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Tag: Private School

  • Teachers’ union’s lawsuit hurts Missouri’s most vulnerable kids

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    Children explore magnifying glasses at the Downtown Children’s Center in St. Louis. (Rebecca Rivas/Missouri Independent.)

    Frustration runs deep for Missouri parents like Libby Eversgerd. Her youngest child has been  using a scholarship to attend a small, private school after he “began to resist attending school due  to mounting pressure and lack of accommodations for his learning differences.”

    It’s not easy to find solutions to complex education problems, but once parents find a solution, losing it is a  nightmare. 

    The Missouri National Education Association (MNEA) lawsuit challenging school choice options could devastate thousands of low-income and special needs families across the state. If the union succeeds, children who rely on scholarships for tuition, learning therapies, or specialized instruction will face the very real possibility of losing access to the educational  lifelines that have helped them thrive. 

    This summer, the MNEA chose courtroom power plays over student needs by targeting a $51  million state investment helping economically disadvantaged and special needs children access high-quality education outside their traditional public schools. By suing to block these funds, the union directly threatens over 7,000 new scholarships slated for this school year, nearly tripling  the reach of the program and finally ending years-long waits for children who need help now. 

    If funding is blocked, families face painful choices: pay tuition out of pocket, drastically cut household spending, or send children (often with complex learning or physical challenges) back into environments that have failed them before. For working parents, school choice is the  difference between a child in second grade finally reading confidently or a student losing hard won academic progress. The union’s lawsuit ignores those stakes. Maintaining institutional control, in their view, is more important than the needs of Missouri families. 

    School choice programs prioritize Missouri’s most vulnerable kids. Families use scholarships not just for private school tuition, but for tutoring, transportation, adaptive technology, and therapies. Blocking those options means denying access to tailored learning environments, sometimes after years of waiting for an opportunity that finally arrived this fall. 

    More than a legal battle about taxpayer funding, the union’s lawsuit is a direct attack on  educational freedom for Missouri’s most vulnerable children and the parents who fight daily for  a better life. While union lawyers claim they’re defending constitutional principles, the impact falls squarely on the backs of families: children with reading disabilities or physical needs, single  mothers scraping together resources, and parents desperate for one more shot at helping their  kids succeed outside the standard system.

    Recent national data paints a troubling picture for students, especially those already facing challenges. According to the latest release from the National Assessment of Educational Progress (NAEP), students are struggling at unprecedented levels. The 2024 “Nation’s Report Card”  shows that average scores have declined since 2019 for twelfth graders in mathematics and reading, and for eighth graders in science (these scores were already trending downward even before the COVID shutdowns). 

    Among high school seniors, the percentage scoring below the basic achievement level in both math and reading has reached the highest point since the assessments began, with nearly half of twelfth graders performing below basic in math and one in three below basic in reading. 

    These results are sobering, as even federal officials admit, with the largest drops hitting lower performing students hardest and widening the gap between the lowest- and highest-achieving  students. Participation in hands-on science learning has also decreased, and absenteeism rates among twelfth graders are up sharply, with nearly a third missing three or more days of school in  the previous month. 

    Against this bleak backdrop, school choice programs are more critical than ever for families  failed by the standard system. Fewer than one in four twelfth graders are performing at a  proficient level in math, and rates of college readiness in both reading and math have dropped  since 2019. For the poorest and most vulnerable (those with disabilities, those qualifying for free  lunch), school choice may be the only path to academic growth and confidence. 

    Though the union claims to act in students’ interests, its actions tell the real story. 

    The union’s  lawsuit would devastate families, removing hope and resources from those who need them most. To block these lifelines now would not just cut off opportunity, but actively worsen the crisis revealed in the Nation’s Report Card. Missouri’s policymakers and courts should heed its dire warnings and do everything in their power to support, not sabotage, direct investments in students most at risk of being left behind. As Missourians, we must unite to secure our kids’ future and shield them from the actions of those who would jeopardize it. 

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  • Private schools are no better than public. School choice will take us backward. | Your Turn

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    It’s back-to-school season across the country, and as children sharpen pencils and power up tablets, we had a burning question for parents and caregivers: Do you still have faith in America’s public school system?

    The tug-of-war between public and private has been simmering for decades, and with President Donald Trump‘s decision to dismantle the Department of Education and congressional Republicans’ push to funnel more money into private and religious schools, the K-12 conversation has now come to a boil. Parents and children, it seems, have more options than ever – charter schools, homeschooling and “unschooling” among them – and we wanted to know how you decide what’s best for your families.

    Do public schools offer a competitive education for students? Are vouchers the answer? What would you do to improve our school systems? Do you think your own schooling and experience prepared you for the so-called “real world”? Dozens of readers from Massachusetts to Montana and Iowa to Arkansas responded in our latest Opinion Forum. Read a collection of their perspectives below.

