Institute of Notre Dame

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Institute of Notre Dame
IND enter.jpg
Entrance to the Institute of Notre Dame
Address
901 Aisquith Street
Baltimore, Maryland, (Baltimore City) 21202
United States
Coordinates Lua error in package.lua at line 80: module 'strict' not found.
Information
Type Private, All-Female
Religious affiliation(s) Roman Catholic
Established 1847
President David C. Ring Jr. Ed.D.
Principal Mrs. Kathy Casey M.A.
Grades 912
Average class size 18
Student to teacher ratio 1:8
Color(s) Blue and White         
Sports Soccer, Volleyball, Field Hockey, Cross Country, Crew, Basketball, Cheerleading, Swimming, Badminton, Track and Field, Softball, Lacrosse
Mascot Penguin
Accreditation Middle States Association of Colleges and Schools[1]
Publication Garland (literary magazine)
Newspaper wINDows
Yearbook Clarissian
Tuition $13,650 (including fees)
Dean of Students Ms. Helen Bruns '04
Admissions Director Mrs. Jeannie Kihn
Athletic Director Mrs. Summer Quisgard
Director of Development Ms. Jerrilyn Borneman
CFO Mrs. Aimee Weil
Director of Public Relations Mrs. Lillian Hughes Knipp
Website

The Institute of Notre Dame is a private Catholic all-girls high school located in the Roman Catholic Archdiocese of Baltimore, Maryland.

History

The Institute of Notre Dame, known as "IND" or "the Institute" by those who are familiar with the school, was founded in 1847, making it the first school founded by the School Sisters of Notre Dame in the United States. The founder of the school is Mother Teresa Gerhardinger, now beatified in the Catholic Church. The school is unique in the fact that it has stayed in its downtown location on Aisquith Street since its founding. IND is adjacent to the Caroline Center, a center run by the School Sisters of Notre Dame which provides job training to local women. IND's current president is Dr. David C. Ring. Currently, around 315 young women attend the school.

In September 2010, IND was named Best Private School for the "Wi-Fi" Generation" by Baltimore magazine for its one-to-one student tablet PC program, which integrates technology across the curriculum. The historic building is fully wireless.

In 2000, Spanish teacher William Brown won a national award from National Catholic Educators Association for his efforts in education and conflict mediation at the school.

The school also has a partnership with Johns Hopkins Hospital called "Bond to Bond", where students volunteer in different areas of the hospital.[1]

The Institute of Notre Dame is very well known for its rivalry with Mercy High School. Once a year, the two schools' basketball teams match up to play a highly anticipated game in the Towson University gym. To fans, this game is known as 'The Game' or the 'IND/Mercy Game'. Over 4000 people have been known to attend. In 2006, 'The Game' resulted in a fifth consecutive win for the Institute of Notre Dame after an intense double-overtime.

Alumna Barbara Mikulski, member of the class of 1954, had this to say about the school:

"Attending the Institute of Notre Dame taught me that I could do anything I dreamed of doing. The sisters were intelligent, caring and had incredible inner strength. They taught me more than geography or mathematics; they taught me to help those in need of help. They inspired my passion for service."[2]

Over the course of the summer of 2008, the film My One and Only was partially filmed in the school. The movie was released in 2009.

Notable alumnae

  • Nancy Pelosi, Speaker of the United States House of Representatives (first woman in US history to be so); 1958 graduate
  • Catherine "Cassie" Mackin, NBC Newsanchor, NBC's first woman floor reporter at the Democratic and Republican presidential conventions, ABC news correspondent, two-time Emmy award winner for television journalism; 1956 graduate
  • Barbara Mikulski, member of United States Senate representing Maryland, the senior U.S. Senator from Maryland, longest-serving female senator and the longest-serving woman in the history of the U.S. Congress ; 1954 graduate
  • Captain Joan Queen, first woman and African-American captain of a U.S. naval hospital, “The Beaufort”; 1974 graduate
  • Mildred Otenasek, first female member of the Democratic National Committee for Maryland; professor, mentor and trustee, Notre Dame of Maryland University; 1932 graduate
  • Grace Geppi Connolly, first woman Register of Wills for Baltimore County, serving since 1998; 1961 graduate
  • Rosemary Stafford Baldwin, Baltimore Colts cheerleader (one of first in NFL); 1956 graduate
  • Eleanor O'Neill Dudley, Baltimore Colts cheerleader (one of first in NFL); 1956 graduate
  • Betsy Slade, actress
  • Chief Laura Shiloh, first female battalion chief in the 149-year history of the Baltimore Fire Department; 1981 graduate
  • Brigadier General Allyson Grant Solomon, first woman and African-American senior commander in the Maryland Air National Guard; 1979 graduate
  • Renee Demski MSW, MBA, Senior Director of Johns Hopkins Medicine’s Center for Innovation in Quality Patient Care as well as the Senior Director of Quality Improvement and Operations Integration for the Johns Hopkins Health System; 1981 graduate
  • Theresa Franz Meade DVM, biomedical researcher and regulatory veterinarian for Charles River, Inc. at the National Institutes of Health, National Institute on Aging; 1996 graduate
  • Carolyn Mignini, Miss Teenage America 1965, actress; 1965 graduate
  • Lauren Parkes, Miss Black Delaware USA 2007, Miss Maryland Galaxy 2008; 2005 graduate
  • Mary Anne Perry-Hoffman, DJ at WLIF
  • Mimi Haw Dietrich, author of 17 books on quilting and the recipient of Teacher of the Year from International Association of Professional Quilters; 1966 graduate

[2]

See also

References

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External links