Canada T (28–28)   Tim Hortons Field 13,138 2019 RWC qualifying N. Civetta / M. Te'o (10)
2017-06-17   Georgia L (17–21)   Fifth Third Bank Stadium mid-year tests AJ MacGinty (7)
2017-06-10   Ireland L (19–55)   Red Bull Arena 22,000 mid-year tests N. Civetta / J. Quill / R. Matyas (5)
2017-03-04   Argentina XV T (27–27)   Estadio Comodoro 9,000 ARC D. Tameilau (10)
2017-02-25   Chile W (57–9)   Estadio San Carlos de Apoquindo 1,000 ARC Ben Cima (17)
2017-02-18   Canada W (51–34)   Swangard Stadium 3,416 ARC M. Te'o (15)
2017-02-11   Brazil W (51–3)   Dell Diamond 6,091 ARC T. Lamborn (10)
2017-02-04   Uruguay W (29–23)   Toyota Field 3,000 ARC B. Cima (11)
2016-11-19   Tonga L (17–20)   Estadio Anoeta 12,000 end-of-year tests W. Holder (7)
2016-11-12   Romania L (10–23)   Stadionul Arcul de Triumf 5,000 end-of-year tests W. Holder (10)
2016-11-04   Māori All Blacks L (7–54)   Toyota Park 18,700 end-of-year tests T. Clever (5)
2016-06-25   Russia W (25–0)   Bonney Field mid-year tests AJ MacGinty (20)
2016-06-18   Italy L (20–24)   Avaya Stadium mid-year tests AJ MacGinty (10)
2016-03-05   Uruguay L (25–29)   Estadio Charrúa 9,500 ARC J. Bird (7)
2016-02-27   Brazil L (23–24)   Arena Barueri 2,000 ARC N. Kruger (8)
2016-02-20   Chile W (64–0)   Lockhart Stadium 13,591 ARC JP Eloff (19)
2016-02-13   Canada W (30–22)   Dell Diamond 7,415 ARC T. Clever (15)
2016-02-06   Argentina XV T (35–35)   BBVA Compass Stadium 10,241 ARC J. Bird (12)
2016-11-04
2015-10-11   Japan L (18–28) RWC 2015
2015-10-07   South Africa L (0–64) RWC 2015
2015-09-27   Scotland L (16–39) RWC 2015
2015-09-20   Samoa L (16–25) RWC 2015
2015-09-05   Australia L (10–47)
2015-08-30   England Argentina XV L (19–24) end-of-year tests]
2015-08-22   Canada W (41–23)   end-of-year tests]
Valley School of Ligonier
Address
153 Lupine Ln

,
15677

Information
TypePrivate, Day, & College-prep
Established1947
PresidentDr. Jonathan Strecker[13]
GradesK – 9
GenderCoeducational
Enrollment200 (2017)
Endowment$33 million[14]
AffiliationsNAIS
WebsiteValley School of Ligonier

Valley School of Ligonier is an independent preparatory school located in Rector near Ligonier (suburban Pittsburgh). Founded in 1946 as an private day school.

Valley School of Ligonier enrolls approximately two hundred students annually and is a member of the National Association of Independent Schools.

Campus edit

Valley School of Ligonier campuses is in Ligonier with a total area of 400 acres.

History edit

 
The first Shady Side Academy building: a one-room red brick schoolhouse in the Shadyside neighborhood, 1883

Valley School of Ligonier was founded in 1946 by Constance Prosser Mellon and General Richard King Mellon. On September 24, 1947, the doors opened for 43 children. Mrs. Mellon envisioned Valley as a nurturing community where students build their academic skill and learn to become responsible and compassionate adults. She felt that children learn best in small classes with skilled teachers who know and care about each child. She wanted a school with students from diverse backgrounds and she made sure that tuition was moderate and financial aid was available. An athlete, Mrs. Mellon knew the benefits of physical fitness and team play. Hoping children would feel at home in nature, she selected the School's 400 acre wood setting. [15]