    We’re grading public schools on the wrong curve

    Public schools are a public good. It’s not just about educating our own children, but also about making sure we have the educated citizens essential to a democratic society. Yet the vast majority of public schools are historically underfunded; they are already an endangered resource. Those who need schools the most will not benefit from vouchers; they will be hurt even more.

    Our schools already have to scramble for funds just to maintain the quality they have. Meanwhile, there’s a tremendous need for additional programs like public preschool and year-round schools, not to mention a tremendous need for higher teacher salaries ‒ which are criminally low.

    So-called choice programs like vouchers only drain funds from the neediest public schools and subsidize the parents of private-school kids. Vouchers and school choice programs will only take us backward. We cannot afford to lose more kids than we already have.

    I think the culture wars are mostly at fault for this. The evangelical right has had an outsize influence on national politics in their lobbying for things like prayer in schools. The social media fight about diversity, equity and inclusion and “wokeness” isn’t helping. Yes, many parents perceive that the public schools are failing them or their children, and I can understand this. But the pressures on public schools today are enormous. They are asked to do more and more ‒ to remediate, counsel and even feed kids ‒ all while their funding keeps shrinking and their public support diminishes.

    Private schools do no better than public ones – if you control for the factors that affect that child’s life outside the school. Public schools must accept every student who walks through the door − from the impoverished and the abused children to the kids who’ve never been read to until their first day of kindergarten. Of course private school kids are going to score better on standardized tests or other measures of “educational outcome” than public school kids!

    I attended multiple Catholic schools as a child, then attended public high schools. When I compare my schools with my children’s, I see my own education as mediocre. My children’s education was far and away better than mine in every sense; the schools of today teach understanding and critical thinking, while mine emphasized rote learning and memorization. Looking back, I see that this was because the public school was more concerned with the “whole child,” and valued our emotional health as much as our classroom achievement.

    Patty Kruszewski, Richmond, Virgina

    Our public school systems are antiquated

    My child has autism, so the convenience that other parents may feel from a simple school bus drop-off or pickup is not what I want or need. I want the school to be welcoming of parents, to be more of a small community, and collaborative. Educating my child is my responsibility, and I’m partnering with whatever school I send him to, and I want everyone to feel that way.

    It might have made sense 100 years ago to carve school assignments up by geography and use property taxes to pay for it, but it seems very antiquated today. People want a variety of options, and one school will never cater to all needs. Schools get stronger when everyone is there because they want to be ‒ not because they are compelled to be.

    For years, public schools complained of overcrowding; now they’re complaining because schools and classes are getting smaller. Is there an optimal funding, enrollment and staffing level? We already spend more per pupil than most other industrialized nations. People are having fewer kids and are recognizing that their kids need different things.

    Your Turn: I was a young mom. You couldn’t force me to have a baby in this economy. | Opinion Forum

    Outcomes are relative. Anyone with more than one kid knows that each is unique and needs something different. Some do well in large schools, some don’t. Some do well with tech, some don’t. Some need more character education, some need more hard skills. Education is as complicated as religion, and trying to boil it down to the governance or tax status seems odd.

    I mostly went to a low-cost, religious private school. I was rebellious and wanted to go to a public high school. My parents didn’t let me. I think I got a good education − probably better than the school I wanted to go to − but education is what you make of it. If you don’t have personal responsibility, motivation or interest, you’re not going to learn in any type of school.

    Education is framed as if it’s a conveyor belt, and if you miss a section, you’re doomed. It’s an industrial view of education that should have gone out of fashion decades ago.

    Adam Peshek, Atlanta

    I’m a public school teacher. We need active parents.

    As a public school teacher, I fully support anything that helps get parents involved in the education of their child. Without proper parent involvement, a child will not succeed in school. A voucher plan may help parents get involved. That said, taking resources from public schools is not the answer, especially when those resources go to schools that do not play by the same rules as public schools.

    Do you want to take part in our next Forum? Join the conversation by emailing forum@usatoday.com.You can also follow us on X, formerly Twitter, @usatodayopinion and sign up for our Opinion newsletter to stay updated on future Forum posts.

    Public schools are often the scapegoats for problems happening at home. Communities must invest in education, but the accountability for those investments must be consistent and applied evenly, no matter where parents use their vouchers.

    Parents and students will get out of school exactly what they expect. Nothing more. Nothing less. No matter which school you choose for your child, you need to hold it to the standards you expect.

    I attended a mix of public and private schools. I value my time in both. I thank my parents for being involved in the schools they chose for me.

    Andrew Taylor, San Antonio

    I don’t want government schools or vouchers ‒ just freedom

    I feel I can give my kids a better quality of education than public schools can. I’m a minority that grew up in an inner-city public school. I remember teachers walking out due to a lack of funding, busy work, 40 kids to a classroom, and watching movies with subs. My kids will have none of that. They can all read above grade level. And thanks to my privilege of being a stay-at-home mom who has money, I can afford to go all in and give them everything I didn’t have access to. Plus, I don’t have to worry about school shootings or bullying.

