The Avery Coonley School | |
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Address | |
1400 Maple Avenue Downers Grove, Illinois United States |
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Coordinates | 41°47′17″N 88°01′12″W / 41.788°N 88.020°WCoordinates: 41°47′17″N 88°01′12″W / 41.788°N 88.020°W |
Information | |
School type | |
Motto | "Onward and Upward" |
Established | 1906 |
NCES School ID | 02024267 |
Head of school | Paul Druzinsky |
Grades | Preschool–8 |
Gender | Coed |
Age range | 3–14 |
Enrollment | 378 (2010) |
Campus size | 11 acres (4.5 ha) |
Campus type | Suburban |
Color(s) | Orange and blue |
Mascot | Fightin' Seahorse |
Accreditation | North Central Association |
Affiliation | National Association of Independent Schools |
Website | |
Coonley, Avery, School
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Location | 1400 Maple Ave., Downers Grove, Illinois |
Area | 10.5 acres (4.2 ha) |
Built | 1929 |
Architect | Faulkner, Waldron,; Hamilton, Fellows & Nedved, et al |
Architectural style | Prairie School |
NRHP reference # | 07000477 |
Added to NRHP | August 8, 2007 |
The Avery Coonley School (ACS), commonly called Avery Coonley, is an independent, coeducational day school serving academically gifted students in preschool through eighth grade (approximately ages 3 to 14), and is located in Downers Grove, Illinois. The school was founded in 1906 to promote the progressive educational theories developed by John Dewey and other turn-of-the-20th-century philosophers, and was a nationally recognized model for progressive education well into the 1940s. From 1943 to 1965, Avery Coonley was part of the National College of Education (now National-Louis University), serving as a living laboratory for teacher training and educational research. In the 1960s, ACS became a regional research center and a leadership hub for independent schools, and began to focus on the education of the gifted.
The school has occupied several structures in its history, including a small cottage on the Coonley Estate in Riverside, Illinois, and another building designed by Frank Lloyd Wright. It moved to Downers Grove in 1916 and became the Avery Coonley School in 1929, with a new 10.45-acre (4.23 ha) campus designed in the Prairie and Arts and Crafts styles, landscaped by Jens Jensen, who was known as "dean of the world's landscape architects". The campus has been expanded several times since the 1980s to create more space for arts, technology, and classrooms. Avery Coonley was added to the National Register of Historic Places in 2007, citing the "long-lasting influence on schools throughout the country" of the educational program and the design of the building and grounds.