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Our Vocation. The conversation between student and teacher is the heart of our school; all that we do must be
born of and nourish that relationship. We are called to challenge the minds, fire the imaginations, and train
the bodies of the young people who have been entrusted to us; to enlarge their spiritual lives and to increase
their capacity for mutual and self-respect. We intend to prepare them to learn confidently for the rest of their
lives and to give generously and joyfully to others. We can accomplish these things only if we keep our students
safe and well while they are in our charge.
Our Obligation. We must ask our young people what they believe in so they can know themselves in the world. We
must give them the tools of rigorous and passionate intellectual inquiry and self-expression so they can grow.
In our commitment to diversity, we must show our students how to be colleagues and friends so they can act out
of respect and love. We must lead them to distinguish right from wrong and then do what is right so they can
be persuasive and courageous citizens.
Our Promise. As a school community with these purposes and responsibilities, we will engage the larger
communities of city, nation, and world of which we are a part. We will serve our neighbors. We will live fully
in our city—exploring its byways and playing over its terrain. We will learn its history and traditions, and
what it can teach us of the arts and sciences. We will embody and celebrate its diversity.
Our Means. Labore et virtute. The terms of our motto, hard work and moral excellence, are meant to strengthen
us as we pursue the promise and joy of Trinity School. We ask Trinity families, alumni, and friends to join us
in taking on this high calling.
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