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Academics

Classes small enough to actually talk.

Average class size of fourteen. A single Harkness table in every Upper School seminar. No course taught by a graduate student or adjunct — every class led by a full member of the faculty.

Lower School · PreK–Grade 4

The earliest years are the most carefully held.

Our Lower School wing is its own building within a building — a quiet, book-filled hallway with brass coat hooks, a reading garden, and a head teacher for every grade. Phonics and arithmetic are taught with discipline. Music, world languages, and outdoor time are not electives.

Middle School · Grades 5–8

The identity years, taken seriously.

Humanities Socratic seminars, lab-based science, an advisory group every student keeps for four years. No device-first classrooms. Writing is done by hand before it is done on a screen.

Upper School · Grades 9–12

Preparation that isn’t only for the test.

Twenty-two AP and honors courses. Four signature programs. Dedicated college counseling from Grade 9. A senior capstone every student presents publicly in April.

A sampling of Upper School courses

Representative, not complete.

English
Modernist Poetry
English
The Essay as Form
History
Capitalism & Its Critics
History
American Reconstruction
Math
Multivariable Calculus
Math
Number Theory
Science
Organic Chemistry
Science
Neurobiology Seminar
Languages
Latin IV: Vergil
Languages
Spanish Lit of the Caribbean
Arts
Studio Art Portfolio
Arts
Advanced Ensemble
Computer Sci
Data Structures
Computer Sci
Machine Learning Seminar
Philosophy
Ethics
Philosophy
Philosophy of Mind
A signature conviction

What we don’t teach — and why.

A school is defined as much by what it refuses as by what it adopts. BPD Academy does not teach to standardized test prep as a separate discipline. We do not use device-first curricula in any grade below seventh. We do not sort students into tracks that close doors before a student is old enough to understand what a door is.

None of this is a rejection of rigor. All of it is an insistence on a particular kind of rigor — the slow kind, the kind that builds attention and judgment rather than speed. When a family asks us how we compare to schools that teach differently, we tell them: we are not better, but we are clearer about what we are for.


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