    I don’t know about private schools, but most homeschoolers I know don’t want vouchers. We don’t want government money because that will likely come with more government oversight. We want the freedom to teach our kids our way without red tape or hoops.

    I realize not everyone can homeschool or send their kids to private schools, but generally, I don’t think public schools are doing a good job. And that’s coming from someone with lots of friends and family who work in education. Kids can’t read today; they’re not ready for college or the real world, so yes, I get why people are looking for alternatives.

    Public school is a good safety net, but quality education? Decent, maybe. OK in some areas, sure, but on the whole? I don’t think it’s very good. I think we should just privatize the whole thing and give large incentives for inner-city communities or communities of color and poor areas so they can have access to education as well. Charter schools are already taking over − might as well lean into it, especially as public schools are not teaching well and not paying teachers well.

    Daisy Garant, Granbury, Texas

    Public schools are the best educational option. No question.

    When it came to deciding what kind of education I wanted for my kids, being able to compete in the job market and having exposure to a diverse environment were the most important factors for me.

    Study after study has proved that wealthy families benefit most from vouchers. In my family, we are high-income earners but cannot afford private school tuition and would not qualify for a voucher. Vouchers seem like a fabricated scheme by conservatives to drain funds from public education and force children into private Christian schools, where they will be indoctrinated with some version of Christianity instead of focusing on education. Whatever version it purports to teach may not be the version that aligns with our family values.

    My kids enjoy going to school. I understand that some districts have safety concerns the district should address, and I am worried about public funding.

    Public schools, without question, are the best educational option, exposing kids to a diverse group of people and ideas. Religious education is important if you are educating children on the variety of faiths practiced. What is inappropriate is when you single out one faith as the “true faith” to the exclusion of all other faiths. My kids will encounter people of many different faiths in society.

    Society can be difficult to navigate as an adult if you have been taught that anyone who doesn’t believe in your faith is immoral. For example, if schools are trying to educate based on Christianity, which version of Christianity is the right version? Protestant versus non-Protestant? Which Bible is the right version? King James or New International Version?

    The separation of church and state is foundational. I want my kids to learn history, social studies, math and science-based standards, based on proven scientific research and historical facts. When I want my kids to explore their faith, that is done by our church, not our schools.

    I attended public school in a small Midwestern community with wealthy families, farmers’ families and economically disadvantaged families, and learned something about each of those distinct groups of people. We said the Pledge of Allegiance every day in school. That’s what I want for my kids, and I think that’s what most families want.

    Betsey Streuli, Edmond, Oklahoma

    You can read diverse opinions from our USA TODAY columnists and other writers on the Opinion front page, on X, formerly Twitter, @usatodayopinion and in our Opinion newsletter.

    This article originally appeared on USA TODAY: I give my kids a better education than public schools could | Opinion

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  • Stevenson School Launches “Reflecting on Our Progress, Inspiring Our Future”

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    Stevenson School, a leading independent PK-12 boarding and day school, today announced the launch of “Reflecting on Our Progress, Inspiring Our Future,” a month-long initiative highlighting the school’s recent achievements and vision for the future.

    Stevenson School, a leading independent PK-12 boarding and day school, today announced the launch of “Reflecting on Our Progress, Inspiring Our Future,” a month-long initiative highlighting the school’s recent achievements and vision for the future. This initiative showcases Stevenson’s commitment to academic excellence, student well-being, and creating an inclusive community where every student can thrive.

    “For nearly 75 years, Stevenson has been a place where growth, learning, excellence, and joy come together,” said Dr. Dan Griffiths, President of Stevenson School. “Our purpose remains clear: To prepare students for success in school and beyond, foster their passion for learning and achievement, and help them shape a joyful life.”

    The initiative centers on five strategic priorities:

    1. Fostering academic excellence and a lifelong love of learning.

    2. Prioritizing student well-being as a foundation for joyful living.

    3. Broaden access and foster inclusivity, equity, and belonging at Stevenson.

    4. Inspiring growth through strong co-curricular programs.

    5. Ensure sustainable success and stewardship.

    Academic Innovation and Excellence

    Stevenson continues to help students achieve academic excellence through innovative curriculum design, hands-on learning experiences, and fostering growth in the areas of critical thinking, kindness, empathy, and creativity. Across disciplines, Stevenson faculty are reimagining education to prepare students for the future while instilling a lifelong passion for learning.

    From the new math, science and engineering center – which will offer cutting-edge resources for collaboration and problem-solving – to expanded elective offerings across the curriculum that build on the solid foundations built in earlier years, Stevenson is creating dynamic pathways for student growth.

