We decided to put a price on education with the following look at of some of the most expensive secondary schools in the county. All tuition data are from the 2008-09 school year and only schools that welcome day students are included.
Day School Tuition: $34,680
History: Lawrenceville was founded in 1810 as the Maidenhead Academy and “refounded,” according to the school’s Web site, as the Lawrenceville School in 1883. It was at that time that the school’s famous House system, whereby students are assigned to live in one of 20 residential houses with a resident housemaster and unique identities, was implemented. Frederick Law Olmsted, the landscape architect who is most famous for designing Central Park, was responsible for the Lawrenceville campus’ circle. The school was all-male until 1987.
Notable: Chicago Bulls forward Joakim Noah honed his skills for the Big Red in Lawrenceville’s basketball gym. The school’s other impressive athletic facilities include an indoor ice hockey rink, a nine-hole golf course, 10 squash courts, 12 tennis courts, and a world-class ropes course. The ropes course, designed by an expert in outdoor experiential education, enables students to build trust in one another and confidence in their own abilities.
Course Catalog: At Lawrenceville, students can learn more about Canada than they ever did from South Park with a history course titled, “Through the Looking Glass: Canada, a Different North America.” Many classes at Lawrenceville are taught using the Harkness method, which involves professors sitting around oval tables with their students to facilitate class discussion.
Famous Alumni: Disney mogul Michael Eisner and singer Huey Lewis graduated from Lawrenceville before attending Denison and Cornell, respectively.
Day School Tuition: $34,700
History: Concord Academy, or CA as it’s commonly known, was established in 1922 as an all-girls school for grades 1 through 12. Enrollment during CA’s early years was small – only 20 students graduated in the class of 1948 – but grew as the institution transitioned into an independent high school. CA became coed in 1971 and today boasts an enrollment of 367 students, less than half of whom live on campus.
Notable: The chameleon, CA’s symbol of adaptability, has been associated with the school for more than 80 years. It has been adopted as the mascot for CA’s 23 athletic teams and is engraved on the class ring. It is also the namesake for CA’s literary magazine.
Course Catalog: In the spring of 2010, CA will offer a new course titled, “Latin American Literature: Magical Realities.” The course will examine the works of the likes of Gabriel Garcia Marquez and Jorge Luis Borges. The course fills the void left by another English course, “Gay Literature: In and Out and In-Between,” which was originally scheduled to be offered but is crossed out in the current version of the online course catalog. The first Gay Straight Alliance (GSA) was formed at Concord Academy in 1988 by teacher Kevin Jennings.
Famous Alumni: In addition to author Julia Glass and Caroline Kennedy, CA’s list of graduates includes a queen and a “Juice Guy.” Queen Noor of Jordan and Tom First, one of the founders of Nantucket Nectars, both attended Concord.
Day School Tuition: $34,250
History: Middlesex was opened as an all-boys school in 1901 by Frederick Winsor, who hoped to “find the promise that lies hidden” in every student. Winsor helped establish the National Scholarship Program, which the school claims was the first of its kind for a secondary school. While Middlesex, which became coed in 1974, used to be closely affiliated with Harvard, its graduates now attend a variety of colleges and universities. The school’s campus was designed by the sons of Frederick Law Olmsted.
Notable: The 1992 movie School Ties, the story of a Jewish boy at an elite prep school during the 1950s, was filmed at Middlesex. The movie stars Brendan Fraser, Chris O’Donnell, and Matt Damon. Of the three, Damon is the only one who attended a public high school.
Course Catalog: In addition to interest-piquing courses such as “Mystery in Literature” and “Biomedical Ethics,” students may enroll in “CSI: Middlesex, Introduction to Forensics.” Lab activities will accompany each topic, which may include fingerprinting, DNA analysis, toxicology, and blood splatter analysis.
Famous Alumni: Bill Richardson, William Hurt, and Steve Carell all attended Middlesex. Before The Office became one of the most popular shows on television, Carell said that his backup plan was to teach high school history and coach a few sports at a New England prep school. Having Michael Scott as your history teacher might be worth the price of admission.
