Thomas Jefferson School
Our students are truly diverse and can’t be categorized as any particular type, but they share common denominators – energy, independence, an interest in their own education, and a commitment to using their teenage years wisely to get ready for college and adulthood. Here, they connect with others who have the same desire to learn. TJ is their second home.
If you’re a parent considering our school, you may wonder: Why spend money on a secondary school in uncertain economic times? Isn’t it better to save for college? Isn’t a classical liberal education possible later in life, on one’s own?
The formative teenage years are a critical time for developing cultural literacy and analytical thinking. The liberal arts, traditionally designed for this time in life, should be started soon in order to save time and money later. If eager, able young minds are allowed to wander and waste, they may grow so bored, distracted, or empty that the tough intellectual work of the professions is simply too much later on. We want your child to be ready for pre-med or pre-law, ready to research history, engage in science, or learn new languages. We want students to be able to choose their walk in life freely, not to have their steps determined by a weak or lopsided curriculum. We want to give them an education that is never out of date, and the middle- and high-school years are the ideal time for it.
Every year, we look forward to greeting the remarkable group of young people we are privileged to work with. The college-placement record they achieve is simply a byproduct of their natural ability coupled with the effort they put into learning and growing here.
Since 1946, Thomas Jefferson School has given students the best environment in which to grow: an unparalleled classical curriculum that emphasizes both doors of the liberal arts (numbers and words) and provides true intellectual depth; varied arts and activities offerings; an emphasis on community and responsibility; and high expectations in every area of school life. That covers quite a bit of ground, doesn’t it?