    Experiential Learning Opportunities

    Experiential learning is at the heart of Stevenson’s approach. X-Term, an immersive two-week program, takes students into the world, whether conducting marine research in Mexico, summiting Mt. Shasta, or participating in a Zen retreat. These transformative experiences cultivate curiosity, resilience, and leadership while forging deep connections between academic disciplines and real-world challenges.

    Division-Specific Enhancements

    The Middle Division strengthens foundational learning with innovative STEM and field programs, while the Lower Division has created innovative programs such as Stevenson’s Writing Workshop, which fosters creativity, critical thinking, and confidence in self-expression.

    Community and Inclusion Initiatives

    Beyond academics, Stevenson fosters a culture of belonging through affinity groups, leadership roles, and mentorship programs. Prefects and student leaders help cultivate an inclusive, supportive environment where every student is encouraged to lead and contribute to their community.

    Co-Curricular Excellence

    The school has also expanded opportunities outside the classroom, enriching students’ experiences through outdoor education, athletics, and service learning. Increased weekend expeditions allow students to take advantage of Stevenson’s breathtaking surroundings while developing leadership and outdoor skills.

    And, with Stevenson’s strong athletics program, students at all levels – from first-time participants to future Division 1 collegiate athletes – can achieve their goals while learning teamwork, discipline, and resilience.

    At the same time, enhanced arts programs – within both academic and extracurricular settings – provide more avenues for self-expression, creativity, and connection with the broader community.

    “These achievements demonstrate our commitment to preparing students for success in an ever-changing world,” said Dr. Griffiths. “As we celebrate our progress, we’re equally focused on the path ahead and continuing to shape an education where curiosity and joy align with challenge and excellence.”

    Throughout March, this initiative will share stories of impact and transformation through digital content, videos, and community perspectives, illustrating how Stevenson’s strategic vision creates meaningful opportunities for students to learn, grow, and thrive.

    Source: Stevenson School

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  • Bonner Classical Academy Opens Its Doors in Sandpoint

    Bonner Classical Academy Opens Its Doors in Sandpoint

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    Press Release


    Dec 6, 2023

    The first school of its kind offering a Christ-centered education featuring Singapore math, an emphasis on American Civics in addition to mechanical and fine arts. School is now accepting new students for the 2023-24 school year.

    The doors have officially opened for Bonner Classical Academy, a K-12 private school located in Sandpoint that offers a Christ-centered approach that features a rigorous math curriculum in addition to its finely curated courses that include mechanical arts and American Civics among others. The school is dedicated to cultivating an ethos of wonder, knowledge, virtue, and wisdom in the tradition of classical Christian education. The academy’s core principles are to offer Christ-centered education, liberal arts academics, an emphasis on American civics alongside programs in mechanical arts and fine arts. The school stands out for offering Singapore math and a pure phonics literacy curriculum in the elementary school. Both curricula have a proven track record of success across the country, and they’re known for their multi-sensory approach to learning. 

    When students progress to middle and high school, they will read deeply in primary sources and classic works of literature, while also taking robust math and science classes. In addition to the rigorous academics, all students take classes in fine arts, outdoor skills, and skilled crafts beginning in kindergarten. Since opening its doors in September, the school has experienced tremendous support from the community, including homeschooling families and homesteaders, as well as those who enjoy the school’s proximity to life downtown. Many parents have found a shared vision in the classical Christian approach, and they appreciate a finely curated curriculum that combines the North Idaho spirit of faith, community, lifelong learning, and self-reliance.

    “Most important to us is the way BCA intertwines faith and learning. We had come to see that it would be much harder to pass on our faith to our kids if their school focused solely on skills and academics, while remaining silent about virtue, goodness, and the spiritual life. I’ve been following the classical education movement now gaining steam nationwide, and its mission resonates. BCA is reclaiming the enduring wisdom that was discarded with educational reforms of recent decades. I appreciate the way BCA plans to reflect and strengthen our local community. It’s wonderful to see the school integrating homeschooling families, planning a mechanical arts curriculum, and aspiring to shape young people who stay and serve Bonner County,” said Noelle Nugent, a parent of a current 1st grader enrolled at BCA.

    Bonner Classical Academy is now accepting applications and booking tours for prospective students. The school offers full-week and partial-week programs. Space is available for January start date. Please inquire on our website to book your tour.

    Source: Bonner Classical Academy

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  • Black Success, White Backlash

    Black Success, White Backlash

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    For more than half a century, I have been studying the shifting relations between white and Black Americans. My first journal article, published in 1972, when I was a graduate student at the University of Chicago, was about Black political power in the industrial Midwest after the riots of the late 1960s. My own experience of race relations in America is even longer. I was born in the Mississippi Delta during World War II, in a cabin on what used to be a plantation, and then moved as a young boy to northern Indiana, where as a Black person in the early 1950s, I was constantly reminded of “my place,” and of the penalties for overstepping it. Seeing the image of Emmett Till’s dead body in Jet magazine in 1955 brought home vividly for my generation of Black kids that the consequences of failing to navigate carefully among white people could even be lethal.