Day School Tuition: $33,150
History: Milton Academy was founded in 1798 with the goal to “open the way for all the people to a higher order of education than the common schools can supply.” After celebrating its centennial, Milton Academy divided into separate boys and girls schools. The school eventually returned to its coed roots and today boasts an equal number of boys and girls among its 680 students.
Notable: Every other year since 1977, Milton Academy has hosted a Seminar Day, when it invites local and international experts in a variety of fields to come to campus and speak to students. Recent guests have included lawyer Alan Dershowitz and editorial cartoonist Dan Wasserman.
Course Catalog: Sometimes learning how not to do something is just as effective as learning the correct way. That seems to be the logic behind the course, “Engineering for Failure: Structures and Their Demise.” As part of the course, students will build various structures and test them to the point of failure.
Famous Alumni: T.S. Eliot graduated from Milton Academy in 1906, while Robert F. Kennedy attended the school for one year.
Day School Tuition: $33,900
History: Lawrence Academy was chartered by Gov. John Hancock and founded in 1793. The school’s main building burned down on July 4, 1868, as the result of a fire started by boys who were playing with firecrackers, and the school suffered extensive damage in a second fire that erupted during baccalaureate services in 1956. Lawrence Academy was coed from the time of its founding until 1898, when it transitioned to an all-boys school. The school, which became coed again in 1971, has an enrollment of roughly 400 students.
Notable: During the fall, students wear costumes and compete for bragging rights in the 2-on-2 Bos’n Ball soccer tournament, which was created by the boys’ varsity soccer team to honor Bos’n, a faculty member’s dog, who was struck and killed by a car.
Course Catalog: Insect lovers will jump at the chance to sign up for Lawrence Academy’s entomology course, which explores insects’ various effects – both good and bad – on the world. Through laboratory investigations, field experiences, and class discussions, students will learn how to collect and identify the major groups of insects.
Famous Alumni: Lawyer Jim Sokolove, AOL CEO Tim Armstrong, and Phish keyboardist Page McConnell all attended Lawrence Academy.
Day School Tuition: $33,260
History: Groton, a coed school of nearly 400 students, was founded in 1884 by Rev. Endicott Peabody, who attended Cheltenham College in England. In 2007, the school’s Trustees voted to offer admission free to students whose family income is less than $75,000.
Notable: A good first impression can be made with a firm handshake, and at Groton, students receive plenty of practice. Each student shakes the hand of his or her dorm head every day, a tradition that dates back to the school’s founding.
Course Catalog: One of the more unique courses offered at the Groton School is an ethics course titled, “C.S. Lewis and the Problem of Evil.” Through readings of such works as The Chronicles of Narnia, the class will attempt to define evil and explain how it exists and operates.
Famous Alumni: Former U.S. Secretary of State Dean Acheson, FDR, and Curtis Sittenfeld, the author of Prep, attended Groton.
Day School Tuition: $34,250
History: Maria Harrison Bissell Hotchkiss founded The Hotchkiss School in 1891 as an all-boys preparatory school for Yale. The school became coed in 1971 and the number of males and females attending Hotchkiss today is roughly equal.
Notable: The school places great emphasis on connecting its students to the world abroad. Hotchkiss began recruiting students from China in 1912, while Forrest Mars, a Hotchkiss graduate and the grandson of the Mars candy bar creator, has sponsored two student trips to Antarctica.
Course Catalog: “Gender and International Development,” an economics course, seeks to answer the question of whether equality between the sexes is linked to economic growth. Physics students compete in the annual Cardboard Boat Regatta, in which participants build two-person boats out of five sheets of corrugated cardboard and two rolls of masking tape.
Famous Alumni: Henry Luce and Briton Hadden, the eventual founders of Time magazine, met while working on the school newspaper at Hotchkiss.
Day School Tuition: $30,500
History: Phillips Academy was established in 1778 as an all-boys school and is the country’s oldest incorporated boarding school. The motto non sibi, meaning “not for self,” was forged into Phillips Andover Academy’s seal in 1782 by Paul Revere. Today, the school has more than 1,000 students with a student-teacher ratio of 5 to 1.
Notable: Most high school students take field trips to art galleries. At Andover, two large collections are mere footsteps away. The Addison Gallery of American Art features an extensive collection by such artists as Winslow Homer and Georgia O’Keefe. The neighboring Peabody Museum of Archaeology houses a collection of more than 500,000 artifacts related to Native American cultures. The museum staff leads students on excavation projects at dig sites throughout North America several times a year.
