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Frassati Catholic High School

Frassati Catholic High School is a private, Catholic coeducational secondary school located in unincorporated Harris County, Texas, near the Spring CDP and in Greater Houston. Frassati Catholic High School is administered by the Dominican Sisters of St. Cecilia Congregation from Nashville, Tennessee. The patron saint of this school is Pier Giorgio Frassati.[7] It was the first Catholic high school to be established in the northern portion of Greater Houston.[8]

Frassati Catholic High School
Address
22151 Frassati Way

, ,
77389

United States
Coordinates30°5′11″N 95°29′29″W / 30.08639°N 95.49139°W / 30.08639; -95.49139
Information
TypePrivate, Coeducational
MottoVerso l'alto ("To the heights")
(To the heights [3])
Religious affiliation(s)Roman Catholic
Patron saint(s)Blessed Pier Giorgio Frassati
Established2013
OversightDominican Sisters of St. Cecilia
PrincipalSister John Paul, O.P.
Grades912
Enrollment232 (2017)
Classes offeredCollege Prep; Honors and AP
Campus size63 acres
Campus typeCollegiate, multiple buildings [2]
Color(s)Cobalt blue and Grey    
Athletics conferenceTAPPS
MascotFalcons [5]
Team nameFalcons
AccreditationTexas Catholic Conference Education Department[4]
NewspaperLa Stampa [6]
Graduates89 [1]
Admissions DirectorMr. Tim Lienhard
Websitewww.frassaticatholic.org

History edit

Prior to the opening of the school, residents of the northern parts of Greater Houston wishing to attend Catholic school had to drive long distances to Houston's Catholic high schools; the nearest such school was 45 minutes away by car. Individuals and/or organizations began attempting to establish a northside Catholic high school in the 1990s.[9]

The North Houston Catholic High School Committee formed in 2007 in order to establish a Catholic high school serving northern portions of Greater Houston.[7] Members of the committee's board of directors included members of Catholic churches in Harris County and southern Montgomery County.[10] In 2008 it wrote a feasibility plan, and then wrote or obtained the curriculum, architectural design, and budget; Cardinal Daniel DiNardo gave his approval to these plans in October 2008. In 2009 the committee received a status as a nonprofit organization and acquired the land, spending $2 million, in December of that year. In 2010 the Dominican Sisters of St. Cecilia agreed to operate the school.[7]

In July 2011, DiNardo announced that the new high school would be named after Blessed Pier Giorgio Frassati, Man of the Beatitudes.[11] As of 2012 the school administration planned to spend a total of $70 million on the facility. About $25–35 million was to be spent on the facility's first phase, with $10 million for the initial structure and an additional $15–25 million for the remainder.[7] The members of the student committee Friends of Frassati campaigned for candidates for the mascots at area middle schools and during a field day event held at the Creekside YMCA. 100 potential mascots were in consideration. The mascot, the falcons, was selected in an online poll held on Friday November 16, 2012; 461 persons voted.[8]

On August 25, 2012 groundbreaking on the first portion occurred.[12] For its faculty it was initially scheduled to have three sisters as well as three other faculty.[10] Frassati Catholic High School opened in 2013 to an initial freshman (9th grade) class.[13] In 2014 the school had 72 students;[14] this increased to 94 in early 2015,[15] 160 later in 2015 and 230 in 2016.[14]

By October 2014 the school established a capital campaign to secure funding for campus additions.[9] Groundbreaking of Phase 1B occurred on October 28, 2014 with construction expected to be completed in the fall of 2015.[12] In 2015, the school welcomed its third class of freshmen, doubling the student population.[citation needed]

Operations edit

The region in which the school planned to draw its students is the area south of Conroe, west of Lake Houston, north of Beltway 8, and east of Texas State Highway 249.[7] Communities within the area include Conroe, Cypress, Humble, Kingwood, Spring, Tomball, and The Woodlands.[10] In October 2014 that area had six Catholic parish primary schools, one private Catholic elementary school, and twelve Catholic parishes.[9]

Campus edit

The campus is on a 63-acre (25 ha) plot of land along Spring Stuebner Road, about 3 miles (4.8 km) west of Interstate 45.[7]

The capacity of this first phase was to be 130 students.[8] The first building, which was to have a stone façade,[7] has twelve classrooms and two science laboratories,[15] and it was scheduled to include a chapel, library, and commons.[7] The total area of Phase 1A is 21,580 square feet (2,005 m2) of space.[15] The uppermost floor was to be decorated with glass.[7] The administration believed the facilities would be sufficient for the first two years of the school's life.[8]