    Explore the November 2023 Issue

    Check out more from this issue and find your next story to read.

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    For the past 16 years, I have been on the faculty of the sociology department at Yale, and in 2018 I was granted a Sterling Professorship, the highest academic rank the university bestows. I say this not to boast, but to illustrate that I have made my way from the bottom of American society to the top, from a sharecropper’s cabin to the pinnacle of the ivory tower. One might think that, as a decorated professor at an Ivy League university, I would have escaped the various indignities that being Black in traditionally white spaces exposes you to. And to be sure, I enjoy many of the privileges my white professional-class peers do. But the Black ghetto—a destitute and fearsome place in the popular imagination, though in reality it is home to legions of decent, hardworking families—remains so powerful that it attaches to all Black Americans, no matter where and how they live. Regardless of their wealth or professional status or years of law-abiding bourgeois decency, Black people simply cannot escape what I call the “iconic ghetto.”

    I know I haven’t. Some years ago, I spent two weeks in Wellfleet, Massachusetts, a pleasant Cape Cod town full of upper-middle-class white vacationers and working-class white year-rounders. On my daily jog one morning, a white man in a pickup truck stopped in the middle of the road, yelling and gesticulating. “Go home!” he shouted.

    Who was this man? Did he assume, because of my Black skin, that I was from the ghetto? Is that where he wanted me to “go home” to?

    This was not an isolated incident. When I jog through upscale white neighborhoods near my home in Connecticut, white people tense up—unless I wear my Yale or University of Pennsylvania sweatshirts. When my jogging outfit associates me with an Ivy League university, it identifies me as a certain kind of Black person: a less scary one who has passed inspection under the “white gaze.” Strangers with dark skin are suspect until they can prove their trustworthiness, which is hard to do in fleeting public interactions. For this reason, Black students attending universities near inner cities know to wear college apparel, in hopes of avoiding racial profiling by the police or others.

    I once accidentally ran a small social experiment about this. When I joined the Yale faculty in 2007, I bought about 20 university baseball caps to give to the young people at my family reunion that year. Later, my nieces and nephews reported to me that wearing the Yale insignia had transformed their casual interactions with white strangers: White people would now approach them to engage in friendly small talk.

    But sometimes these signifiers of professional status and educated-class propriety are not enough. This can be true even in the most rarefied spaces. When I was hired at Yale, the chair of the sociology department invited me for dinner at the Yale Club of New York City. Clad in a blue blazer, I got to the club early and decided to go up to the fourth-floor library to read The New York Times. When the elevator arrived, a crush of people was waiting to get on it, so I entered and moved to the back to make room for others. Everyone except me was white.

    As the car filled up, I politely asked a man of about 35, standing by the controls, to push the button for the library floor. He looked at me and—emboldened, I have to imagine, by drinks in the bar downstairs—said, “You can read?” The car fell silent. After a few tense moments, another man, seeking to defuse the tension, blurted, “I’ve never met a Yalie who couldn’t read.” All eyes turned to me. The car reached the fourth floor. I stepped off, held the door open, and turned back to the people in the elevator. “I’m not a Yalie,” I said. “I’m a new Yale professor.” And I went into the library to read the paper.

    I tell these stories—and I’ve told them before—not to fault any particular institution (I’ve treasured my time at Yale), but to illustrate my personal experience of a recurring cultural phenomenon: Throughout American history, every moment of significant Black advancement has been met by a white backlash. After the Civil War, under the aegis of Reconstruction, Black people for a time became professionals and congressmen. But when federal troops left the former Confederate states in 1877, white politicians in the South tried to reconstitute slavery with the long rule of Jim Crow. Even the Black people who migrated north to escape this new servitude found themselves relegated to shantytowns on the edges of cities, precursors to the modern Black ghetto.

    All of this reinforced what slavery had originally established: the Black body’s place at the bottom of the social order. This racist positioning became institutionalized in innumerable ways, and it persists today.

    I want to emphasize that across the decades, many white Americans have encouraged racial equality, albeit sometimes under duress. In response to the riots of the 1960s, the federal government—led by the former segregationist Lyndon B. Johnson—passed far-reaching legislation that finally extended the full rights of citizenship to Black people, while targeting segregation. These legislative reforms—and, especially, affirmative action, which was implemented via LBJ’s executive order in 1965—combined with years of economic expansion to produce a long period of what I call “racial incorporation,” which substantially elevated the income of many Black people and brought them into previously white spaces. Yes, a lot of affirmative-action efforts stopped at mere tokenism. Even so, many of these “tokens” managed to succeed, and the result is the largest Black middle class in American history.

