Angela Mac
STAFF WRITER
Science teacher Ralph Bledsoe is well known and loved by students and faculty members at Andover High School.
Prior to high school, Bledsoe went to Southern California Military Academy (SCMA), a junior high boarding school. He then attended Northfield Mount Hermon (NMH), a boarding school in Massachusetts. After high school, he went to the University of Southern California (USC). Bledsoe noted that his experience was out of the norm: boarding in high school and commuting to college when most students did the opposite.
When Bledsoe made the switch from SCMA to NMH, he recalled that “all of a sudden, I was getting C’s and D’s, from A’s and B’s, because the work was at an upper level. It was no freaking joke.”
Compared to AHS students, Bledsoe had a lot more freedom and time off from classes. At NMH, students would only have classes three or four days a week. On some days, there would be free periods where Bledsoe “could go anywhere [he] wanted. You know [at AHS] every second is regulated.” Private schools like NMH would load up on schoolwork and then have days off for the students to complete it. Bledsoe admires AHS students for their constant work and compared it to a workday: “A lot of kids here will have 14-hour day jobs, where the job has to get done. Doesn’t matter the hours. You work through Saturday and you work through Sunday.”
With the free time Bledsoe had, he didn’t spend it thoughtlessly. As a work-oriented person, he studied in the library and prepared for the next class. At USC he made sure to study at all 11 libraries on campus. Bledsoe’s favorite subject in college was organic chemistry. Though organic chemistry may be regarded as one of the hardest classes, for Bledsoe, it came naturally. However, he reflected that his mind developed over time. “Don’t think your mental capabilities are going to stay static. Throughout your life, you’re still developing, and your mind is going to be clearer and clearer and clearer,” he stated.
Physical chemistry was the subject that challenged Bledsoe the most: “It was just, like, beyond my reach. A little bit. You know? So I blunted my drive, which was a mistake.” He explained that taking classes to get them out of the way is the wrong way to go about school. The right attitude was to take classes to learn a skill and to remember it, that way it could be used later on in life. To high school students, Bledsoe said, “You got to fight everybody. Got to fight yourself. You got to fight for what you need to do.”
In NMH, Bledsoe enjoyed being a part of the Afro-AM, a club for African Americans. The club located in the basement of the Cutler Science Center was called Harambee Umoja. Members of the club would go to socialize and throw parties in between classes, and even go to Phillips Academy to beat the students there in basketball.
Now in his 8th year at AHS, Bledsoe is proud of the students at AHS. In the mornings that he comes in tired, seeing the students energizes him and it gets him ready to start the lesson. As much as teachers love their students, each has their own pet peeves about them. However, Bledsoe’s pet peeve wasn’t about the students, but himself. He asked, “Why am I such a school person. It’s absurd. Why do I enjoy faculty meetings? No teacher enjoys faculty meetings.” After a pause, he asked himself again, “Why do I cry every single graduation and miss the kids?”



