Английская Википедия:Carlbrook School

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Шаблон:Short description Шаблон:Infobox school Шаблон:Portal Carlbrook School was a private, coeducational, college preparatory boarding school located on Шаблон:Convert in Halifax, Virginia. It was non-sectarian and covered grades 9 through 12.[1] As of 2014, it reported an enrollment of 80 students.[2] The school closed permanently in December 2015. At that time, it had graduated almost 700 alumni.[3] Carlbrook's mission statement was to help students discover, internalize and effectively utilize the intellectual and personal resources necessary to succeed in college and in life.[4]

History

Carlbrook was founded in early 2002 by Cascade School graduates Robert "Grant" Price, Jr. and Justin J. Merritt.[5] Within the first week of their opening, there were seven students enrolled.[6] By June 2003, it had grown to 89 students. All new students were required to complete a wilderness therapy program before enrolling.[6][7] In 2003, a school official explained that wilderness programs help prepare students for success in the school program and function as a "filter," meaning that students who successfully complete these programs are more likely to succeed at Carlbrook.[7] Grant hired several former CEDU staff to implement a similar emotional growth program.[8][9][10]

Admissions

Admission to Carlbrook was selective, focusing on students of high aptitude and potential who had struggled academically or socially in previous educational environments.[11] Carlbrook was accredited by the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools[12] and the Virginia Council for Private Education,[13] and was a member of the Secondary School Admission Test Board,[14] the Small Boarding Schools Association,[15] and the Educational Records Bureau.[16]

Academics

The school followed a quarter-based academic calendar and awarded high school diplomas in accordance with Virginia Department of Education guidelines.[17] There were multiple Advanced Placement courses and several advanced and dual-enrollment offerings;[18] in addition to the school's academic requirements, graduating students were required to demonstrate leadership and character through extracurricular involvement and/or community service. Carlbrook reported that over the school's first decade, its graduates were accepted to over 500 colleges and universities.[19]

Carlbrook's Program

Carlbrook was a 15-month program which consisted of five workshops (Integritas,[20] Amicitia,[21] Animus,[22] Teneo,[23] and Veneratio[24]) which took place roughly every three months depending on the child's arrival at the school. Elizabeth Gilpin, who is a graduate of Carlbrook School, makes the following claim in Stolen,[25] a memoir about her time there:

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Closure

The school closed in December 2015 after giving notice a few days before end of the fall semester.[26][27] The email announcement attributed the closure to declining enrollments.[28]

In the news

  • December 4, 2010: 16-year-old Forest Ferguson disappeared from Carlbrook School's campus in South Boston, Virginia. He was never found.[29][30]
  • April 2017: Life Boat,[31] a short film based on the exercise used in Animus,[22] Carlbrook's third workshop, premiered at Tribeca Film Festival.[32] It was directed by Jack Nicholson's daughter, Lorraine Nicholson,[33][34] and stars Carlbrook graduate and author of Stolen,[25] Elizabeth Gilpin.
  • July 20, 2021: Stolen, a memoir by Elizabeth Gilpin about the time she spent in the wilderness of the Appalachian Mountains and then at Carlbrook School was published.[25][35][36]

References

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External links

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