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Return to Virginia Business - February 2004

Private Schools

Putting faith in education
Private evangelical schools grow and compete



by Heather B. Hayes
For Virginia Business
February 2004

WEB POINTERS
For additional information on private schools:
Virginia Council for Private Education
Virginia Association of Independent Schools

At first glance it’s easy to mistake a place like Norfolk Christian Schools as the educational equivalent of a megachurch. Like those showy and upbeat houses of worship that draw thousands on Sundays, Norfolk Christian is big and getting bigger fast.

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The schools’ leaders run an almost perpetual fundraising and building campaign. They have spent $15.5 million in the past five years to renovate and expand its schools, adding new classrooms, a gym, library and science labs, and more money and more building projects are on the way. And, they’re packing them in: Student enrollment has jumped from 595 to 790 over the past three years and is expected to top 900 this fall.

The similarities end there, however. Unlike the megachurches, Nor-folk Christian isn’t growing just to gather more souls. Getting bigger, says Headmaster David Patterson, is part of its formula for offering a private, biblically based education at an affordable price to families dissatisfied with public school offerings. “Right now we’re looking to grow to the 1,100-student mark, and that threshold will help us to keep the tuition down and yet be able to pay our teachers better salaries,” he says.

The demand at independent evangelical Christian schools is evident in Virginia and across the country. Greenbrier Christian Academy in Chesapeake has added 75 students in the past year, a more than 10 percent leap. Fredericksburg Christian Schools’ enrollment topped 1,150 students on five different campuses this year. And Williamsburg Christian Academy, slated to move into a new 64,000-square-foot building in late winter, expects to double its student population from 250 to 500 within the next few years.

These fast-growing Christian schools are different from elite, secular private schools or even the more established mainstream church-affiliated schools, which often tout fancier campuses or large endowments. Despite their expanding enrollment, independent Christian schools have to stretch every dollar.

“A lot of these Christian schools are just making it,” says David Sikkink, an assistant professor of sociology at the University of Notre Dame, who has studied the growth of private religious education. “We have to pinch every penny,” says Gary Foss, founder of Fredericksburg Christian Schools, an evangelical nondenominational school marking its 25th year.

Among evangelical schools in Virginia tuition usually ranges from $4,100 to $6,900 for high school students, less for the lower grades. Financial aid is often available and most schools have an annual fund to help pay operating costs. Greenbrier Christian Academy, for example, raises about $200,000 each year to cover expenses beyond what tuition pays for. A few schools have small endowments. New construction is paid for through fundraising campaigns from students’ families and community supporters.

Teachers, in fact, typically shoulder the burden of a shoestring operation with low salaries. Williamsburg Christian Academy pays an average of just $22,000 a year, about half the $41,000 average paid to a Virginia public school teacher. Interim Principal Gwen Martin admits that the sum is paltry, but “our teachers are here because they feel called to ministry and because they want to have an impact,” she says.

Norfolk Christian provides a slightly better salary structure, paying its teachers an average of $27,000 a year. Patterson hopes his growth plan over the next few years will allow him to bring those salaries up to $32,000 a year. In addition, he’s putting more money into staff development, increasing the budget from $8,000 to $50,000 per year. “We feel like that has already made a huge impact on the quality of our instruction,” he says.

That same focus on the mission over the money is reflected in the design and building at new or expanding schools. For their project Williamsburg Christian leaders turned to a Utah-based design firm that specializes in Christian-school construction. The firm, Daniel Cook and Associates, has a strategy dubbed “Building God’s Way.” It touts simple, rectangular buildings, gymnasiums and cafeterias placed in the center of the building to negate the need for tall exterior walls; no-frills detailing and negotiated alliances with major manufacturers for discounted pricing. The result: schools typically save 30 percent to 50 percent over traditional construction costs, says Mike McIntosh, the firm’s director of operations.

Fredericksburg Christian just completed a new elementary school in Stafford County that has room for 300 students. The building cost about $3 million, and while not designed by the Utah firm, it reflects the same approach. The cream-colored building has a neat but simple exterior of metal and cinderblock, and a flat roof. “We’re very plain Jane,” says Foss. “We think they represent well, but we try to stretch our dollars just as far as we possibly can.”

While the private evangelical schools have a different approach to construction, they increasingly are embracing more traditional academics. Like their fundamentalist forebears that dominated the Christian school boom of the 1970s and early 1980s, these schools place a significant emphasis on a Christ-centric worldview. But students also read non-Christian, even atheist, writers and take instruction in real-world ethics and world religion studies and have the opportunity to sign up for Advanced Placement courses. And the schools’ building programs have as much to do with adding state-of-the-art computer and science laboratories and fine arts and athletic facilities as with adding classroom space.
“Parents used to send their students to Christian schools because of the lack of prayer in the public schools, for moral issues, if you will, and if you didn’t have the best labs or the best fine arts facilities, that really was not their concern,” says Ron White, Superintendent of Greenbrier Christian Academy. “People still want the moral training, the character training, but today you hear people coming in and saying, ‘What’s your average SAT score? How many of your graduates are going on to college? Where are they going to college?’ There’s much more emphasis on the academic side of it.”

The attention to academics also helped propel the rising popularity of a unique private school concept called the Christian Classical School, which teaches grammar, dialectic (logic) and rhetoric. There are five such schools in Virginia, including the Faith Christian School in Roanoke, a six-year-old middle and high school that has seen so much demand that it will open a grammar school this fall and break ground on a new $5.5 million school building within the next year.
Faith Christian — which expects to have an enrollment of 110 students this fall — teaches, among other things, Latin, principles of interpretation and classical literature. By the 12th grade, students are required to read “Beowulf,” the complete works of Homer and books by Karl Marx, Adam Smith and Descartes. The school’s six graduates from last year all got into the colleges of their choice — including the College of William and Mary, Wake Forest University, and Furman University — and earned $180,000 in merit scholarship money.

“There are those who say you have to be either a rigorous academic environment or a Christian school — you cannot be both,” says Samuel P. Cox, headmaster of Faith Christian. “And we vehemently disagree with that. You can be an Evangelical Christian school that believes in the Bible and believes in what Christ has taught, and you can still be just as good as any school around, academically.”

Sikkink notes that key factors in this trend are the upward mobility of the average evangelical churchgoer over the past 30 years and the fact that the evangelical movement has effectively used modern styles of worship and modern music to draw a more professional demographic. “In some ways, Christian schools are just now catching up to this new reality,” he says.

Others point to the fact that Christian parents are increasingly disillusioned with public schools. “What we hear consistently from parents in deciding to enroll at our school is that their kids can’t learn in the public school because of the large classes and the lack of discipline,” says White. In fact, Christian schools do market themselves as having an edge in personal touch. Student-to-teacher ratios are often around 15 to 1 or lower. “We have a commitment to our parents that we will not allow one child to keep 15 or 16 others from learning,” White says.

That kind of discipline has always been a part of what private schools offered, no matter what their orientation. Yet today’s evangelical schools are not like the strict, authoritarian kind of schools that emerged in the 1970s. Most are non-denominational in their admission policies. Fredericksburg Christian, for example, has students from 150 churches. Greenbrier Christian Academy’s students attend 140 churches.

Despite the expanding enrollments and competitive academics, there are boundaries to what such schools want to be. Some are nearing the limits they’ve set for themselves. Norfolk Christian doesn’t plan to go beyond 1,100 students. “Once we reach our goal, we’ll stop there,” Patterson says. “We want to be able to know the students, to know the families. We don’t want to get so big that we’re not manageable.”

Return to Virginia Business - February 2004


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