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Private Schools
Virginia has plenty of options that
can better chances for college and life overall.
by
Anna Barron Billingsley
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Directory
of private schools
in Virginia
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After
her first semester at University of Virginia, Susan
Holt returned home to Petersburg in tears: She was floundering
academically. Yet, several years later, when her brother
Mark arrived back home as a freshman from Wake Forest
University, he was on the Dean's List. Their mother,
Jean Holt, pondered the difference. After all, the siblings
possessed similar intellectual aptitudes and attended
equally challenging colleges.
The difference, she surmised, was their high school
experience. Susan attended a local private school where
she received good preparation for life, but not college.
Mark, on the other hand, sacrificed convenience for
curriculum. He commuted 45 minutes each way for his
last three years of high school so that he could attend
The Collegiate School in suburban Richmond. Collegiate
was a good fit for her son, Holt says. "He became
more sure of himself. He was ready to meet the world."
Families
across Virginia are seeking schools that offer good
fits for their children. If they live in the right zip
code, they may be fortunate enough to send their children
to one of the state's many fine public schools. But
as a number of parents have discovered, academic excellence
in public schools can be a crap shoot. Some fall short
of the standards needed for students to get into top
colleges. Even more troubling, public schools have a
duty to handle all students regardless of their scholastic
abilities or whether they can behave in class. So, while
private schools require a significant financial commitment,
more and more families believe it's worth the sacrifice.
Selecting
the right private school can be challenging. There is
a wide array of choices: parochial vs. secular, coed
vs. single-sex, boarding vs. day school, uniforms vs.
no uniforms. If special circumstances exist, such as
behavior or learning problems, a further sub-set of
schools emerges. Tuitions vary widely, and locations
are not always convenient. The Virginia Council for
Private Education (VCPE) tracks about 350 private schools
from every pocket of the state, ranging in size from
less than 100 to 1,500 students and costing anywhere
from $3,000 to $30,000 a year. On the list are church-related
preschools, single-sex boarding schools, Catholic schools,
Montessori schools, military schools, schools for emotionally
disturbed students, Hebrew schools, an Islamic school,
college-preparatory schools, arts-oriented schools and
schools for students with learning disabilities.
Moreover,
VCPE's list is not comprehensive. Included are only
those schools that meet the standards of accrediting
associations approved by the council. While public schools
in the state are monitored by the Virginia Board of
Education, private school accreditation is a voluntary
process. Many private schools in Virginia believe it
is to their benefit to seek accreditation, a process
that involves extensive outside review of the school
and its policies. Others do not.
What's
a parent to do? "Look at your child and determine
what's best for that child," says George McVey,
former headmaster of St. Christopher's, a boys' preparatory
school in Richmond, and now head of the VCPE. Accreditation
can be a starting point. "If a school is accredited,"
McVey says, "you know someone is looking over its
shoulder." Or, as Sally K. Boese puts it: "If
you're considering an accredited versus a non-accredited
school and everything else is equal, you can assume
[with the accredited school] the things that are not
seen have been taken care of."
As
executive director of the Virginia Association of Independent
Schools (VAIS), Boese has closely examined private schools,
warts and all, throughout the state. If a school is
accredited, she says, parents can be assured the environment
is "safe, secure, healthy, financially sound and
well governed." Her association is one of 13 member
organizations of the VCPE, which functions as an umbrella
statewide for the private school sector in Virginia
and serves as a model nationally for the relationship
between public and private education. Other VCPE members
include the American Montessori Society, the Association
of Christian Schools International, the Mennonite Secondary
Education Council, the Association of Military Colleges
and Schools of the United States, and the Virginia Catholic
Education Association.
These
and other VCPE-member organizations set a high bar for
their member schools. "We are really privileged
to be in the state of Virginia," Boese says. Because
the VCPE serves as the link between private schools
and the Virginia Board of Education, "we have the
blessing of the state and the ability and the freedom
to function very independently." Before the 1980s,
McVey explains, the state was involved in accreditation
of private schools. That still is the case in many other
states. In Virginia, he says, the relationship between
public and private education is "harmonious, not
competitive."
"Virginia leads when it comes to the state's relationship
to non-public schools," says Gary Temple, regional
superintendent of Seventh-day Adventist Schools. VCPE
monitors the state's private schools, he says, and the
state accepts what VCPE says.
One
of the aims of accreditation, according to Boese, is
to "make sure the school is doing what it says
it's doing." That's why her organization and others
pay so much attention to the mission statements of schools.
If, for instance, a school states that its purpose is
to provide a nurturing environment, the accrediting
organization wants to see tangible evidence of that
nurturing. Says Boese: "We look at things analytically."
Families,
on the other hand, tend to view schools emotionally
and to focus on the intangibles. Betsy Frantz of Falls
Church, mother of three students in private schools,
said, "It's like buying a house. You look for a
good feel."
When
it comes to private schools, parents need to do their
homework and figure out "which environment their
child will be most successful in," Frantz says.
The assignment is "incredibly challenging"
and "ridiculously competitive," she adds,
particularly now that so many private schools are bulging
at the seams.