Course: Among the 300 different courses and 150 electives that students may take at Andover is the psychology course, “The Brain and You: A Users Guide.”
Famous Alumni: Perhaps the notorious cut-off sweatshirt that New England Patriots head coach Bill Belichick wears on the sidelines is his way of rebelling against the more formal attire he was required to wear as a student at Andover. Other famous graduates include George H.W. Bush, George W. Bush, actress Dana Delany, JFK Jr., Peter Sellers, and Pulitzer Prize-winning author Tracy Kidder.
Day School Tuition: $29,330
History: Phillips Exeter Academy was founded in 1781 by Harvard graduate John Phillips, the uncle of Andover Academy founder Samuel Phillips. The school became coed in 1970. Exeter’s huge endowment reached $1 billion in 2007, but has since dipped to around $700 million.
Notable: Exeter devotes about $60,000 a year to each of its students, which includes maintaining the Class of 1945 Library, the largest secondary school library in the world with more than 150,000 volumes.
Course Catalog: Through case studies of countries in Latin America, Africa, and Asia, students tackle an important question in the course, “Why Are Poor Nations Poor?”
Famous Alumni: Daniel Webster, Franklin Pierce, Da Vinci Code author Dan Brown, Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg, and CNBC anchor Trish Regan are but a few of Exeter’s famous graduates.
Day School Tuition: $34,500
History: The Kent School was founded as an all-boys school in 1906 by Rev. Frederick Herbert Sill, an Episcopal monk and Columbia graduate who believed there was a connection between intellectual effort and spiritual reward. Kent, which was the first secondary school in the country to charge tuition on a sliding scale, became coed in 1960.
Notable: While its values and mission have remained constant, the Kent School prides itself on innovation. The school began providing tablet PCs to every student and teacher in 1995 as one of the 29 pioneering schools of the Anytime, Anywhere Learning Program.
Course Catalog: Kent offers a number of interesting English courses, including “The Ghost Story” and “Micro Fiction,” in which students read and write stories that are no longer than 55 words.
Famous Alumni: KT Tunstall formed her first band, “The Happy Campers,” while attending Kent School on a scholarship. Actor Ted Danson and director Peter Farrelly are among the other famous graduates of the school.
Day School Tuition: $32,500
History: While its roots date back to the founding of the Cambridge School for Girls in 1886, the school moved to Weston and reopened under its current name with a class of 106 students in 1931.
Notable: The Lab System was instituted during the school’s first year in Weston. Under the system, students chose an academic area to study for 2 hours at the beginning of each day as teachers provide guidance. That same year, students constructed the Hobby House, a space for the school’s woodworking classes. Today, the Hobby House is used as the Admissions and Development Building.
Course Catalog: Among the new additions to CSW’s curriculum of more than 300 courses for 2009-10 is “Art of Prediction,” a history course that explores the establishment of a new world-view from the time of the Scientific Revolution through the development of an atomic bomb.
Famous Alumni: Helen Keller studied for one year at the school in 1896, while Paul Glaser, who played detective David Starsky in the ’70 television show Starsky and Hutch, attended CSW before pursuing his undergraduate degree at Tulane.
Day School Tuition: $31,850
History: Sarah Porter, the scholarly daughter of a Farmington minister, was tutored by Yale professors as a young woman and founded Miss Porter’s School in 1843. In addition to a rigorous curriculum, Porter demanded that her students remain physically active; to that end, the school formed a baseball team in 1867. Following Porter’s death in 1900, her nephew and his wife took control of the school, which was incorporated as a non-profit institution in 1943. Today, the school boasts more than 300 students.
Notable: In keeping with the school’s dedication to service, all students who enter the school as freshmen and sophomores must complete 20 hours of community service before they graduate. Students who enter as juniors and seniors must complete at least 10 hours. All-Star awards are given to seniors who complete over 100 hours of community service.
Course Catalog: Miss Porter’s School has long placed great emphasis on the arts, and it shows in the school’s course offerings. While newspapers as we know them may be dying, students enrolled in “The Living Newspaper” research, write, and perform original plays based on current events.
