St. Rita School for the Deaf

St. Rita School for the Deaf
Address
1720 Glendale Milford Road
Cincinnati, (Hamilton County), Ohio 45215
United States
Coordinates 39°15′10″N 84°26′54″W / 39.25278°N 84.44833°W / 39.25278; -84.44833Coordinates: 39°15′10″N 84°26′54″W / 39.25278°N 84.44833°W / 39.25278; -84.44833
Information
Type Private, Coeducational
Motto Teaching communication for life
Religious affiliation(s) Catholic
Established 1915
Executive Director Sr. Marianne Van Vurst, S.C.
Chaplain Rev. Wysong
Faculty 99
Grades PK12
Enrollment 180 (2008-2009)
Campus size 237 acres (0.96 km2)
Color(s) Green and Gold
Athletics Basketball, Volleyball
Nickname Lions[1]
Athletic director Tim Kelly
Website http://www.srsdeaf.org

St. Rita School for the Deaf is an independent Roman Catholic[2] school located in the village of Evendale, near Cincinnati, Ohio.

History

Challenged by Archbishop Henry Moeller, Father Henry J. Waldhaus, with the help of the Knights of De l'Epee and the Saints Mary and Joseph Society, was able to raise the funds necessary to purchase the land for St. Rita School. The school opened in 1915 and became the first accredited high school for the deaf in Ohio. In 2016, Sr. Marianne Van Vurst SC was named as interim Executive Director of the school.

Approach and languages used

Currently, their philosophy is "comprehensive communication" essentially Total Communication with a different name. The school's deaf and hearing teachers use ASL as a method of instruction, but the majority use is Simultaneous Communication.

Academics and programs

While based in the Catholic Archdiocese of Cincinnati, St. Rita School works to meet the needs of Deaf, Hard of Hearing and students with special communication needs. Students come from all over Cincinnati in addition to students from northern Kentucky and North of Dayton as well.

St. Rita's is one of the first schools in the country to develop a program for dyspraxic children, sometimes referred to as "global" apraxia. The program teaches to the students communication disabilities (oral-buccofacial apraxia) and encompasses each student's global dyspraxic apraxia disabilities that affect the student's fine and gross motor skills with their motor planning; sequencing and motor- processing abilities (which include but is not limited to ideomotor, ideation, limb-kinetic and ocular motor apraxias).

The school's Montessori pre-school program is designed to meet the development needs of hearing and deaf children, starting at 3 years of age. The school also features an elementary, high school, and Career Plus programs.

Athletics

St. Rita's competes with area schools in basketball and volleyball. In 1962, the high school division petitioned the Greater Catholic League to compete in football at the reserve level.[3] Later, the high school became a member of the Girls Greater Cincinnati League.[4] Due to small class sizes, in 2017/2018 the school switched to intramural sports and did not compete competitively.

Fundraising

Like many Greater Cincinnati Catholic parishes, major funding comes from annual festivals. The St. Rita Fest [5] began in 1916 but stopped in 2016[6] It was one of the area's largest. The school still holds a Grand Raffle and a scholarship benefit dinner.

References

  1. Vissing, Jessica (January 2008). St. Rita School for the Deaf Lion Tracks (PDF). St. Rita School for the Deaf. 1 (1) http://www.srsdeaf.org/pdf/LionTracksNOV.pdf. Retrieved 2010-09-13. Missing or empty |title= (help)
  2. Amos, Denise Smith (2011-03-11). "Q&A with James Rigg, superintendent of schools". The Cincinnati Enquirer. Gannett Company. Archived from the original on 2013-01-19. Retrieved 2011-03-18. 'With the exception of St. Rita School for the Deaf, which is controlled by an independent board, there are three kinds of Catholic high schools in the Archdiocese of Cincinnati...'
  3. "History". Greater Catholic League. 2006-06-14. Archived from the original on 2010-10-15. Retrieved 2010-09-13.
  4. "History". Girls Greater Cincinnati League. 2008-02-06. Retrieved 2010-09-13.
  5. Steigerwald, Shauna (2007-07-11). "St. Rita Fest, an enduring summer rite, arrives Fri". The Cincinnati Enquirer. Gannett Company. p. B3.
  6. Knight, Cameron (2016-01-15). "St. Rita Fest Ends due to costs, staffing". The Cincinnati Enquirer. Gannett Company.
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