The state鈥檚 only single-gender secondary school wins a basketball championship鈥 and newfound attention. |
Three thousand fans packed the stands of the Bangor Auditorium this past spring to witness Maine鈥檚 biggest basketball spectacle. The Warriors of Nokomis Regional High School were taking on the Lions of Catherine McAuley High School for the Class A girls state championship. The Warriors, from just down the road in Newport, were playing in their own backyard, but the Lions had traveled 120 miles north from Portland for the game. Still, the McAuley faithful were out in force, dressed in the Catholic girls鈥 school鈥檚 green and gold, faces painted, waving pompoms, and bearing hand-lettered signs that read 鈥淣un Better鈥 and 鈥淪isters of No Mercy.鈥
At halftime, McAuley was down 22-14, but in the second half the Lions came roaring back, going on an 8-point run that tied the score 22-22. Led by senior point guard Sarah Marshall, the Lions rebounded ferociously, defended tenaciously, and made key free throws as the lead changed hands seven times. The unsung hero of the second half was 5-foot-9 sophomore forward Tara Beaulieu, who, with brunet ponytail flying, swarmed all over Nokomis鈥 star player, 6-foot center Danielle Clark, denying the bigger girl the ball and holding her to 12 points, eight fewer than her season average. McAuley won, 50- 39.
As the jubilant teammates hugged each other and their fans in celebration, Sarah embraced coach Liz Rickett and asked, 鈥淐an you believe we won it again?鈥 Indeed, the McAuley Lions had repeated as state champions, capping a remarkable run of victories that began with their Cinderella season in 2000. In 1999, Rickett鈥檚 first year as coach, McAuley posted a dismal 1-17 record; but the following year, convinced by their new coach that a Catholic girls鈥 school with an enrollment of just 300 could compete against public high schools three, four, and five times its size, the 8-10 Lions managed to claw their way from the 10th seed in the state tournament to win the Western Maine title. Though the team lost the 2000 state championship game, the Maine press called the scrappy Lions a 鈥渞eal-life Hoosiers story鈥 worthy of the 鈥渟tate title for gutsiest comeback.鈥
Overnight, Catherine McAuley became a basketball powerhouse, making it to the state championship again in 2001 and winning the gold-ball trophy the next two years. One of the biggest reasons for the team鈥檚 turnaround was Sarah, Maine鈥檚 2003 Player of the Year, who transferred to McAuley as a sophomore. This past spring, as she prepared to graduate and accept a full scholarship to play basketball at Boston College, she reflected on what her team鈥檚 success has meant to Maine鈥檚 only single-sex secondary school.
鈥淚t鈥檚 put Catherine McAuley on the map,鈥 she said. 鈥淓veryone in the state was able to see what kind of school McAuley was.鈥
McAuley High is a two-story brick building connected to a gymnasium and auditorium by a glassed-in 鈥渕all,鈥 where students, dressed in red- and-gray plaid skirts and white blouses topped with either red sweaters or gray fleeces, congregate before and after classes and at lunch time. Operated by the Sisters of Mercy, the school is on the grounds of the order鈥檚 golden-domed motherhouse on a busy avenue in suburban Portland. A wrought-iron fence surrounds the entire complex.
Named for the Irish founder of the Sisters of Mercy, Catherine McAuley was established in 1969, after the order鈥檚 St. Joseph鈥檚 Academy boarding school merged with the diocesan Cathedral High School. It鈥檚 been Maine鈥檚 only single-sex secondary school since nearby Cheverus High, a Jesuit school for boys for 82 years, went coed in 2000 to increase enrollment and remain economically viable. During Catherine McAuley鈥檚 34year history, periodic rumors have surfaced that it, too, would go coed. But, as Sister Mary Morey, president of the McAuley High board, points out, the school鈥檚 19th-century namesake began her mission work in Ireland by housing and educating orphaned and working girls. So running an all-girls school, she says, 鈥渋s integral to our mission as Sisters of Mercy.鈥
Tara Beaulieu was dragged to McAuley High kicking and screaming, but in a way it was her own fault. Inspired by the team鈥檚 Cinderella season, she attended a summer basketball camp at the school. She was voted most valuable player, and Coach Rickett gave her family season tickets to Lions home games. As an 8th grader, Tara let it slip that she might like to attend McAuley, a surprise to her parents because the Beaulieus are not Catholic.