    Over the past 50 years, according to a study by the Pew Research Center, the proportion of Black people who are low-income (less than $52,000 a year for a household of three) has fallen seven points, from 48 to 41 percent. The proportion who are middle-income ($52,000 to $156,000 a year) has risen by one point, to 47 percent. The proportion who are high-income (more than $156,000 a year) has risen the most dramatically, from 5 to 12 percent. Overall, Black poverty remains egregiously disproportionate to that of white and Asian Americans. But fewer Black Americans are poor than 50 years ago, and more than twice as many are rich. Substantial numbers now attend the best schools, pursue professions of their choosing, and occupy positions of power and prestige. Affirmative action worked.

    But that very success has inflamed the inevitable white backlash. Notably, the only racial group more likely to be low-income now than 50 years ago is whites—and the only group less likely to be low-income is Blacks.

    For some white people displaced from their jobs by globalization and deindustrialization, the successful Black person with a good job is the embodiment of what’s wrong with America. The spectacle of Black doctors, CEOs, and college professors “out of their place” creates an uncomfortable dissonance, which white people deal with by mentally relegating successful Black people to the ghetto. That Black man who drives a new Lexus and sends his children to private school—he must be a drug kingpin, right?

    In predominantly white professional spaces, this racial anxiety appears in subtler ways. Black people are all too familiar with a particular kind of interaction, in the guise of a casual watercooler conversation, the gist of which is a sort of interrogation: “Where did you come from?”; “How did you get here?”; and “Are you qualified to be here?” (The presumptive answer to the last question is clearly no; Black skin, evoking for white people the iconic ghetto, confers an automatic deficit of credibility.)

    Black newcomers must signal quickly and clearly that they belong. Sometimes this requires something as simple as showing a company ID that white people are not asked for. Other times, a more elaborate dance is required, a performance in which the worker must demonstrate their propriety, their distance from the ghetto. This can involve dressing more formally than the job requires, speaking in a self-consciously educated way, and evincing a placid demeanor, especially in moments of disagreement.

    As part of my ethnographic research, I once embedded in a major financial-services corporation in Philadelphia, where I spent six months observing and interviewing workers. One Black employee I spoke with, a senior vice president, said that people of color who wanted to climb the management ladder must wear the right “uniform” and work hard to perform respectability. “They’re never going to envision you as being a white male,” he told me, “but if you can dress the same and look a certain way and drive a conservative car and whatever else, they’ll say, ‘This guy has a similar attitude, similar values [to we white people]. He’s a team player.’ If you don’t dress with the uniform, obviously you’re on the wrong team.”

    This need to constantly perform respectability for white people is a psychological drain, leaving Black people spent and demoralized. They typically keep this demoralization hidden from their white co-workers because they feel that they need to show they are not whiners. Having to pay a “Black tax” as they move through white areas deepens this demoralization. This tax is levied on people of color in nice restaurants and other public places, or simply while driving, when the fear of a lethal encounter with the police must always be in mind. The existential danger this kind of encounter poses is what necessitates “The Talk” that Black parents—fearful every time their kids go out the door that they might not come back alive—give to their children. The psychological effects of all of this accumulate gradually, sapping the spirit and engendering cynicism.

    Even the most exalted members of the Black elite must live in two worlds. They understand the white elite’s mores and values, and embody them to a substantial extent—but they typically remain keenly conscious of their Blackness. They socialize with both white and Black people of their own professional standing, but also members of the Black middle and working classes with whom they feel more kinship, meeting them at the barbershop, in church, or at gatherings of long-standing friendship groups. The two worlds seldom overlap. This calls to mind W. E. B. Du Bois’ “double consciousness”—a term he used for the first time in this publication, in 1897—referring to the dual cultural mindsets that successful African Americans must simultaneously inhabit.

    For middle-class Black people, a certain fluidity—abetted by family connections—enables them to feel a connection with those at the lower reaches of society. But that connection comes with a risk of contagion; they fear that, meritocratic status notwithstanding, they may be dragged down by their association with the hood.

    When I worked at the University of Pennsylvania, some friends of mine and I mentored at-risk youth in West Philadelphia.

    One of these kids, Kevin Robinson, who goes by KAYR (pronounced “K.R.”), grew up with six siblings in a single-parent household on public assistance. Two of his sisters got pregnant as teenagers, and for a while the whole family was homeless. But he did well in high school and was accepted to Bowdoin College, where he was one of five African Americans in a class of 440. He was then accepted to Dartmouth’s Tuck School of Business, where he was one of 10 or so African Americans in an M.B.A. class of roughly 180. He got into the analyst-training program at Goldman Sachs, where his cohort of 300 had five African Americans. And from there he ended up at a hedge fund, where he was the lone Black employee.

