Graduation Requirements
In order to receive a Putney diploma, a student must fulfill the following academic requirements, as well as live up to responsibilities in all other areas of the program. Each student is expected to participate fully in the Evening Arts Program, the land-use program, Project Week, the Work Program, afternoon activities, dorm life, assemblies, Sunday Night Meetings, and other special events where attendance is required. Long Spring camping trips are a non-academic graduation requirement.The Putney faculty votes on each student’s eligibility for a diploma. AcademicThe academic program is rich in opportunity for intellectual exploration and discovery as well as creative expression.The courses are designed to encourage students to become author ties in their own right. Students approach the interpretation of literature, as do writers.The study of history is steeped in primary sources and students, like historians, learn to create historical narratives, research and interpret events. Students work in science class as do scientists and are encouraged to view the campus as a laboratory for discovery as well as develop an appreciation for the complexity and fragility of the environment. Math is taught as a language where phenomena can be expressed in numbers and problems solved elegantly. Spanish and French are taught with an emphasis on speaking, writing and appreciating the opportunity to achieve a more global understanding.The arts and the cultivation of creativity and the imagination are central to a Putney School education.The arts also inspire our students to value discipline in pursuit of their creative vision. Embracing skills and discipline to create meaning is the approach that characterizes the entire academic program. To graduate from The Putney School, a student must earn a total of 20 or more course credits during his or her high school years. Seniors must pass all courses in the second semester, in order to graduate. A full-year course is worth 1 credit. A student must earn 5 credits per year (normally 2 1/2 per semester), distributed thus:
*If a student is given credit for U.S. History at another school, they are required to take Research Seminar or complete a similar research project in another senior history seminar. All students must take classes in at least four departments each semester (that is, no student may take three of five courses in the same department in any semester). Exceptions to or waivers of these requirements are granted only by special petition to the Educational Program Committee or its delegates.
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