We are a Catholic, Jesuit, college preparatory high school serving more than 1700 young men and women in grades 9-12 in becoming Men and Women with and for Others.
With nearly 150 years of history behind us, we are a Roman Catholic educational community rooted firmly in the nearly 500-year-old model of Jesuit education, leading the way in preparing students for the 21st century.
Our unique educational model combines the advantages of single-sex instruction with opportunities for young men and women to collaborate, serve, pray and socialize together to form the whole person—mind, body and spirit.
The strength of Regis Jesuit is found in the depth and diversity of its broad community of students, parents and alumni who strengthen and share their gifts through a lifelong Raider experience.
The transformational student experience has been developed thanks to a long tradition of generous philanthropic support of our enduring educational mission.
THREE RAIDERS RECOGNIZED FOR EFFORTS TO BENEFIT LEUKEMIA & LYMPHOMA SOCIETY
Three current students, Jillian Kieran '21, Kenna Cashman '22 and Natalie Cohlmia '20 participated in Students of the Year, a seven-week philanthropic leadership development program during which students foster professional skills such as entrepreneurship, marketing and project management in order to raise funds for Leukemia & Lymphoma Society (LLS), a global leader in the fight against cancer.
The two Regis Jesuit teams (Kieran and Cashman ran together as a team; Cohlmia ran a solo campaign) were able to raise $85,614 collectively, contributing to more than one-eighth of the entire student candidate fundraising total of $481,152 to benefit LLS.
Cohlmia was selected as the Mission Award winner of this year’s campaign. The winner is chosen based on a short essay they write describing how they incorporated the mission of LLS into their Student of the Year campaign. She is now eligible to win the national title.
Regis Jesuit High School admits students of any race, color, national and ethnic origin to all the rights, privileges, programs and activities generally accorded or made available to students at the school. It does not discriminate on the basis of race, color, national and ethnic origin in administration of its educational policies, admissions policies, scholarship and loan programs, athletic and other school-administered programs.