Famous Alumni: Ruth Hanna McCormick, the first woman elected to Congress from Illinois, graduated from Miss Porter’s School in 1897. Fifty years later, Jacqueline Kennedy Onassis earned her degree. More recently, Heather Lynch, the director of public relations for J. Crew, took part in the traditional hanging of the daisy wreath at commencement.
Day School Tuition: $32,600
History: The Governor’s Academy, which was established as the Dumm’r Charity School in 1763 and was later known as Governor Dummer Academy, is the country’s oldest continuously operating boarding school. Originally named after Massachusetts Governor William Dummer, the school’s name was changed to The Governor’s Academy in 2005. The campus includes an archives room, which houses the Document of Incorporation of Dummer Academy, which was signed by John Hancock and Samuel Adams in 1782. Today, the school is coed and has an enrollment of nearly 400 students.
Notable: The school’s 500-acre campus outside of Boston hosts the Massachusetts Special Olympics Fall Soccer Tournament every year. Governor’s Academy students help run the event by arranging the opening ceremonies, organizing public relations activities, registering the more than 800 athletes, and overseeing games during the round-robin tournament.
Course Catalog: In “Children’s Literature,” students will take an academic view of classics such as Charlotte’s Web and Alice’s Adventures in Wonderland. For their final project, students will be required to produce an original piece of children’s literature that will be shared with the faculty’s young children. Perhaps those children should determine each student’s grade, too.
Famous Alumni: Booker T. Washington, Jr., played on the football team, while Theophilus Parsons, a Chief Justice of Massachusetts and author of the Massachusetts Constitution of 1780, also attended the school.
Day School Tuition: $29,000
History: The Hill School was founded in 1851 by Rev. Matthew Meigs as the “Family Boarding School for Boys and Young Men” and remained an all-boys school until 1998. Student enrollment has traditionally been around 500 students; the school’s official song is called “A Thousand Hands.”
Notable: One of the many traditions at Hill School is the J-Ball tournament held each spring. J-Ball is short for Javelin Ball, a game created by Hill School students that combines tennis with baseball. The game is played on a baseball field, but players use tennis racquets instead of bats and tennis balls instead of baseballs. Only one player on each team is allowed to use a glove.
Course Catalog: Students enrolled in the school’s “Fine Woodworking” class in the fall will design and build a custom skateboard deck with paint and graphics for their class project. Students who take the course in the winter and spring will build a fully functional glass-bottomed canoe.
Famous Alumni: Legendary Kansas City Chiefs owner Lamar Hunt, who coined the term “Super Bowl,” Oliver Stone, and Donald Trump, Jr. attended Hill School.
Day School Tuition: $33,981
History: Dana Hall opened in 1881 as an all-girls preparatory school for Wellesley College. The first class of 18 students paid $325 for board and tuition.
Notable: Dana Hall has an equestrian team and students are welcome to board their own horses in the school’s 45-stall Riding Center. The school provides veterinarian and blacksmith care for the horses, as well as private, semi-private, and group riding lessons for students.
Course Catalog: Through English readings of classical texts, students enrolled in “Women in the Classical World” take a closer look at how Greek and Roman attitudes toward women helped shape Americans’ view of women today. The third trimester of the class is devoted to independent research projects related to material presented in the course.
Famous Alumni: Cynthia Voigt, an author of numerous young adult books, and Nina Garcia, former editor of Elle magazine and a judge on Project Runway, both attended Dana Hall.
That’s really depressing… My high school sucks. (There’s a link right there. On my name.)
posted by Isaac on 5-20-2009 at 11:44 pm
I guess as long as I don’t live in Mass. or Conn., I should stay out of educational debt. Go Texas.
posted by nutmeag on 5-20-2009 at 11:50 pm
And how are these any better then free public schools?
posted by Ellie on 5-20-2009 at 11:57 pm
@ Ellie: Fewer students for each teacher, I assume not all the bathrooms smell like pot, the architecture wasn’t inspired by prisons, the can afford arts and whatnot, their money isn’t tied to test scores, and I would hope they don’t need security guards always on campus.
posted by Isaac on 5-21-2009 at 12:03 am
I live near a bunch of these schools, pretty much between Groton and Concord. Everyone i’ve ever known that went to these schools was just a rich kid whose parents didn’t want to put up with them anymore.