Phase 1B had two components: additional classroom space,[12] and a 54,000-square-foot (5,000 m2) student life building; the latter includes a gymnasium, a 400-600-person assembly hall, a concession stand,[16] a fine/performing/visual arts area,[17] locker rooms, offices for coaching staff, a team meeting room, a training room, and a weight room. The gymnasium can be used as a 1,000-seat competition gymnasium, and it has two courts for basketball and volleyball matches.[16] Games and practices may be held at the same time in the gymnasium. The assembly hall may be used for fine arts performances.[17] The center opened on May 2, 2016 during a mass held by Cardinal DiNardo.[16]

Phase 1B's second academic building is a mirror image of the inaugural Phase 1A building. The gymnasium and fine arts building was completed in March 2016.[18]

Curriculum edit

Frassati Catholic High School has an ethics and culture curriculum. Over their four years, students at Frassati Catholic take courses on Catholic philosophy (in the Dominican and Thomistic tradition),[19] ethics, and bioethics. Seniors finish their requirements in the department by taking an Ethics & Culture Seminar.[20]

Sports edit

Frassati Catholic High School offers several sports including volleyball, cross country, soccer, flag football (a transitional program leading up to the school's first year of tackle football, which will begin in the 2016-2017 school year), swimming, boys and girls basketball, tennis, baseball, golf, and track & field. The school will add additional sports as it grows based on student interest. Almost 80% of Frassati Catholic's student body participates in athletics.

In 2019, the Frassati Catholic Boys Soccer Team made it to the TAPPS 5A Playoffs for the first time in school history. They would win their first playoff game on February 5, 2020 against Holy Cross San Antonio by a score of 3-0. 2 goals were scored by freshman Anthony Abib and one goal was scored by freshman Christopher Lopez. They would lose in the next round against Lutheran South.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ FCHS News Article
  2. ^ . Archived from the original on 2019-01-30. Retrieved 2019-01-29.
  3. ^ FCHS Website: Frassati
  4. ^ SACS-CASI. "SACS-Council on Accreditation and School Improvement". Retrieved 2009-06-23.
  5. ^ "Frassati Catholic Athletics".
  6. ^ FCHS Website: Clubs & Organizations
  7. ^ a b c d e f g h i Meeks, Flori (2012-08-21). "New Catholic high school coming to North Harris County". Houston Chronicle. The Spring Observer. Retrieved 2017-03-25.
  8. ^ a b c d "Frassati Catholic High School's announces mascot from 100 nominations". Houston Chronicle. 2012-11-26. Retrieved 2017-03-25.
  9. ^ a b c Peyton, Lindsay (2014-10-29). "Catholic high school in expansion mode". Houston Chronicle. Retrieved 2017-03-25.
  10. ^ a b c Dominguez, Catherine (2012-08-29). "New Catholic high school breaks ground". Houston Chronicle. The Spring Observer. Retrieved 2017-03-25.
  11. ^ "Our Name." Frassati Catholic High School. Retrieved on March 25, 2017.
  12. ^ a b c "Frassati Catholic High School breaks ground on phase 1B". Houston Chronicle. The Spring Observer. 2014-11-21. Retrieved 2017-03-25.
  13. ^ John Bat. "Frassati Catholic High School opens for Montgomery County and Northern Houston". The Woodlands Online. Retrieved 2014-05-06.
  14. ^ a b Olabi, Nora (2016-06-24). "Private schools in Spring, Tomball put finishing touches on expansion projects". Houston Chronicle. The Spring Observer. Retrieved 2017-03-25.
  15. ^ a b c Olabi, Nora (2015-06-09). "Spring-area growth drives prep school expansions". Houston Chronicle. The Spring Observer. Retrieved 2017-03-26.
  16. ^ a b c "Frassati Catholic High School opens new Student Life Building". Houston Chronicle. The Spring Observer. 2016-05-11. Retrieved 2017-03-25.
  17. ^ a b "Construction progressing on Frassati Catholic's gymnasium/fine arts building". Houston Chronicle. The Spring Observer. 2015-09-23. Retrieved 2017-03-25.
  18. ^ Frassati Catholic High School's Master Plan
  19. ^ . Archived from the original on 2016-04-17. Retrieved 2016-04-23.
  20. ^ 2016-2017 Curriculum Guide