Academics edit

 
Rowe Hall, the LEED-certified main academic and administrative building of the Senior School campus

Academic life at Shady Side Academy operates on a trimester system, dividing the year into three thirteen to fourteen-week terms. Classes begin each year before Labor Day with Convocation in late August and finish with Commencement exercises in early June. Second Term begins in late November, and Third Term begins in early April.[16] At the Senior School, regular classes begin each day at 8:15 a.m. and end at 3:00 p.m., punctuated by a late-morning assembly period. All-school assemblies take place every Monday and Friday in the Hillman Center's Rauh Theater, and every Wednesday students meet with their advisory groups. The academic day is divided into six periods filled with at least five classes, a lunch period, and intermittent free periods. Athletic practices follow the school day from 3:45 p.m. to late afternoon. Class periods are determined by an eight-day rotating schedule.[17]

Each term students enroll in a minimum of five classes, both year-long courses and one-term electives, taught by seven academic departments—Arts, Computer Science, English, History, Mathematics, Science, and World Languages. Many departments, particularly the English and History Departments, make extensive use of the Harkness table, as the majority of rooms in Rowe have large, oval tables. This is a teaching style similar to the Socratic method. Students receive midterm grade reports during the year's first term and subsequently at the conclusion of each term, followed by a cumulative grade report at the end of the year. The grade for each class has three parts—a letter grade, an effort grade, and a paragraph of written remarks. The quality grade, assigned on the A+ (4.3333) to F (0.0) scale, is used to calculate the student's GPA. Effort grades for each class consist of a number from 5, indicating "exemplary effort," to 1, indicating "unacceptable effort." Effort grades of 2—"inconsistent effort"— or below result in a student's placement on Academic Warning and likely an interim report to the student's parents. The Academy uses the student's GPA and effort grades each term and at the end of the year to award academic Year and Term Honors, ranging from "Honors" (B+ average) to "Highest Honors" (A average), as well as other school and departmental prizes. Established in 1929, Shady Side Academy's chapter of the Cum Laude Society elects members from the top fifth of the graduating class based on academic performance in the junior year and in the first two terms of the senior year.[18]

Academic and Personal Counseling edit

The Senior School campus offers college, academic, and personal counseling through a variety of resources. Every upperform student is assigned a personal college counselor to navigate the college applications process. College counselors help students write applications and choose between offers of admission through regular meetings in the Kassling College Counseling Center in Rowe Hall. Every student graduating from Shady Side proceeds to study at a four-year college or university.[19] The Academy's advisory program also provides every student with a year-long academic advisor. Students are assigned a new advisor specific to their form for each academic year, and each advisor supervises an advisory group of approximately 5 to 6 students. Advisory groups meet as a homeroom once each week, usually to share a midday snack and read the week's announcements, and sit together at least twice a week in all-school assemblies. Each student also meets individually with their advisor during a free period to discuss their academic life and any academic difficulties they may be having. Advisors meet with their advisees' parents twice every year, and write reports summarizing their advisees' academic and personal progress—which form one part of each student's grade report—at the end of each term. An on-campus personal counselor is also available.

Academic and personal counseling is offered at the Middle School. Students are assigned an advisor and meet in homerooms regularly, as well as in weekly all-school assemblies. Each term a conference with the student, parent(s) and advisor is held to discuss the student's progress, achievements and challenges.

The Junior School provides personal counseling, as well as academic counseling in reading, math and overall learning support. All-school assemblies are held weekly. Each student has at least one opportunity per academic year to speak in front of the school at these assemblies starting in Pre-Kindergarten. This provides early experience in public speaking and helps students, at a young age, to overcome fear associated with speaking on front of a large group of people in a supportive, non-judgmental environment. Fifth grade students, in preparation for the Middle School, serve as leaders in the school, giving tours to prospective families, assisting students getting on and off the bus in the morning and afternoon, and leading assemblies. These additional responsibilities help prepare them for the transition to the Middle School.

