Viewbook 2018

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They say some people are born to lead.

We think that’s a good start. 2

Welcome to Baylor.


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What it takes to lead. 4

Being born to lead does not guarantee that one will.

Leaders in action.

The potential has to be developed and nurtured, and that is what the Baylor School educational experience does. For over a century, we have tended the seeds of leadership present in all our students. With proper care, the seeds flower into core values: honesty, respect, spirituality, persistence, individuality – principles that fuel real leadership in college and beyond.

Baylor students put their leadership skills to the test in communities and on campus. Whether they are seventh graders raising money to help children from a South Dakota Indian reservation attend summer camp, or seniors diving deep into aquatic research in The Tennessee River, Baylor graduates are poised to become the world’s next generation of leaders.

Central to the task is the Baylor Honor Code. Dating to 1916, the code provides a structure within which students come to appreciate honesty, mutual respect, and their word as their bond. As that understanding turns into practice, those values form a foundation of trust, independence and responsibility from which Baylor students have launched careers with the UN, won the Pulitzer Prize for Journalism, developed life-saving cardiac diagnostics, and advanced the Human Genome Project. When you leave Baylor, you’ll have what it takes to lead.

BaylorLaunches. These are just a few of the colleges and universities Baylor graduates have recently attended. Amherst College Boston University Brown University Bryn Mawr College Duke University Georgetown University Hamilton College Harvard University Princeton University Rhodes College Stanford University Vanderbilt University Wake Forest University Yale University


The Baylor Honor Code

ding “The honor system is an understan among Baylor students that we do lie, not want among us one who will cheat, steal, or falsify information. I understand this principle, and I to recognize that I shall be expected live in accordance with it.�

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When it comes to leading,

Baylor students look beyond the classroom. From cancer research to collaboration with MIT students and college-level environmental research classes, Baylor students are leading the way in becoming tomorrow’s problem-solvers.

Imagine a robot entering a burning building and distinguishing between the heat of the flames and the body heat of a person who needs rescuing, or a computer program allowing the elderly to venture beyond the confinement of their nursing home through virtual reality. These are the real-world robotics possibilities investigated by students in Baylor’s engineering design class. 6 Leadership has many faces.

A patent-worthy big idea.

At Baylor, there are more than a thousand of them – students finding their leadership stride in the classroom, on the court, at the easel, on the stage, or out in the community. Within each of our Gates Scholars, Presidential Scholars and National Merit Semifinalists, we also see the tech wizard, the mixed media artist, the social activist, entrepreneur, and the champion athlete.

When Baylor students Eric Fong, Atherton Mook, Hays Mook, and Nick Perlaky claimed the nation’s top prize in a recent NASA competition, they were invited to present their research to engineers at Goddard Space Institute. At the urging NASA engineers, they are now pursuing a patent for their invention that involves applying microshutter array technology to increase data streaming speed in fiber optic data conduits.

Academics elevated.

Silicon Valley comes to Baylor.

The Harris-Stanford Honors Program gives some of Baylor’s highestachieving scholars uncommon opportunities like discussing public policy with Tennessee state officials during a behind-the-scenes visit to the capitol in Nashville, or discussing the merits of civic service at the Institute for Public Trust in Charlotte. Learn more: www.baylorschool.org/ honorsprogram.

Baylor’s academic reputation, inviting campus, and innovative spirit proved to be a perfect match for a Silicon-Valley based summer academy that brought to campus Fortune 500 companies and high tech investors who shared their experiences and heard some new ideas from the next generation of entrepreneurs.


A virtual-reality calm room developed by valedictorian Hayley Harwood ’18 could give parents an affordable and portable way to help a child with autism, and could also grant families more freedom to participate in activities outside the home with their child. She is now taking her talents to North Carolina State University as a Park Scholar.

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Amazing teachers >> Un

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BaylorInspires. Our instructors have earned Fulbright Scholarships and the Presidential Award for Excellence, and more than 75 percent hold advanced degrees from schools like Cornell, Emory, Vanderbilt, and Harvard.