In
fact, as applications soar, private schools are becoming
much more selective. "We screen and really work
toward a good fit," says J. David Yoder, headmaster
of Eastern Mennonite High School in Harrisonburg.
Having
just undergone the months-long selection process with
her oldest son, who is a freshman this year at a boys'
school in Maryland, Frantz has some tips for other parents
undertaking this venture. Go to open houses sponsored
by the schools, she says. Then, let your child visit
for a day. Make sure the personality of your child matches
that of the school.
When
evaluating a school, parents should insist that "the
environment is safe, clean and wholesome - and child-centered,"
says Jean Parisine, headmistress of the Montessori School
of McLean. Order and neatness should prevail, she adds.
Parents also should investigate the credentials of the
teachers and make sure every adult on the premises is
prepared and positive.
Whether
a Northern Virginia Montessori classroom in which students
of multiple ages are interacting or a southwest Virginia
Christian school chapel in which students of different
denominations are praying, a common theme characterizes
private schools in the Commonwealth: a sense of community.
That certainly is a draw for his school, says Benjamin
Vaughan, headmaster of Isle of Wight Academy in Isle
of Wight County. In addition to a good academic program
and extracurricular activities, "we offer a family-oriented
atmosphere," he says of his 500-student day school
that takes boys and girls from preschool through high
school. And they do so for, at most, $3,900 a year.
Other
private schools also try to promote a family atmosphere,
but the tuition can be much steeper. At The Madeira
School in McLean, an all-girls boarding and day school,
a significant number of faculty members live on campus.
The price tag there, though, is at the other end of
the spectrum: $30,000 a year for tuition, room and board.
About an hour and half southwest and about $5,000 cheaper
is another boarding school in which most of the faculty
members live on campus. Woodberry Forest is an all-male
school that features classrooms averaging 12 students,
an honor system that is taken so seriously no doors
ever are locked and a 1,200-acre campus that includes
a golf course, a river and areas for hunting and fishing.
With
all that, what is it that most distinguishes Woodberry
Forest? According to Admissions Director Joe Coleman,
"Academic excellence and a sense of community."
What Fork Union Military Academy offers is structure,
says school spokesman Lt. Col. Craig Jones. Where else
would you find 500 to 600 boys quietly studying each
evening, he asks. The all-male military boarding school
offers an environment free from distraction and peer
pressure. He views the school as "an academic training
camp." David Charlton, who oversees five Episcopal
schools in various parts of the state, says that every
school should offer "intimate, personal attention
customized to accommodate individual students' needs."
Historically,
he says, academic rigor has been at the top of parents'
checklists for schools. With the preponderance of drugs
and violence on school grounds, though, safety has become
a bigger issue, he says. And even more prevalent among
parents in recent years, he adds, is a search for values
or character development for their children. Gary Temple
of the Seventh-day Adventist Schools calls it a search
for "an integration of faith and learning."
Development
of "the whole person" is the way the Virginia
Catholic Education Association views it. A Catholic
education means "forming a spiritual side, an artistic
side and a physical side," says Linda Shovlain,
communications director for the Catholic Diocese of
Arlington. In addition, she says, the many Catholic
schools around the state encourage students to look
beyond themselves.
Private
school certainly has broadened her two daughters' horizons,
says Susan Hansen of Fredericksburg. "It has made
them all-around better persons." A product of public
school education, Hansen admires the benefits her husband
Dan received from attending a boarding school. Besides
forming lifelong networking opportunities with his classmates,
she says his educational background allowed him to "go
places and do things." She adds, "I decided
before my children were born that they would go to a
boarding school."
Although
they initially resisted the idea of going away to school,
Hansen says, both girls ended up "choosing schools
that matched their personalities and interests"
- Virginia Episcopal in Lynchburg for the older daughter
and Episcopal High School in Alexandria for the younger.
"It's a lot of money," Hansen says. "We
had to make sacrifices. But if I had to do it over,
it's one thing I'd do again for my kids."
Frantz,
too, talks about the financial toll. "We may have
to eat oatmeal every morning," she says. But it's
a matter of values, she adds. Some people send their
children to public schools, Frantz says, but use the
savings to take them to Europe every year.
Or,
as in Debbie Fisher's case, they send one child to public
school and the other to private. The family simply couldn't
afford the private school route for both, says Fisher,
who lives in Williamsburg and teaches in a public school
there. In exchange for a private school education, her
daughter knew all along that she had to attend a non-private
college.
Fisher
says her son did OK in public school, but she sought
a different environment for her daughter as soon as
she hit middle school. Fisher wanted the full focus
to be on academics. "In public school, you discipline
half the time." Private schools, on the other hand,
can say to students with behavior problems: "If
you don't go by the rules, there's the door," she
says. At Walsingham Academy, with its smaller class
sizes, Fisher's daughter "learned how to study,
how to organize."
It
paid off. Hallmates at Virginia Tech recognized her
daughter's abilities and asked her to help them with
their papers. Reflecting on her daughter's private school
experience, Fisher says, "I am very, very pleased.
We definitely got a return on our investment."
Return to Virginia Business - February 2002
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