External links edit

  • Frassati Catholic High School
  • Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Galveston–Houston

frassati, catholic, high, school, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenged, removed, find, sources, news, newspapers, books, scholar, . This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Frassati Catholic High School news newspapers books scholar JSTOR August 2015 Learn how and when to remove this template message Frassati Catholic High School is a private Catholic coeducational secondary school located in unincorporated Harris County Texas near the Spring CDP and in Greater Houston Frassati Catholic High School is administered by the Dominican Sisters of St Cecilia Congregation from Nashville Tennessee The patron saint of this school is Pier Giorgio Frassati 7 It was the first Catholic high school to be established in the northern portion of Greater Houston 8 Frassati Catholic High SchoolAddress22151 Frassati WaySpring Harris County Texas 77389United StatesCoordinates30 5 11 N 95 29 29 W 30 08639 N 95 49139 W 30 08639 95 49139InformationTypePrivate CoeducationalMottoVerso l alto To the heights To the heights 3 Religious affiliation s Roman CatholicPatron saint s Blessed Pier Giorgio FrassatiEstablished2013OversightDominican Sisters of St CeciliaPrincipalSister John Paul O P Grades9 12Enrollment232 2017 Classes offeredCollege Prep Honors and APCampus size63 acresCampus typeCollegiate multiple buildings 2 Color s Cobalt blue and Grey Athletics conferenceTAPPSMascotFalcons 5 Team nameFalconsAccreditationTexas Catholic Conference Education Department 4 NewspaperLa Stampa 6 Graduates89 1 Admissions DirectorMr Tim LienhardWebsitewww frassaticatholic org Contents 1 History 2 Operations 3 Campus 4 Curriculum 5 Sports 6 See also 7 References 8 External linksHistory editPrior to the opening of the school residents of the northern parts of Greater Houston wishing to attend Catholic school had to drive long distances to Houston s Catholic high schools the nearest such school was 45 minutes away by car Individuals and or organizations began attempting to establish a northside Catholic high school in the 1990s 9 The North Houston Catholic High School Committee formed in 2007 in order to establish a Catholic high school serving northern portions of Greater Houston 7 Members of the committee s board of directors included members of Catholic churches in Harris County and southern Montgomery County 10 In 2008 it wrote a feasibility plan and then wrote or obtained the curriculum architectural design and budget Cardinal Daniel DiNardo gave his approval to these plans in October 2008 In 2009 the committee received a status as a nonprofit organization and acquired the land spending 2 million in December of that year In 2010 the Dominican Sisters of St Cecilia agreed to operate the school 7 In July 2011 DiNardo announced that the new high school would be named after Blessed Pier Giorgio Frassati Man of the Beatitudes 11 As of 2012 the school administration planned to spend a total of 70 million on the facility About 25 35 million was to be spent on the facility s first phase with 10 million for the initial structure and an additional 15 25 million for the remainder 7 The members of the student committee Friends of Frassati campaigned for candidates for the mascots at area middle schools and during a field day event held at the Creekside YMCA 100 potential mascots were in consideration The mascot the falcons was selected in an online poll held on Friday November 16 2012 461 persons voted 8 On August 25 2012 groundbreaking on the first portion occurred 12 For its faculty it was initially scheduled to have three sisters as well as three other faculty 10 Frassati Catholic High School opened in 2013 to an initial freshman 9th grade class 13 In 2014 the school had 72 students 14 this increased to 94 in early 2015 15 160 later in 2015 and 230 in 2016 14 By October 2014 the school established a capital campaign to secure funding for campus additions 9 Groundbreaking of Phase 1B occurred on October 28 2014 with construction expected to be completed in the fall of 2015 12 In 2015 the school welcomed its third class of freshmen doubling the student population citation needed Operations editThe region in which the school planned to draw its students is the area south of Conroe west of Lake Houston north of Beltway 8 and east of Texas State Highway 249 7 Communities within the area include Conroe Cypress Humble Kingwood Spring Tomball and The Woodlands 10 In October 2014 that area had six Catholic parish primary schools one private Catholic elementary school and twelve Catholic parishes 9 Campus editThe campus is on a 63 acre 25 ha plot of land along Spring Stuebner Road about 3 miles 4 8 km west of Interstate 45 7 The capacity