custom ad
NewsMay 16, 2017

WASHINGTON -- First lady Melania Trump announced Monday her son, Barron, will attend a private Episcopal school in Maryland, beginning this fall. The announcement answered one of the lingering questions surrounding the first family's unusual living arrangement. Melania Trump and 11-year-old Barron have been living at Trump Tower in New York since Donald Trump took office in January, while the president has lived at the White House...

By DARLENE SUPERVILLE ~ Associated Press
Barron Trump, with his father, President Donald Trump, and mother, first lady Melania Trump, disembark from Air Force One upon arrival March 17 at Palm Beach International Airport in West Palm Beach, Florida.
Barron Trump, with his father, President Donald Trump, and mother, first lady Melania Trump, disembark from Air Force One upon arrival March 17 at Palm Beach International Airport in West Palm Beach, Florida.Manuel Balce Ceneta ~ Associated Press

WASHINGTON -- First lady Melania Trump announced Monday her son, Barron, will attend a private Episcopal school in Maryland, beginning this fall.

The announcement answered one of the lingering questions surrounding the first family's unusual living arrangement. Melania Trump and 11-year-old Barron have been living at Trump Tower in New York since Donald Trump took office in January, while the president has lived at the White House.

Trump has said his wife and youngest child will relocate to the White House after the current school year ends, which meant finding a local school for Barron.

Melania Trump said Monday they have chosen St. Andrew's Episcopal School in Potomac, Maryland, for their son.

"It is known for its diverse community and commitment to academic excellence," she said in a statement. "The mission of St. Andrew's is 'to know and inspire each child in an inclusive community dedicated to exceptional teaching, learning, and service,' all of which appealed to our family."

Annual tuition ranges from more than $23,000 for pre-K to more than $40,000 for students in grades nine to 12.

"We look forward to the coming school years at St. Andrew's," Melania Trump said.

Founded in 1978, St. Andrew's, a day school, has a total enrollment of 580 students in prekindergarten through 12th grade, according to its website.

Class sizes are small, with anywhere from 11 to 13 students, and all of its graduates go on to college, the school said.

"As we came to know Barron through the admission process, it became clear that he, like all of our newly enrolled students, will be a great addition to St. Andrew's," school administrators wrote in a letter to parents Monday.

Receive Daily Headlines FREESign up today!

A spokesman said the head of the school, Robert Kosasky, would not have any additional comment out of respect for students' privacy.

The school is known for research-informed teaching and the use of neuroscience and other brain-based research to help high-achieving students unlock their potential and to tailor education to children with learning disabilities or differences.

Barron currently attends Columbia Grammar and Preparatory School on the Upper West Side of Manhattan.

St. Andrew's is in the wealthy enclave of Potomac, about 17 miles northwest of the White House and a 30-minute drive in light traffic.

"School leaders are working directly with the Secret Service to ensure that ... logistics and security will continue to work smoothly and discreetly next year for all of our students and families," the letter to parents said.

The Trumps' decision to send Barron to St. Andrew's marks the first time in decades the school-aged child of a president will attend a school other than Sidwell Friends, an elite Quaker school with campuses in Washington and Bethesda, Maryland.

President Bill Clinton's daughter, Chelsea, attended Sidwell.

So did President Barack Obama's daughters, Malia and Sasha.

Malia Obama, 18, graduated from Sidwell in June. She is taking the year off, what is known as a "gap year," before her expected enrollment at Harvard this fall.

Sasha Obama, 15, is a sophomore at Sidwell Friends.

Her parents decided to live in Washington after leaving the White House so she can finish her studies there.

Story Tags
Advertisement

Connect with the Southeast Missourian Newsroom:

For corrections to this story or other insights for the editor, click here. To submit a letter to the editor, click here. To learn about the Southeast Missourian’s AI Policy, click here.

Advertisement
Receive Daily Headlines FREESign up today!