However, Concord Academy is one of the nicest schools i’ve ever seen, definitely nicer than my university and we’re right on the Maine coast. And you can sneak into CA’s dining hall, say you lost your card and get a good free meal.
posted by Schmooz on 5-21-2009 at 12:57 am
Just a quick question to the mental floss community about school fees in the USA. Are the fees listed above per semester or per year?
In England they tend to give you them per term/semester (and there are 3 terms per year)
I just worked out my old school’s fees in dollars for the year as a comparison.
Nottingham High School – US$17,500 per anum (approx)
about half of the above places for a school that came in the top 10 in the country the year I graduated.
Compare that however to Eton.
Eton College – US$48,500 per anum (basic, not including equipment, music lessons etc.)
Difference in ranked places between the two schools… 4 (you don’t really get much bang for your buck there)
(Note when I have kids I wouldn’t send them to my old one, it drove me nuts and nearly sucked the life force and creativity from my body)
posted by Chris on 5-21-2009 at 1:03 am
@ Ellie: I attended one of these schools, and I have 3 cousins who teach at these schools, and they are in fact much better. the students who go to them are ridiculously lucky, as they allow you to form better relationships with teachers, who usually live in the dorms with you, and many, if not most of the teachers have PHDs- in fact my favorite english teacher had been taken from Wellesley College. the teachers are some of the most dedicated, enthusiastic, and helpful people I have ever met. it is clearly evident that they love their jobs and the kids they teach. Also, more that 75% of students are on financial aid, so they are not for the extraordinarily wealthy only. In fact the biggest donor at my school was as a student, literally penniless, and credits his education at this school as what made him so successful.
Once again, I cannot justify the price other than saying you get what you pay for, but keep in mimd that it is entirely possible, and probably likely, that if you go to one of these schools, you are not impossibly rich. Private schools get a lot of flack, but they are not horrible, evil institutions as they can be portrayed.
posted by Codpiece on 5-21-2009 at 2:07 am
The fees seem exceptionally silly when one realizes that Boston Latin, founded in 1635, is part of the Boston public school system, thus free. One wonders if the $30K tuition doesn’t have more to do with getting the children out of their parents’ hair than with educating them.
posted by Antinous on 5-21-2009 at 2:46 am
hey, you forgot about savannah country day school. i subbed there during grad school and it was at least $20k/year then, about 10 years ago…
posted by groanygirl on 5-21-2009 at 9:07 am
Hmm, with only two exceptions, all of these schools are in New England. Aren’t there any ridiculously expensive private schools in the rest of the country?
posted by Wilson on 5-21-2009 at 9:13 am
Well, nice to see that New England has taken a great chunk out of expensive secondary school list. I wish I had known some of these school’s would’ve given free tuition, I so would have gone.
posted by SriVani on 5-21-2009 at 9:28 am
@ Wilson
You bet there are. There are schools like this all over the country, but I think these on the list are older/more famous.
I was surprised that Georgetown Prep, a super expensive school where the DC elite send their kids didn’t make the list. Apparently its a mere 25K a year to go there, but if a student boards at school its 45.
In my experience, any thing that’s called a “Country Day school” is incredibly expensive and can rival these schools on the list in terms of tuition.
posted by Steve on 5-21-2009 at 10:10 am
You definitely do not have to be rich to attend private schools, just show a hint of wanting to better yourself. My wife went to Solebury in Pennsylvania on a hardship scholarship; she was dirt poor and living with a foster family at the time.
posted by Will on 5-21-2009 at 10:14 am
It was Peter Sellars, not Peter Sellers, who attended Phillips Andover Academy.
posted by Henry on 5-21-2009 at 10:48 am
I’m surprised you left off Linden Hall for Girls in Lititz, PA. Day school tuition is about $37,590.
posted by Hyacinth on 5-21-2009 at 10:52 am
Not sure how old these tuition fees are, but they seem out-dated. If you found current fees, I think you see most of these schools are at or above $40k for the year (certainly for the boarding schools). These places do exist, are harder to get into than most colleges, and justify these tuitions. Something must be going right on those campuses.
posted by Chris on 5-21-2009 at 10:53 am
I find it interesting that all of these schools are in New England. However, as a public school teacher who is underfunded and attacked on a daily basis verbally (and sometimes physically) I can only imagine that the education these students are receiving has got to be exceptional. If my options were the public school system where I teach, and being able to send my children to one of those New England schools, I would definitely want them to have the education from those schools.