When it came time to decide on a high school, Tara and her parents had three choices: Portland High, her father鈥檚 alma mater and a city school offering the state鈥檚 most diverse student body; Deering High, a suburban school that most of the kids in Tara鈥檚 neighborhood would attend; and Catherine McAuley, a $7,000-a-year private institution. Tara leaned toward Deering, but after her parents toured McAuley, they knew immediately where she鈥檇 be going.
鈥淲hat sold me,鈥 says Tammy Beaulieu, Tara鈥檚 mother, 鈥渨as a science class. I saw 10 kids in the class. They were all facing forward, and the teacher was teaching. I just knew everyone was focused, and they were learning. Tara would have been fine at Deering, but she wouldn鈥檛 have been pushed. Tara is very competitive, and in public school the competition is just not there in the classroom.鈥
In her first-period honors algebra II class, Tara doesn鈥檛 look all that competitive. Wearing sneakers and a Boston College sweatshirt with her McAuley plaid, she adjusts her ponytail, talks quietly with a friend, and appears to ignore teacher Russ Valentine鈥檚 explanation of the remainder and factor theorems for polynomial equations. But when another girl blurts out 鈥淭hat鈥檚 cool! Who figured that out?鈥 Tara snaps to attention, ready with questions of her own.
There are only 11 girls in Tara鈥檚 algebra class, but 19 later pack into her Spanish II classroom, where teacher Terrilynn Dubreuil leads a recitation of the Lord鈥檚 Prayer in Spanish. The kids then settle in to listen to classmates report on Latin American celebrities like baseball stars Manny Ramirez and Vladimir Guerrero.
In English, Lynn Erkkinen drills her 16 pupils on vocabulary words and seems pleased when one student, asked for an example of 鈥渟ynesthesia鈥 (the rhetorical device of describing one sense by using another), immediately volunteers the Skittles candy slogan, 鈥淭aste the rainbow.鈥 Erkkinen then prepares them to read The Great Gatsby. 鈥淭his looks like it must be a hard book,鈥 observes Tara, 鈥渂ecause it has explanatory notes.鈥
Only nine of the 45 McAuley faculty members are Sisters of Mercy, and there is considerable turnover among the lay staff, in part because the school pays just 85 percent of what public school teachers earn. No one at McAuley argues that the school has a better academic program or better teachers, just a different learning environment. 鈥淪tudent behavior and discipline is too flexible in public school,鈥 says math teacher Valentine, who came to McAuley after teaching at nearby Deering High for two years. 鈥淜ids are always looking for limits, and if you don鈥檛 let them know, they go too far.鈥 Dubreuil, another former public school teacher, plans to transfer her own daughter to the school.
Private schools, of course, are not forced to educate students with behavior or learning problems, and Catholic schools tend to be orderly institutions. Eighty percent of McAuley High鈥檚 students come from Catholic families, but both Sarah Marshall, who is Catholic, and Tara, who is not, say that religion was not a factor in their enrollment decisions.
That leaves the school鈥檚 all- girl culture as the defining difference. It鈥檚 the one thing that everyone connected with the school seems to agree on: Girls do better without the distraction and disruption of boys in the classroom. 鈥淭hat was something I was shaky about when coming to McAuley,鈥 Sarah says. 鈥淚 was a huge tomboy, and all my friends were guys at Falmouth High School. But now, I don鈥檛 even realize there aren鈥檛 boys. With all girls, everyone鈥檚 more themselves, and conversations are more relaxed.鈥
According to Whitney Ransome, co-director of the National Coalition of Girls鈥 69传媒, all-female institutions have experienced something of a renaissance in recent years. NCGS represents 100 of the estimated 500 girls schools in the United States, and Ransome says at least 35 new facilities have opened since the coalition formed in 1991.
