Archbishop Ryan High School

Archbishop Ryan High School (often called Archbishop Ryan or simply Ryan) is a Roman Catholic high school located in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, USA. The school is named after Patrick John Ryan, Archbishop of Philadelphia from 1894 to 1911.

Archbishop Ryan High School
Address
11201 Academy Road

,
19154

United States
Coordinates40°5′6″N 74°59′11″W
Information
TypePrivate, Coeducational
MottoBelong, Believe, Become
Religious affiliation(s)Roman Catholic
Patron saint(s)Blessed Virgin Mary and St. Francis of Assisi
Established1966
OversightArchdiocese of Philadelphia
SuperintendentSr. Maureen Lawrence McDermott, IHM
School code39–502
CEEB code393–244
PresidentMichael Barnett '90
PrincipalJoseph McFadden '97,M.A., M.S.Ed.
ChaplainFr. Jonathan Dalin
Grades9-12
Enrollment1,102 (October 1, 2017)
Student to teacher ratio21:1
CampusUrban
Campus size35 acres (140,000 m2)
Color(s)Black, Red, Gold             
SloganIn Vite Mane. (Remain on the vine)
MascotRaider (Men),
Ragdoll (Women)
AccreditationMiddle States Association of Colleges and Schools [1]
PublicationThe Vine (literary magazine)
NewspaperRyan Review
YearbookThe Sentinel
Tuition$8,150.00
Alumni35,000 +
Admissions DirectorDaniel P. Clifton '11, M.S.
Athletic DirectorJoe Zeglinski
Websitewww.archbishopryan.com

Established in 1966, Archbishop Ryan High School is the largest Catholic secondary school in the city of Philadelphia with a current enrollment of 1,325 students. The students come from over 60 catholic, public and charter elementary schools in Philadelphia, Bucks, and Montgomery County.

Archbishop Ryan High School consists of extensive technology resources: 84 classrooms, 7 computer labs, 3 music rooms, 2 newly renovated science labs, 2 state-of-the-art sports gymnasiums, 2 art studios, 1, 1 graphic design lab, 1 iMac Music Tech Lab, and 1 new Black Box Theater that was dedicated in the Spring of 2013 and seats 140 people. The entire school is wireless with internet access.

Over 600 of Archbishop Ryan's current students are second generation Ryan students.

History

The doors of Archbishop Ryan High Schools opened for the first time in 1966 as a co-institutional facility, i.e., two separate single-sex facilities with separate administration and faculty for each side of the building. Founded under the jurisdiction of the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Philadelphia, Archbishop Ryan was the twenty-eighth archdiocesan high school to be founded. The process of merging the two schools into one co-educational school began in 1988.

Ryan was the twenty-eighth archdiocesan high school, the sixth begun by Cardinal John Krol, who continued the tradition of furthering Catholic education in the Philadelphia archdiocese. The 35-acre (140,000 m2) tract on Academy Road accommodates a spacious school building, and outdoor athletic fields as well as parking areas. The original design by architects, Dagit Associates, eased the merger. The central shared facilities of auditorium, library media center, and chapel serve the coeducational student body. Ryan draws students from all across the Philadelphia area extending into the surrounding suburban areas.

In the summer of 2014, Archbishop Ryan hired the current president, Denise LePera, as the previous president, Michael McArdle, was appointed to the office of Director of Financial Aid in the Office of Catholic Education within the Archdiocese of Philadelphia. In June 2017, Denise LePera stepped down as President of Archbishop Ryan. In November 2017, Michael Barnett '90 was appointed the newest President of Archbishop Ryan.

Notable alumni

Academics

One of Archbishop Ryan's main attributes is the school's extensive and broad academic program. Offering many fields of study, Ryan offers a variety of studies such as English, Social Studies, Mathematics, Natural and Physical Science Studies, World Languages (Spanish, Italian, and Latin), Business, Technology, Religion, Music, and Fine Art Studies. Coursework is required in the fields of English, Social Studies, Mathematics, Natural and Physical Science Studies, Religion and World Languages.