By the way, Ellie, I think you wanted “than” instead of “then.”
posted by Jessica on 5-21-2009 at 11:08 am
You forgot Kent School’s most famous alumnus: Seth McFarlane, creator of Family Guy.
posted by AmyD on 5-21-2009 at 12:02 pm
Up until I read this article I was opposed to higher taxes. After reading the this article I have changed my mind. I live a comfortable middle class existence. Its disturbing to see the differences in education provided to the ultra rich and the middle class.
posted by Dan on 5-21-2009 at 1:05 pm
wow – glad i’m not the only one that noticed that all of these are New England schools and over half are in MA.
I expected most of these schools have students on scholarships. Me and my husband were recently discussing the benefits of public vs. private schools for our children (age 3 and unborn) and what the advantages would be for them – besides putting us in debt.
Eye-opener on the tutions. good job, MF.
posted by MamaBug on 5-21-2009 at 1:15 pm
As someone who lived in close proximity to three of these schools (Hotchkiss, Kent and Miss Porter’s), I can attest that these are fine schools, but I don’t think that any of my friends who attended them got a better education than I did at the local public high school. What these schools do offer is a better opportunity for future success via networking.
posted by AmyD on 5-21-2009 at 3:15 pm
You omitted Choate Rosemary Hall in Wallingford, CT, my alma mater. For the coming academic year it’s $33,030 for day students, so it must have been comparable last year. (I went on full scholarship.)
posted by Alissa on 5-21-2009 at 3:43 pm
A common cheer of ours to the local public schools was “That’s alright, That’s OK, you’ll all pump our gas someday”. We rarely got to use it because we are also superior in athletics.
posted by alum on 5-21-2009 at 8:28 pm
I went to Kent School, just after they started admitting girls in the 60s, and benefited from its sliding scale tuition. They educated both my brother and me for the price of one student. We came from rural Pennsylvania schools. I attended elementary school in a one-room school house with 35 kids across three grades & one teacher — so have long been grateful for the superb teachers and wonderful classmates which Kent provided.
posted by Mary B, Cambridge MA on 5-22-2009 at 11:04 am
Id prefer to live in the real world and experience things like parties, sex, culture, atmosphere, sports, and the high school experience instead of being buried in the woods with 400 other guys and graduating as a socially awkward virgin. But maybe i just “dont get it”.
The northeast is lame.
posted by David on 5-22-2009 at 4:41 pm
I went to a “special” boarding school in CT (read, students with varying degrees of learning disabilities and behavior issues, I was there for depression and a LD akin to ADD). occasionally I would take the train from school to NYC to visit relatives.
I often moved seats to get away from the inane jabbering of the miss porters girls (much of which was related to designer labels, dispite the fact they were all still in their uniforms).
the choate boys on the other hand, you’d THINK went to an all guys school. they would gawk and point but never seemed to actually TALK to the girls from miss porters or anywhere else….
posted by moonablaze on 5-23-2009 at 12:10 pm
@David- I went to a public school in NJ but many friends in HS and college went to schools like these in the northeast. From what they told me- including one ex-boyfriend- they all found ways around the rules and most were the craziest non-virgins I know :) No in all seriousness, they find ways of having fun. Anyone out there to back me up? Since I am just getting this word of mouth.
posted by Kelly J on 5-25-2009 at 8:46 pm
Missing from this list: Marlborough School is LA, CA
it’s up there in the $30,000s too. I don’t know the exact number, but definitely expensive
posted by Becky on 5-25-2010 at 12:48 am
They definateky didnt look into this. Myparents pay 30.000for my school and its not here
posted by yis on 1-2-2011 at 12:22 am
I go to Linden Hall school for girls and tuition for 7 day boarders is almost $47,00 w/ books, etc. i was surprised not to see it…
posted by Kayla on 7-31-2011 at 3:53 pm