Whatever the reasons for enrollment at Catherine McAuley, it鈥檚 hard to argue with the school鈥檚 accomplishments. Not only did the Lions remain state champs in basketball this year; McAuley students also took first place at the regional drama festival and at the We the People mock congressional hearings in Washington, D.C. The entire class of 2003 has been accepted to four-year colleges, and three of the 72 graduates are National Merit finalists.
鈥楪irls,鈥 says Sister Edward Mary Kellerher, McAuley鈥檚 principal, 鈥渕ay I have your attention please.鈥 Instantly, an entire auditorium falls silent. 鈥淚 am going to bring in the seniors. That means no talking.鈥
With that, a pianist plays 鈥淧omp and Circumstance鈥 as the graduating seniors, arranged in order of height and dressed in white caps and gowns, march in pairs for the Class Day assembly. Once onstage, they sing 鈥淎merica the Beautiful鈥 and a lovely rendition of 鈥淥ne Moment in Time.鈥 The underclass officers present gifts of picture frames and T-shirts to the seniors. Then everyone sits forward to watch the class video鈥攁 collage of candid snapshots accompanied by such pop tunes as 鈥淕et the Party Started,鈥 鈥淕irls Just Want to Have Fun,鈥 and 鈥淔orever Young.鈥
The girls on the wide-screen TV and those in the auditorium look happy and healthy. No facial piercing or radical hairdos are allowed, and no boys are pictured鈥攅ven in the prom photos. The whole assembly has an air of sisterly affection.
When the video ends, the McAuley seniors, now free of their caps and gowns, circulate throughout the auditorium, exchanging cards and flowers. Sarah, dressed in a summery skirt and untucked blouse, hugs her friends and her mother. She says she made the right choice when she transferred to McAuley three years ago. Falmouth High, which her three older sisters attended and where she spent her freshman year, is one of Maine鈥檚 best high schools. Located on a spacious campus in a wealthy community, Falmouth moved two years ago into a brand-new, state-of-the-art building and annually posts among the highest scores on the Maine Educational Assessment tests鈥攚hich McAuley, as a private school, does not administer. Still, Sarah chose McAuley, and two of Falmouth鈥檚 best basketball players followed her lead in subsequent years.
鈥楾he classes are small, and there鈥檚 lots of one-on-one attention. The sisters know everyone, so it鈥檚 a very personal environment.鈥 Sarah Marshall, |
Sarah鈥檚 parents, John and Susan Marshall, say McAuley was always in the backs of their minds, in part because John is a graduate of Cheverus. But it was the team鈥檚 run at the state championship that rekindled everyone鈥檚 interest. Still, 鈥渋t definitely was not a purely basketball decision,鈥 Sarah says. 鈥淚 couldn鈥檛 be happy if I was just happy with the basketball side of it. The classes are small, and there鈥檚 lots of one-on-one attention. The sisters know everyone, so it鈥檚 a very personal environment. I鈥檝e had the best time here, and I鈥檝e learned a lot.鈥
While the basketball-related publicity has helped the school reconnect with alumnae and has won it support in the broader community, McAuley did not experience a spike in applications. Interest is more closely tied to the economy. Sister Kellerher has found, however, that when interviewing prospective students, she no longer hears, 鈥淚 really want to the come to the school, but...鈥 The 鈥渂uts,鈥 years ago, were often followed by concerns about the quality of athletics and extracurricular activities.
Even Tara is willing to admit something she鈥檚 never told her parents鈥攕he actually likes attending McAuley. 鈥淭hey made me come here. I wasn鈥檛 happy about the decision at all,鈥 she says. 鈥淪ometimes I still wish I could go to Deering, but I鈥檝e met so many new friends. I get the best of both worlds.鈥
Tara explains that along with her new friends at McAuley, she鈥檚 managed to retain her old ones at Deering, a major concern when she first enrolled. She needn鈥檛 have worried. During the Western Maine playoffs earlier this year, Tara鈥檚 two best friends went into the restroom after a Deering game and changed out of their school鈥檚 purple into McAuley green and gold to root for their old friend and her new school.
鈥淭his school is different,鈥 says Tara, 鈥渂ut not that 诲颈蹿蹿别谤别苍迟.鈥