    What’s striking about Robinson’s accomplishments is not just the steepness of his rise or the scantness of Black peers as he climbed, but the extent of cultural assimilation he felt he needed to achieve in order to fit in. He trimmed his Afro. He did a pre-college program before starting Bowdoin, where he had sushi for the first time and learned how to play tennis and golf. “Let me look at how these people live; let me see how they operate,” he recalls saying to himself. He decided to start reading The New Yorker and Time magazine, as they did, and to watch 60 Minutes. “I wanted people to see me more as their peer versus … someone from the hood. I wanted them to see me as, like, ‘Hey, look, he’s just another middle-class Black kid.’ ” When he was about to start at Goldman Sachs, a Latina woman who was mentoring him there told him not to wear a silver watch or prominent jewelry: “ ‘KAYR, go get a Timex with a black leather band. Keep it very simple … Fit in.’ ” My friends and I had given him similar advice earlier on.

    All of this worked; he thrived professionally. Yet even as he occupied elite precincts of wealth and achievement, he was continually getting pulled back to support family in the ghetto, where he felt the need to code-switch, speaking and eating the ways his family did so as not to insult them.

    The year he entered Bowdoin, one of his younger brothers was sent to prison for attempted murder, and a sister who had four children was shot in the face and died. Over the years he would pay for school supplies for his nieces and nephews, and for multiple family funerals—all while keeping his family background a secret from his professional colleagues. Even so, he would get subjected to the standard indignities—being asked to show ID when his white peers were not; enduring the (sometimes obliviously) racist comments from colleagues (“You don’t act like a regular Black”). He would report egregious offenses to HR but would usually just let things go, for fear that developing a reputation as a “race guy” would restrict his professional advancement.

    Robinson’s is a remarkable success story. He is 40 now; he owns a property-management company and is a multimillionaire. But his experience makes clear that no matter what professional or financial heights you ascend to, if you are Black, you can never escape the iconic ghetto, and sometimes not even the actual one.

    The most egregious intrusion of a Black person into white space was the election (and reelection) of Barack Obama as president. A Black man in the White House! For some white people, this was intolerable. Birthers, led by Donald Trump, said he was ineligible for the presidency, claiming falsely that he had been born in Kenya. The white backlash intensified; Republicans opposed Obama with more than the standard amount of partisan vigor. In 2013, at the beginning of Obama’s second term, the Supreme Court gutted the Voting Rights Act, which had protected the franchise for 50 years. Encouraged by this opening, Alabama, Mississippi, North Carolina, and Texas moved forward with voter-suppression laws, setting a course that other states are now following. And this year, the Supreme Court outlawed affirmative action in college admissions. I want to tell a story that illustrates the social gains this puts at risk.

    Many years ago, when I was a professor at Penn, my father came to visit me. Walking around campus, we bumped into various colleagues and students of mine, most of them white, who greeted us warmly. He watched me interact with my secretary and other department administrators. Afterward, Dad and I went back to my house to drink beer and listen to Muddy Waters.

    “So you’re teaching at that white school?” he said.

    “Yeah.”

    “You work with white people. And you teach white students.”

    “Yeah, but they actually come in all colors,” I responded. I got his point, though.

    “Well, let me ask you one thing,” he said, furrowing his brow.

    “What’s that, Dad?”

    “Do they respect you?”

    After thinking about his question a bit, I said, “Well, some do. And some don’t. But you know, Dad, it is hard to tell which is which sometimes.”

    “Oh, I see,” he said.

    He didn’t disbelieve me; it was just that what he’d witnessed on campus was at odds with his experience of the typical Black-white interaction, where the subordinate status of the Black person was automatically assumed by the white one. Growing up in the South, my dad understood that white people simply did not respect Black people. Observing the respectful treatment I received from my students and colleagues, my father had a hard time believing his own eyes. Could race relations have changed so much, so fast?

    They had—in large part because of what affirmative action, and the general processes of racial incorporation and Black economic improvement, had wrought. In the 1960s, the only Black people at the financial-services firm I studied would have been janitors, night watchmen, elevator operators, or secretaries; 30 years later, affirmative action had helped populate the firm with Black executives. Each beneficiary of affirmative action, each member of the growing Black middle class, helped normalize the presence of Black people in professional and other historically white spaces. All of this diminished, in some incremental way, the power of the symbolic ghetto to hold back people of color.

    Too many people forget, if ever they knew it, what a profound cultural shift affirmative action effected. And they overlook affirmative action’s crucial role in forestalling social unrest.

    Some years ago, I was invited to the College of the Atlantic, a small school in Maine, to give the commencement address. As I stood at the sink in the men’s room before the event, checking the mirror to make sure all my academic regalia was properly arrayed, an older white man came up to me and said, with no preamble, “What do you think of affirmative action?”

