Phillips Exeter Academy

Harkness

How you'll learn
At Exeter, Harkness is more than a way to learn. It’s a way of life. It starts in the classroom and extends to field, stage and common spaces.

Harkness

Harkness

You'll love to learn

A lot of students feel like they have to know things before they come into the classroom, and I love when they discover that it's OK to not know things — that's actually why we're here.

Ms. Ullah, instructor in English

Lauren '26 talks about the discoveries she has made through discussion at the Harkness table.

Read how Harkness warms a winter morning.

My first job as a staff writer was on Lost … and it was exactly like the Harkness table. Ten to 12 people sitting around a table and just throwing out ideas. .. I remember sitting there thinking: This is literally Exeter, but in a professional setting. It felt strangely comforting because it wasn’t new to me.

Christina Kim '95

Hollywood might feel a long way from Exeter, but alumna Christina Kim '95 and Janet Yang '74 tell us Harkness is present in their TV and film careers.

Building a better classroom

Harkness tables are built according to the original 90-year old copyrighted and patented design, developed by philanthropist Edward Harkness. The standard size of the traditional oval Harkness table is 7 feet wide and 11 feet long, with seating for 12 students and one teacher.

“I had not suspected that a merely physical change in the classroom could so influence our work as it has done,” observed instructor Henry S. Couse during the first term of Harkness teaching in 1931. “Sitting in a group about a table instead of in formal rows of seats has abolished almost completely the stiff duality which used to obtain between instructor and class. … Now, there is a freedom of discussion, an eagerness to participate, that I never saw before, the value of which to both student and instructor is incalculable. And it comes mostly from sitting about a table.”

Today, every Exeter classroom and many common areas are adorned with our iconic table.

 

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The man behind the plan

Edward Harkness’ experiences at St. Paul’s School and at Yale shaped his thinking about education. Not a natural student, he struggled to maintain his grades and to adjust to the competitive environments at both institutions. When considering making a large donation to Exeter, he told his friend and Exeter Principal Lewis Perry that a “conference method” of teaching fostered real learning, not a setting “where the teacher is on a platform raised above the pupils and there is a class of 20 or more boys who recite lessons.” He added to Perry, “get up a scheme, I’ll give you all the money you need to put it into operation.”

In 1930, Harkness donated $5.8 million (the equivalent of $129 million today) to the Academy, and Perry set out to put the benefactor’s vision to practice. As for Harkness, whose father was an early investor in Standard Oil, he gave away more than $2.4 billion in today’s dollars before his death in 1940.

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