of this first phase was to be 130 students 8 The first building which was to have a stone facade 7 has twelve classrooms and two science laboratories 15 and it was scheduled to include a chapel library and commons 7 The total area of Phase 1A is 21 580 square feet 2 005 m2 of space 15 The uppermost floor was to be decorated with glass 7 The administration believed the facilities would be sufficient for the first two years of the school s life 8 Phase 1B had two components additional classroom space 12 and a 54 000 square foot 5 000 m2 student life building the latter includes a gymnasium a 400 600 person assembly hall a concession stand 16 a fine performing visual arts area 17 locker rooms offices for coaching staff a team meeting room a training room and a weight room The gymnasium can be used as a 1 000 seat competition gymnasium and it has two courts for basketball and volleyball matches 16 Games and practices may be held at the same time in the gymnasium The assembly hall may be used for fine arts performances 17 The center opened on May 2 2016 during a mass held by Cardinal DiNardo 16 Phase 1B s second academic building is a mirror image of the inaugural Phase 1A building The gymnasium and fine arts building was completed in March 2016 18 Curriculum editFrassati Catholic High School has an ethics and culture curriculum Over their four years students at Frassati Catholic take courses on Catholic philosophy in the Dominican and Thomistic tradition 19 ethics and bioethics Seniors finish their requirements in the department by taking an Ethics amp Culture Seminar 20 Sports editFrassati Catholic High School offers several sports including volleyball cross country soccer flag football a transitional program leading up to the school s first year of tackle football which will begin in the 2016 2017 school year swimming boys and girls basketball tennis baseball golf and track amp field The school will add additional sports as it grows based on student interest Almost 80 of Frassati Catholic s student body participates in athletics In 2019 the Frassati Catholic Boys Soccer Team made it to the TAPPS 5A Playoffs for the first time in school history They would win their first playoff game on February 5 2020 against Holy Cross San Antonio by a score of 3 0 2 goals were scored by freshman Anthony Abib and one goal was scored by freshman Christopher Lopez They would lose in the next round against Lutheran South See also editPier Giorgio Frassati Dominican Sisters of St CeciliaReferences edit FCHS News Article Capital Needs and Projects Frassati Catholic High School Spring TX Archived from the original on 2019 01 30 Retrieved 2019 01 29 FCHS Website Frassati SACS CASI SACS Council on Accreditation and School Improvement Retrieved 2009 06 23 Frassati Catholic Athletics FCHS Website Clubs amp Organizations a b c d e f g h i Meeks Flori 2012 08 21 New Catholic high school coming to North Harris County Houston Chronicle The Spring Observer Retrieved 2017 03 25 a b c d Frassati Catholic High School s announces mascot from 100 nominations Houston Chronicle 2012 11 26 Retrieved 2017 03 25 a b c Peyton Lindsay 2014 10 29 Catholic high school in expansion mode Houston Chronicle Retrieved 2017 03 25 a b c Dominguez Catherine 2012 08 29 New Catholic high school breaks ground Houston Chronicle The Spring Observer Retrieved 2017 03 25 Our Name Frassati Catholic High School Retrieved on March 25 2017 a b c Frassati Catholic High School breaks ground on phase 1B Houston Chronicle The Spring Observer 2014 11 21 Retrieved 2017 03 25 John Bat Frassati Catholic High School opens for Montgomery County and Northern Houston The Woodlands Online Retrieved 2014 05 06 a b Olabi Nora 2016 06 24 Private schools in Spring Tomball put finishing touches on expansion projects Houston Chronicle The Spring Observer Retrieved 2017 03 25 a b c Olabi Nora 2015 06 09 Spring area growth drives prep school expansions Houston Chronicle The Spring Observer Retrieved 2017 03 26 a b c Frassati Catholic High School opens new Student Life Building Houston Chronicle The Spring Observer 2016 05 11 Retrieved 2017 03 25 a b Construction progressing on Frassati Catholic s gymnasium fine arts building Houston Chronicle The Spring Observer 2015 09 23 Retrieved 2017 03 25 Frassati Catholic High School s Master Plan Ethics amp Culture Department Archived from the original on 2016 04 17 Retrieved 2016 04 23 2016 2017 Curriculum GuideExternal links editFrassati Catholic High School Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Galveston HoustonPortals nbsp Texas nbsp Catholicism nbsp Schools Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Frassati Catholic High School amp oldid 1177089261, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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