Financial aid edit

Shady Side has a financial aid program. In 2013, over $2.8 million in need-based financial aid was distributed to 159 students.[20]

Boarding program and residential life edit

Boarding at Shady Side Academy dates back to the school's relocation from the Shadyside neighborhood in the 1920s. The number of boarding students living on campus and the number of buildings serving as dormitories have fluctuated over the Academy's history. Four buildings on the Senior School campus—Bayard House (1924), Croft House (1931), Ellsworth House (1922) (now Hunt Hall), and Morewood House (1922)—all served as residence halls at one point in the school's history. The names of Bayard, Morewood, and Ellsworth Houses reference the names of three out of the four streets encircling the site of the Academy's original campus, now the site of the Winchester Thurston School. At one time nearly 200 students, both Senior and Middle School students, boarded full-time in a seven-day boarding program. In the 1960s the Academy transitioned to housing Senior School students in a five-day boarding program, one of six schools nationwide to offer such a program to its students. Because students spend weekends at home, boarders almost always came from the three-state area of eastern Ohio, western Pennsylvania, and northern West Virginia. In the fall of 2014, the Academy announced it would start offering a seven-day boarding option beginning in 2015, in addition to its current five-day boarding program. Shady Side's boarding program now hosts approximately fifty students every year in two residence halls—Croft House, the boys' dormitory, and Morewood House, the girls' dormitory. The Academy also houses residential faculty representing almost every academic department, both in apartments in the dormitories and in homes on the Senior and Middle School campuses.[21]

The main residential quadrangle on the Senior School campus. Pictured from left to right are Croft House, the Hillman Center for Performing Arts, Bayard House, the Benedum Visual Arts Center, McCune Dining Hall, Morewood House, Rowe Hall, and Hunt Hall

Extracurricular activities edit

Student-run clubs at Shady Side exist as collaborations between a group of students and a sponsoring faculty member. Numerous language clubs exist both in collaboration with language programs offered by the World Languages Department, such as the German, Spanish, and French clubs, and for languages not taught at Shady Side, such as the Italian Club. Nationality clubs, such as the Jewish Student Union and Black Student Union, celebrate various global cultures and often present performances during the Academy's annual GlobalFest week. There are also many established service and philanthropic clubs, such as Service Learning and Meals on Wheels. There are also religious clubs, activist clubs, academic competition teams, student government organizations, performance groups, departmental programs such as the peer-tutoring Scribe Office for writing, and publications.[22]

Academic edit

Shady Side participates in Model United Nations conferences, National Academic Quiz Tournaments and other quiz bowl competitions, the Western Pennsylvania Math League, Science Olympiad, North American Computational Linguistics Olympiad, National Science Bowl, and forensics competitions, principally in the National Forensics League. The Academy has sent also sent a team annually to the Pittsburgh Regional event of the FIRST Robotics Competition since 2008. In 2003, 2005, 2006, and 2007, Shady Side was the season champion of Pittsburgh-based game show Hometown High-Q. At the 2006 NAQT Nationals, the team finished 5th overall. Shady Side Academy's Speech and Debate team competes principally in the National Forensics League, but also regularly sends students to the National Catholic Forensics League and the Pennsylvania High School Speech League. The Shady Side Academy Speech and Debate team is coached by Mary Krauland, who has won multiple coaching awards, and Sherri Hallgren assists with speech competitors.

In 2004, Shady Side Middle School placed third in the nation at the National Science Olympiad Tournament at Juniata College, a tournament with over fifty schools from all around the nation. They did this after placing 1st at both the Regional and State Science Olympiad Tournament, which earned them a position in the National tournament. In 2005, the team also placed 1st in the Regional and State Science Olympiad Tournaments, which got them into the National Tournament again, this time held in the University of Illinois. The team placed ninth at the national tournament . In the 2007 State Tournament, Shady Side's team placed second, as runners up to Sewickley Academy, once again securing a place in the 2007 National Science Olympiad Tournament in Wichita, Kansas. Also, in 2009 the Middle School team placed second in the state tournament at Juniata College. They later went on to place 20th in the nation at Augusta State University in Georgia, in which 60 teams participated in. In 2011 the Middle School team returned to Nationals at Madison, Wisconsin, placing 18th in the nation. In 2012, the team placed 26th at the national competition held at the University of Central Florida in Orlando, Florida. In 2013, the Middle School team won the Pennsylvania State Tournament for the second year in a row, and they went on to place 11th, missing 10th place by just one point, at Nationals at Wright State University. They won for the third consecutive year in 2014, going on to place 14th at Nationals.