Unparalleled engagement Motivated by teachers like Jean Lau, students are happy to give their all.

And they get plenty back in return. In her post AP Chinese class, students are taking the equivalent of a sophomore-level college course.

Leading authorities. As experts in their own fields of study, Dr. Dawn Richards, Dr. Mary Loveless, Dr. Ben Nelson, Dr. Patrice Miles, and Dr. Elizabeth Forrester are leading the way in developing curriculum and programs that will inspire the next generation of research scientists. A textbook case. When Baylor students need insight into the intricacies of mathematics, they go straight to the source: Dr. Dan Kennedy. His calculus and algebra textbooks are used by millions of students worldwide. A source of inspiration. Melissa Pojasek didn’t conclude her discussion of Frankenstein at the end of the semester, she kept it going into summer on a Frankenstein-inspired sojourn through France and Switzerland with ten honors English students.

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Best in Class Academic Center The recently completed $15 million academic center is Baylor’s new hub for our English and history classes. Whether they are analyzing data of contemporary urban issues in AP human geography or discussing ancient religious wars in AP European history, Baylor students leave for college with a broader way of thinking and new perspectives. Want to put your unique talents to work? • Report for the Baylor Notes student newspaper • Defend a client through Mock Trial • Pass legislation at Harvard Model Congress • Get involved in one of our 36 clubs – or start one of your own!

“My AP literature teacher really taught me how to think critically, which is the most important skill I have learned in high school.” ~ Clay Thames ’18, Yale University


“The ethos of our classrooms is to generate interest. Once students are interested, they will do things that they may have once thought they were incapable of.” ~ William Montgomery ’92, Dean of Academic Affairs

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OUR MISSION:

To foster in our students both the ability and the desire to make a positive difference in the world.


The world could use more leaders. Before our students can make a positive difference in the world, they need to understand more about it. World travel

develops perspective, cultural awareness, and empathy, and it prepares Baylor students to lead through collaboration and tolerance. Art and culture inspire the Liz Aplin trip to Italy. Washington, D.C. is the destination for the David M. Abshire Civic Leadership trip and the annual eighth grade class trip. Community service students visit Kingston, Jamaica. Walkabout takes students to India, Panama, and Maine. Want to live abroad for a semester? Apply to one of our exchange programs in Australia, South Africa, Spain, or France. Global Scholar distinction.

Many of our students choose to become a Global Scholar, our distinction for those who apply an international lens to their education by studying world languages, taking globally-focused courses, participating in activities like Model UN, and conducting Senior Global Capstone Portfolios. There’s a whole wide world to explore, and Baylor leads you to it. No language barriers.

Global focus means fluency in foreign languages. Baylor sixth graders take Spanish, German, French, Latin, and Chinese, then are allowed to choose the language they will study for the next two years. Once they reach the Upper School, they can become even more proficient in that language, or explore another one. This innovative approach has paved the way for Chinese 500 – the only college level Chinese course offered in area high schools.

The Barks-Guerry Faculty Global Study Grant Program

supports faculty travel that enriches classroom instruction and supports Baylor’s mission.

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“One Baylor.” On average, Baylor welcomes students from 14 countries, 24 states, and dozens of area neighborhoods. There are six dorms, diverse families and faiths, divergent backgrounds and cultures and numerous traditions.

simply choosing an outfit for the homecoming dance. They’re also here to keep schedules and activities on track, working with student prefects and proctors to help their fellow students through everything from homesickness to homework.

But there’s just one Baylor.

The Baylor boarding community fosters selfconfidence, mutual respect, independence and interdependence to a degree that most students won’t experience until college. With the Baylor family’s support, just about anything is possible.

The sense of community runs deep here. It starts with dorm parents. More than 40 faculty members live on campus. When the school day ends, they transform into mediators, mentors, counselors, cooks, and crisis managers – even if the “crisis” is


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BaylorWelcomes.

