- Source: Dalton School
The Dalton School, originally the Children's University School, is a private, coeducational college preparatory school in New York City and a member of both the Ivy Preparatory School League and the New York Interschool. The school is located in four buildings within the Upper East Side of Manhattan. In the 2024–25 academic year, tuition rates totaled $64,300.
History
The Dalton School, originally called the Children's University School, was founded by Helen Parkhurst in 1919. After experimentation in her own one-room school with Maria Montessori, Parkhurst visited other progressive schools in Europe including Bedales School and its founder and headmaster John Haden Badley in England. She developed what she called the Dalton Plan, which encouraged teachers and students to work together toward individualized goals. The Laboratory Plan was first put into effect as an experiment in the high school of Dalton, Massachusetts, in 1916. The estate of her benefactor Josephine Porter Boardman, was also near the town of Dalton and from this beginning the Laboratory Plan and school eventually took their names.: 15f
In 1919, Helen Parkhurst relocated to New York City, where she opened her first school on West 74th Street. Larger facilities soon became necessary; the Lower School was moved to West 72nd Street, and the High School opened in the autumn of 1929 in the current building at 108 East 89th Street. Eleanor Roosevelt admired the work of Helen Parkhurst and played an important role in expanding the population and resources of the school by promoting a merger between the Todhunter School for girls (founded by Winifred Todhunter) and Dalton in 1939.
Enlarged and modified through the years, Dalton still celebrates many traditions like lighting candles before winter break and holding a Greek Festival. Academically, the school still subscribes to the Dalton Plan, which Parkhurst helped to create. Over the years, the Dalton Plan has been adopted by schools around the world, including schools in Australia, Austria, Belgium, Chile, the Czech Republic, Hong Kong, Japan, and the Netherlands.
Admission
As of early 2013, the overall acceptance rate for grades K–12 at Dalton was reported by Peterson's to be 14%. Parental anxiety created by the highly competitive admission process was the subject of press coverage from 1999 to 2001. Long seen as a bastion of privilege, Dalton's efforts to broaden its mandate for diversity have met with some difficulty. In 2010, a financial aid budget of $6.5 million supported an outreach program for socio-economic diversity at the school. As of 2008 students of color made up 38% of the Dalton First Program. In the 2008–2009 school year, the kindergarten was composed of 44% children of color. Articles in The New York Times and The Atlantic have described difficulties experienced by some African-American children at the school.
American Promise was a PBS documentary that followed two African American students who enrolled at Dalton as kindergartners and the challenges they faced due to Dalton's lack of diversity. In 2020, Dalton found itself in controversy during the broader diversity, equity, and inclusion movement that followed the murder of George Floyd. The discussions continued into the following school year and resulted in the departure of school head Jim Best.
Notable people
Alumni
Ronnie Abrams, US judge
Dan Barber, chef
Antony Blinken, current U.S. Secretary of State
Montgomery Clift, actor
Anderson Cooper, journalist
Rachel Covey, actress
Claire Danes, actress
Edgar de Evia, photographer
Samuel R. Delany, writer
Blu DeTiger, musician
Maxim Dlugy, chess grandmaster
Shaun Donovan, former U.S. Secretary of Housing and Urban Development and Director of the Office of Management and Budget
Edward Downes, musicologist and radio quizmaster
Naomi Ekperigin, writer and comedian
Noah Emmerich, actor
Mark Feuerstein, actor
Frances FitzGerald, journalist
Barrett Foa, actor
Helen Frankenthaler, painter
Laura Geller, rabbi
Alexis Glick, television personality
Sam Gold, theater artist
Carol Grace, actress
Jennifer Grey, actress
Vanessa Grigoriadis, journalist
Jefferson Y. Han, research scientist
Hannah Higgins, writer
Marni Hodgkin, editor
A. J. Jacobs, journalist
Jason Jorjani, writer
Max Joseph, filmmaker
Joshua Katz, classicist
Brooks Kerr, jazz pianist
Rachel Kovner, United States federal judge
Dylan Lauren, businesswoman
Clyde Lawrence, musician
Gracie Lawrence, musician
Steve Lemme, actor
Sean Lennon, musician
Andrew Levitas, painter and sculptor
J. Kenji López-Alt, chef and food writer
Jenny Lumet, actress and #MeToo activist
Mary Stuart Masterson, actress
Helly Nahmad, art dealer
Jennifer O'Neill, actress
Morgan Pehme, filmmaker, journalist
Tracy Pollan, actress
Dara Resnik, screenwriter and producer
Simon Rich, writer
James B. Rosenwald III, entrepreneur
Matthew Ross, film director, screenwriter, journalist
Marco Roth, editor and founder of N+1 magazine
Melissa Russo, journalist
Eric Schlosser, journalist
Marian Seldes, actress
Wallace Shawn, actor, playwright
Fazal Sheikh, photographer
Christian Slater, actor
Marina Squerciati, actress
Jill Stuart, fashion designer
Emma Sulkowicz, performance artist
Veronica Vasicka, record label founder and DJ
Josh Waitzkin, chess player
Dean Wareham, musician
Julie Warner, actress
Bokeem Woodbine, actor
David Yassky, Director, New York City Taxi and Limousine Commission.
Matt Yglesias, writer
Andrew Zimmern, chef
Head of School
José Manuel De Jesús became Head of School in 2022. Former Head of School Jim Best resigned in 2021 after 16 years at the school.
Faculty
Donald Barr, headmaster c. 1964–74
Joe Frank, taught literature and philosophy 1965–1975; radio performer, writer.
Rhys Caparn, art instructor 1946–1972
Jeffrey Epstein, taught 1974–76. Financier; convicted sexual predator
Yves Volel, taught c. 1968–85. Lawyer, activist, assassinated while running for Haitian presidency
See also
History of education in New York City
References
Further reading
Semel, Susan F. "Dalton Plan" in Historical Dictionary of Women’s Education in the United States, ed. by Linda Eisenmann (1998) pp 111–113.
Semel, Susan F. The Dalton School: The Transformation of a Progressive School (1992).
External links
Official website
Kata Kunci Pencarian:
- John Dalton
- Dalton Knecht
- Sean Lennon
- Fred Thompson
- Dalton Castle
- Timothy Dalton
- Dead Poets Society
- Anderson Cooper
- Helen Frankenthaler
- Hope Leezum Namgyal Tobden
- Dalton School
- Dalton Plan
- Dalton High School (Georgia)
- Cheongna Dalton School
- Dalton, Massachusetts
- Dalton
- Dalton High School
- Dalton School Hong Kong
- John Dalton
- Dalton International