The Pittsburgh Japanese School (ピッツバーグ日本語補習授業校 Pittsubāgu Nihongo Hoshū Jugyō Kō), a weekend supplementary Japanese school, uses the middle school facilities of Shady Side Academy.[23][24] The school, established in 1993, originated from a group of parents starting a Japanese class system in 1977.[25]

Arts, theater, and music edit

Since 2003 Shady Side has sponsored a benefit concert called "Untucked"—an homage to the school dress code, which, before 2004, required all shirts to be tucked in. Members of the Untucked Committee include students selected annually from a competitive applicant pool and a member of the faculty. Recent bands to appear at Untucked include Rusted Root, The Clarks, Robert Randolph and the Family Band, Better than Ezra and Sister Hazel. Untucked is usually held at the end of the year in the Roy McKnight Hockey Center and includes food and carnival games.

Shady Side Academy's main theater, the 650-seat Richard E. Rauh Theater, is named after local teacher, actor and arts patron Richard Rauh. It resides in the newly constructed Hillman Center for Performing Arts on the Senior School campus.[26] There is also a blackbox theater (The Kountz Theater), which holds many smaller productions, such as the annual Fall Play and the Spring Original Works Theatre Festival. Recent theater performances include: Grease, An Enemy of the People, West Side Story, A Midsummer Night's Dream, The Music Man, Romeo and Juliet, Kiss Me, Kate, and The Importance of Being Earnest. The debut musical in the Hillman Center for the Performing Arts was Oliver! which took place in the spring of 2005, starring Danielle Papincak (Nancy, Class of '05) and Bernard Balbot (Fagin, Class of '05). In 2006, the Academy launched the Hillman Performing Arts Series with the Golden Dragon Acrobats, River City Brass Band, and Pittsburgh Ballet Theatre.

Publications edit

The Academy's campus newspaper, the Shady Side News, is written and produced by an editorial staff of Senior School students and releases five issues each academic year. It contains campus news, commentary, political opinion, and photographs. The Academian, the Shady Side Academy yearbook, has been published annually since the time of the school's founding by a committee of student editors. The Egerian, the school's literary magazine, publishes student-written prose and poetry at the end of each academic year. Established in 1928, it is released exclusively online by a committee of student editors, and is available at "The Egerian". Angles, the school's other literary magazine, collects the best of student-written nonfiction and also publishes—in print—at the end of every year. A science magazine, SSA Frontiers of Science, helps to relay to the community significant scientific advances; it is produced once per term under the leadership of a student committee. The Forum, a collaboration between the Senior School History Department and a committee of student editors, contains political commentary and policy analysis.