As Aden George-Warren sees it,

Some of the first friends boarding

life in the Baylor dorms is more than

families will meet are Baylor’s Parent Alliance Ambassadors. These parent volunteers help new students move into the dorms and show up throughout the school year with birthday cakes and other home-baked treats. Dorm life is the good life. Baylor School has six dormitories, each with its own unique amenities: gorgeous views of the Tennessee River, stone patios, TV and study lounges, faculty families, and dozens of friendly housemates.

movie nights and chili cook-offs.

“You grow so tight with all your friends – it’s a gi-normous family. Right now, I have 36 brothers in Lupton Hall.”


Our river offers more than a beautiful view. Baylor’s campus is home to the Southeast’s only freshwater research center: the Tennessee Aquarium Conservation Institute. The 14,000-square-foot facility gives students from around the state (and beyond) the unique opportunity to rub elbows with brilliant aquatic scientists. For some Baylor students, it’s a chance to dive even deeper into limnology – freshwater science – for their threeyear scientific analysis and research program.

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Dive deep! True knowledge comes from putting every part of your brain to work. That’s why Baylor’s science and engineering classes and our advanced research program require students to dive deep into complex problems. In our molecular biology lab, students are researching breast cancer with equipment widely found in professional cancer labs (but rarely seen at the high school level). In our engineering research lab students are designing a device that could be used to fight malaria in Africa. Baylor students are taught to see problems from innovative angles, envision scenarios, understand the process of trial and error, and offer creative and dynamic answers.

Technology’s Tools. The Weeks Science Building is supported with a $15 million endowment to ensure the most advanced program possible. In the words of one teacher, “It allows us to have all the best tools” for bringing STEAM theories to life: robots, apps, scoping devices, wind tunnels, computer programs, and much more.

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The end (of the day) is just the beginning. Leadership opportunities extend beyond the classroom.

When other campuses are winding down, Baylor kicks into high gear, and every student participates in after-school, cocurricular activities.

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Play in the jazz band, train with varsity teams, design costumes for a musical, or dedicate time to giving back through Baylor’s nationally-acclaimed community service program. Every year, students commit more than 40,000 hours to serving at home and abroad. They tutor kids at local schools, write grants to help underserved children, and work to improve educational opportunities for children in Kingston, Jamaica. On the stage, on the field, on the court, on the trail, in the pool or in the neighborhood rec center, Baylor students learn teamwork, empathy, collaboration, and improvisation – critical skills for emerging leaders. At the end of the day, there are dozens of ways to lead at Baylor.

“It never rains after three o’clock.” Legendary Baylor football coach James B. Rike once noted that Baylor only cancels afternoon activities when it rains. “But,” he declared, “It never rains after three o’clock.” Message received: Our students press on, rain or shine. BaylorCreates. For both academic electives and after class creativity, Baylor’s facilities are literally state-of-the-art. The Ireland Arts Studio features studio spaces for drawing, printmaking, pottery, sculpture, photography, computer graphics and painting – and it’s just one of three fine arts facilities on campus. All things theater take place in the Roddy Performing Arts Center, and the music building houses Baylor’s vocal and instrumental programs.


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Walkabout >> For more than 40 years, Baylor’s Walkabout program has been taking students (literally) outside their comfort zones.

Unleashing discovery. Trekking in India. Kayaking in Panama. Backpacking the Appalachian Trail. Each Walkabout journey is designed around skills that students learn every day after school. Taught by a team of adventure leaders that includes a Wilderness First Responder and a Whitewater Rescue Technician, Walkabout students love discovering the great outdoors.

Redefining spring break. Walkabout Director and Eastern Religions teacher Tim Williams describes the Walkabout trip to India as “a wonderfully uncomfortable spring break adventure.” Students live with Tibetan families, wander the banks of the Ganges River, and volunteer at Sikkim Happiness Home, where Himalayan children receive education, healthcare, and shelter.