Archbishop Ryan has a student/teacher ratio of 21:1. Ryan offers both courses in writing skills and digital literacy, and has 11 AP classes. Ryan offers a 4-year art program, including AP art and a 4-year music instrumental program. Ryan also offers a music tech course. Holy Family University offers college level courses at the Ryan campus for seniors during the regular school day.

Archbishop Ryan hosts the archdiocesan program for students with diagnosed learning needs, the Bonaventure Program. The Bonaventure Program is for applicants with an IEP.

The Class of 2013 received $18 million in scholarships and financial aid for post-graduate study. Approximately 92% of Ryan's graduates go on to higher education.

Athletics

The competitive boys' sports of Archbishop Ryan include baseball, basketball, football, wrestling, bowling, cross country, ice hockey, golf, indoor/outdoor track and field, lacrosse, soccer, swimming, and tennis. The competitive girls' sports of Archbishop Ryan include basketball, bowling, cross country, field hockey, indoor/outdoor track and field, lacrosse, ragdoll cheerleading, raider cheerleading, soccer, softball, tennis, volleyball, and swimming.

Extracurricular activities

With a variety of extracurricular activities, Archbishop Ryan emphasizes and stresses the importance of involvement and participation in the school and community with almost 94% of the student body participating in after school activities and sports. The school boasts well over 74 clubs with everything from Strategy Games club to a Sewing club.

Archbishop Ryan has a theater program that produces 2 musical productions per year. It also hosts a summer program that produces a summer musical. Their auditorium's sound booth provides up to date Izod Surround Sound 55:1 settings.

The Ryan Review, Archbishop Ryan's award-winning newspaper, has received recognition year-after-year for journalistic excellence. All of the Review's editors are members of the Quill & Scroll International Honor Society for High School Journalism and the staff writers study closely with the editors. The staff uses Associated Press Formatting and InDesign to produce their paper. The Ryan Review does most of its own photography through the Photo Editor and two photographers through the use of a Nikon D40 camera with a 14-155mm lens. You do not need to be in the Journalism Course to submit written work or photo into the paper. All submissions should be sent to room 217N. This paper also features a unique texting service to allow student interaction with the editors. See the paper for details.

The Yearbook provides a way for students to participate in creating a yearbook which will be handed out to each graduating class as part of their prom fee. Students use InDesign, Photoshop, and Paint to do layout work for the yearbook and take most of their own pictures, using digital cameras and a single Nikon D300.

Other clubs and activities include:

  • Ambassadors
  • American Math Competition
  • American Sign Language Club
  • Art Club
  • Book Club
  • Chorus
  • Community Service Corps
  • Concert Band
  • Jazz Band
  • Pit Orchestra
  • Pep Band
  • Creative Writing Club
  • Future Business Leaders of America (FBLA)
  • Future Engineers
  • Health Careers Club
  • Interact Club
  • Mathletes (JV and Varsity)
  • National Honor Society (Rho Kappa, National English Honor Society, Nuestro Capitulo)
  • No Place for Hate
  • Orchestra
  • Ryan for Life
  • Ryan Pride
  • Speech and Debate Team
  • Stage Crew
  • Student Council
  • Table Tennis
  • Tribe-a-Thon Planning Team
  • TV Studio/Media Club
gollark: It's like being angry if they came up to me and forced it down my throat if I didn't eat it within 10 seconds.
gollark: Forced updates: have seen.Candy Crush randomly appearing: have seen.Advertising: have seen screenshots.
gollark: What specifically?
gollark: I install most of my software from the repos on Arch and it is *still* faster than Windows updating only itself and its random junk.
gollark: My Arch system: package updates run in the background, on demand, basically no manual intervention, except I need to reboot for kernel updates and it takes 30 seconds.Windows: the entire system updates at once, it randomly breaks, I can't use the system while it updates and it's far too slow.

References

  1. MSA-CSS. "MSA-Commission on Secondary Schools". Archived from the original on 2011-06-10. Retrieved 2009-05-23.
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