Athletics edit


History edit

Affiliations edit

WPIAL and PIAA championships edit

Notable alumni edit

References edit

  1. ^ David Drew (29 December 2014). "WMU hockey falls to No. 14 Colgate, 2-1, in Three Rivers Classic". Pittsburgh: MLive. Retrieved 26 November 2015.
  2. ^ Grubba, Matt (December 29, 2014). "Robert Morris hockey holds off Penn State in Three Rivers Classic". Pittsburgh Tribune-Review. {{cite news}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  3. ^ Joey Sykes (30 December 2014). "2014 Three Rivers Classic Blog: Day 2". Pittsburgh: Pittsburgh Penguins. Retrieved 26 November 2015.
  4. ^ Grubba, Matt (December 30, 2014). "Colgate offense topples Robert Morris to win Three Rivers Classic title". Pittsburgh Tribune-Review. {{cite news}}: Italic or bold markup not allowed in: |publisher= (help)
  5. ^ "Boston College Shut Outs Bowling Green To Open 2013 Three Rivers Classic". Pittsburgh: World Hockey. 28 December 2013. Retrieved 26 November 2015.
  6. ^ Alex Robinson (28 December 2013). "Penn State Sneaks Past Robert Morris 3-2 At Three Rivers Classic". Pittsburgh: Onward State. Retrieved 26 November 2015.
  7. ^ Nesbitt, Stephen J. (December 28, 2013). "Robert Morris heats up too late, loses consolation game, 3-2, to Bowling Green". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Retrieved December 29, 2013.
  8. ^ Nesbitt, Stephen J. (December 28, 2013). "Boston College blasts Penn State, 8-2, in Three Rivers Classic championship game". Pittsburgh Post-Gazette. Retrieved December 29, 2013.
  9. ^ Sam Werner (29 December 2012). "Three Rivers Classic College Hockey Tournament: Robert Morris beats Penn State". Pittsburgh: Pittsburgh Post Gazette. Retrieved 26 November 2015.
  10. ^ Matt Gajtka (29 December 2012). "Three Rivers Classic Day 1 recap: RMU, Miami score shutouts in first round". Pittsburgh: Fansided. Retrieved 26 November 2015.
  11. ^ "Thank You Terry: M: Penn State 5 vs. Ohio State 4". Pittsburgh. 29 December 2012. Retrieved 26 November 2015.
  12. ^ Steve Uhlmann (29 December 2012). "Three Rivers Classic 2012: Robert Morris upsets Miami for championship". Pittsburgh: SB Nation. Retrieved 26 November 2015.
  13. ^ "Administration". Valley School of Ligonier. Retrieved October 9, 2017.
  14. ^ "Charitable Organization: Valley School of Ligonier". Open Endowment. 2008. Retrieved October 9, 2017.
  15. ^ "History". Valley School of Ligonier. Retrieved October 9, 2017.}}
  16. ^ Shady Side Academy. "Academic Calendar 2010–2011 School Year" (PDF). Retrieved May 8, 2012.
  17. ^ Shady Side Academy. "All-School Calendar". Retrieved December 18, 2013.
  18. ^ Shady Side Academy. "Curricular Programs" (PDF). Shady Side Academy Senior School Student Handbook 2011–2012. Retrieved May 8, 2012.
  19. ^ Shady Side Academy College Counseling Office. "Profile 2011–2012" (PDF). Retrieved May 8, 2012.
  20. ^ Shady Side Academy. "School Profile" (PDF). Retrieved November 3, 2014.
  21. ^ Shady Side Academy Residential Life Program. "Shady Side Academy Residential Life Program Frequently Asked Questions" (PDF). Retrieved May 8, 2012.
  22. ^ Shady Side Academy. "Student Clubs". Retrieved May 6, 2012.
  23. ^ "北米の補習授業校一覧(平成25年4月15日現在)." (Archive) MEXT. Retrieved on May 5, 2014. "c/o Shady Side Academy Middle School, 500 Squaw Run Road East, Pittsburgh, PA 15238,U.S.A"
  24. ^ "Zoning Map" (Archive). Borough of Fox Chapel. Retrieved on May 6, 2014.
  25. ^ "In English" (Archive). Pittsburgh Japanese School. Retrieved on May 6, 2014.
  26. ^ New Works Festival honors Rauh - Tribune-Review

External links edit

Category:High schools in Pittsburgh Category:Middle schools in Pittsburgh Category:Private elementary schools in Pennsylvania Category:Private middle schools in Pennsylvania Category:Private high schools in Pennsylvania Category:Preparatory schools in Pennsylvania Category:Educational institutions established in 1883 Category:1883 establishments in Pennsylvania Category:Boarding schools in Pennsylvania