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“I never would have gotten involved in something like Walkabout before I came to Baylor. It thrust me out of my comfort zone and I’m so thankful, because now I’m more comfortable trying new things.” ~ Esther Park ’13


Boundary-defying adventures

“Walkabout” is a term that Australian aboriginal tribes use to describe a young person’s rite-of-passage journey in the wilderness. Find out more at www.baylorschool.org/walkabout. 21


More state championships than 22

With more than 100 state championships over the past decade, Baylor School athletic leadership is going strong. In a single year,

the Red Raiders have brought home titles in cross country, swimming, tennis, wrestling, track, fencing, golf, and softball, plus recent national rankings in softball and girls and boys swimming and soccer. And Baylor players aren’t just champions on the field; they also score plenty of academic points. With regular appearances on National Honor Society and Scholastic All-American rosters, it’s no wonder our scholar-athletes earn as many academic scholarships as athletic ones.

It doesn’t end here.

Baylor boasts over 100 alumni from the past four years who are currently competing on college or university athletic teams, including Army, Stanford, UVA, and the University of Pennsylvania.

SO MANY WAYS TO PLAY | BASEBALL | BA CREW | CROSS COUNTRY | GOLF | FENCING | SWIMMING & DIVING | TENNIS | TRACK


any other school in Tennessee. 23

FOR THE LOVE OF THE GAME. One of the few things that rivals our love of competition is the high standard of Baylor’s athletic facilities. • A state-of-the-art training and fitness center for elite athletes • A football stadium with artificial turf and a seven-lane track • Three baseball fields and a softball diamond

• A field house with a cardio room, dance studio, erg room, athletic training room, equipment room, and film room • An expansive three-mat wrestling facility

• A three-field soccer complex, including artificial and natural turf fields

• An on-campus cross country course winding through the woods and along the Tennessee river

• A short-game golf practice center

• 24 indoor and outdoor tennis courts

• An aquatic center that features 25and 50-meter courses and seating for 700 specatators • Four basketball courts – historic Duke Arena and three others that convert to volleyball and fencing venues • An outdoor rowing center including a boat house and dock adjacent to the Tennessee River

Check out your favorite sport at www.baylorschool.org/athletics.

ASKETBALL | BOWLING | CHEERLEADING FOOTBALL | LACROSSE | SOCCER | SOFTBALL K & FIELD | VOLLEYBALL | WRESTLING


Outside magazine named Chattanoo

“Best Town Ev We couldn’t agree

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oga the

ver.” more.

Outside magazine readers have learned what Baylor students have known for decades. If you love the great

outdoors, Chattanooga is the place to be. Within minutes of campus lie some of the country’s most beautiful hot spots for kayaking, rafting, hiking, biking, rock climbing, paddleboarding, hang gliding, and more.

Add in minor league baseball, semi-pro soccer, trendy boutiques, cozy coffee shops, IMAX movies, and miles of breath-taking riverfront paths … living up to the title of “Best Town Ever” is no easy task, but Chattanooga more than meets the challenge.

Boarding, but not bored.

Fortune magazine declares

Every weekend, Baylor

Chattanooga “one of

boarding students get to taste

America’s most startupfriendly cities.” Chattanooga’s

ultra-fast internet service has earned it the nickname GigCity, and the city’s 140-acre Innovation District is a hub for startup companies. With Baylor’s impressive history of fostering future leaders, it’s no surprise that Chattanooga Mayor Andy Berke ’86, and fellow alumni Ken Hays ’72, Jack Studer ’01, and Abby Studer Garrison ’99 (to name a few) are behind the city’s latest chapter of re-invention.

what Chattanooga has to offer. Walkabout takes students rafting, hiking, bouldering or paddleboarding (and hosts sea kayaking and skiing trips on shorter school breaks). Shuttle buses run downtown and to the area’s main shopping mall. Overnight excursions to Atlanta and Nashville are led by our dedicated student activities staff. Spirit Week and special dinners heighten both competition and camaraderie. We want our boarding students to balance their work with play, and we offer plenty of it.

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One-on-one College Counseling

Baylor leads 26

MEET THE CLASS OF 2018 When Baylor students graduate, they’re not just alumni, they’re full-fledged world citizens.They go on to learn and lead at Princeton, Wake Forest, Duke, and Johns Hopkins. They’re wired for challenge, determined, and passionate.To help them chase down their dreams, Baylor counselors work one-on-one starting freshman year. And those efforts pay off big time. In the past five years, they’ve earned more than $80 million in scholarships. Lead on.

“As college counselors, we provide guidance and advice, ask probing questions, make recommendations and suggestions, provide referrals, and above all, inform our students of the many opportunities available to them.” ~ Stephen Jackson, Director of College Counseling


to choices. 27

Pictured above, left to right are Baylor Pillow, Hannah Berke, Matthew Davis, Maggie Lundberg, Chloe Smith, and Jack Tucker.

59%

are attending public four-year institutions A record

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athletes will continue their sport in college

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acceptances to Ivies and Public Ivies

100%

acceptance rate to four-year institutions

The Class of 2018 received

285

acceptances to colleges and universities around the world.

39%

are attending private four-year institutions

3.6

class average GPA Class of 2018 have enrolled at

87

different colleges and universities around the world, including Oxford, Penn, Stanford, and Yale.

Find out more at www.baylorschool.org/choices.


1893

FOUNDED IN

730 THE HONOR COUNCIL:

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Baylor’s guiding value system is led by 13 students and a faculty adviser

UPPER SCHOOL STUDENTS: 50% BOYS/50% GIRLS

games trips sports movies museums outdoors + more RESIDENTIAL LIFE

320 MIDDLE SCHOOL STUDENTS: 50% BOYS/50% GIRLS

200 STUDENTS FROM 21 STATES AND 14 COUNTRIES LIVE IN THE BAYLOR RESIDENCE HALLS

6-12 DAY SCHOOL: GRADES

116 TEACHING FACULTY + ACADEMIC ADMINISTRATORS 89 HAVE MASTER’S DEGREES 17 HAVE DOCTORATES

MIDDLE SCHOOL CALENDAR

is organized on the quarter system UPPER SCHOOL CALENDAR

is organized on the semester system UPPER SCHOOL STUDENTS

take 6 courses each semester

PARTICIPATION IN A CO-CURRICULAR ACTIVITY SUCH AS ATHLETICS, COMMUNITY SERVICE, ART, ENVIRONMENTAL SERVICE, MUSIC, OR THEATER

is required.


LAST YEAR, 341 BAYLOR STUDENTS TOOK

BOARDING SCHOOL: GRADES

772 AP exams, scoring 3 or higher on 88%

58 285 9-12 NATIONAL MERIT SCHOLARSHIP FINALISTS IN THE LAST 10 YEARS

LAST YEAR TEST SCORES (MIDDLE 50% RANGE)

and 92% achieved a 3.0+

67% OF THE CLASS OF 2018 HAD A 3.5 GPA OR HIGHER

Act Composite: 23–29 SAT Math: 550–690 SAT Evidence Based Reading & Writing: 600–690 OVER THE PAST THREE YEARS GRADUATES HAVE MATRICULATED AT

270+ institutions worldwide

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A RECENT CLASS OF 175 GRADUATES RECEIVED

acceptances to colleges and universities around the world.

100

%

OF BAYLOR GRADUATES ATTEND COLLEGE

PROFESSIONAL SUPPORT STAFF

Psychologist Learning Specialist Counseling Staff Learning Center Health Center College Counselors (3)

DORM PARENTS LIVE ON CAMPUS

ADMISSION TO BAYLOR =

selective + competitive

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Ready to lead? Visit us at www.baylorschool.org/admission. Call (423) 267-5902. Come for a tour. Take the lead. Apply.



171 Baylor School Road Chattanooga, TN 37405 t: 423.267.5902 f: 423.757.2525 www.baylorschool.org

Baylor School admits students of any race, sex, color, religion, national or ethnic origin to all the rights, privileges, programs and activities generally accorded or made available to students at the school. Baylor does not discriminate on the basis of sex, race, color, religion, national or ethnic origin in the administration of its educational policies, admission policies, financial aid programs, athletic programs, and other school-administered programs.


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