    “I think it’s a form of reparations,” I said.

    “Well, I think they need to be educated first,” he said, and then walked out.

    I was so provoked by this that I scrambled back to my hotel room and rewrote my speech. I’d already been planning to talk about the benefits of affirmative action, but I sharpened and expanded my case, explaining that it not only had lifted many Black people out of the ghetto, but had been a weapon in the Cold War, when unaligned countries and former colonies were trying to decide which superpower to follow. Back then, Democrats and some Republicans were united in believing that affirmative action, by demonstrating the country’s commitment to racial justice and equality, helped project American greatness to the world.

    Beyond that, I said to this almost entirely white audience, affirmative action had helped keep the racial unrest of the ’60s from flaring up again. When the kin—the mothers, fathers, cousins, nephews, sons, daughters, baby mamas, uncles, aunts—of ghetto residents secure middle-class livelihoods, those ghetto relatives hear about it. This gives the young people who live there a modicum of hope that they might do the same. Hope takes the edge off distress and desperation; it lessens the incentives for people to loot and burn. What opponents of affirmative action fail to understand is that without a ladder of upward mobility for Black Americans, and a general sense that justice will prevail, a powerful nurturer of social concord gets lost.

    Yes, continuing to expand the Black professional and middle classes will lead to more instances of “the dance,” and the loaded interrogations, and the other awkward moments and indignities that people of color experience in white spaces. But the greater the number of affluent, successful Black people in such places, the faster this awkwardness will diminish, and the less power the recurrent waves of white reaction will have to set people of color back. I would like to believe that future generations of Black Americans will someday find themselves as pleasantly surprised as my dad once was by the new levels of racial respect and equality they discover.


    This article appears in the November 2023 print edition with the headline “Black Success, White Backlash.”

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    Elijah Anderson

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  • There’s a New Kid in Arizona’s School Tuition Organizations — Community Reinvestment: Low Income Based Scholarships

    There’s a New Kid in Arizona’s School Tuition Organizations — Community Reinvestment: Low Income Based Scholarships

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    School Tuition Organizations in Arizona serve private school education vouchers — a new organization plans to serve students and communities that need aid the most.

    School Tuition Organizations, in Arizona, have been a source of funding for students K-12 in private schools to go to the school that is best for their individual needs. While many organizations act to fill the gaps in any child’s ability to attend a school of their choice, a new organization has emerged with a mission to provide new opportunities and do good work.  

    Community Reinvestment: Low Income Based Scholarships is a non-denominational organization focused on applying private school vouchers to students that need them most.  

    “We have systems in place to allow for low-income families to qualify, we also reach out to schools to learn about and rank the overall need of a school as well as research where a donation will have its highest community impact,” states Carly Bodmer, Executive Director of Community Reinvestment: Low Income Based Scholarships. School Tuition Organizations have been around since 1997, and in 2006, corporations became allowed to participate in tax credit-worthy donations to aid low-income scholarships, a program that is smaller in tax dollar contributions than the individual school vouchers in the past. 

    “This organization identifies the demographics, needs, and programs within the private school ecosystem, and allows corporate donors to decide how to aid and impact communities with their donations. We do not influence the types of programs or students that they wish to support, only that the income qualifications provide new opportunities for families that might not otherwise have the ability to go to a school with the resources needed in order to allow their child to thrive,” Bodmer states.  

    Community Reinvestment: Low Income Based Scholarships has worked with guidance from banking authorities and educational institutions to create a program that is purpose-driven, and accessible. Examples of the data-driven deciding factors would include (but are not limited to): special needs, defined programs such as STEM and Montessori, % of overall LMI (low/moderate income) need within a school as a whole, county, whether students have been a part of the foster system in Arizona, and other factors related to need and risk.  

    The goals of the data-driven organization are to measure the long-term impact within communities and lower the illiteracy, crime, and incarceration rates in Arizona. There are many problems to solve in this space, and matching corporations with packages of need that match their internal giving goals is the current focus. Corporate donations to Community Reinvestment: Low Income Based Scholarships utilizes the only dollar-for-dollar tax credit available in Arizona, and the goal is to maximize the use of this ability, in partnership with the Arizona Department of Revenue, to impact communities with the highest need. 

    Source: Community Reinvestment: Low Income Based Scholarships

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  • Atlantis Academies Was Awarded Favorite Program for Special Needs by South Florida FamilyLife

    Atlantis Academies Was Awarded Favorite Program for Special Needs by South Florida FamilyLife

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    Press Release


    Jul 5, 2022

    Atlantis Academies, a ChanceLight school, announced today that it has been awarded Favorite Program for Special Needs by South Florida FamilyLife, an award-winning, complimentary monthly magazine whose goal is to serve and enlighten their readers with information about local events, programs, news, and businesses throughout South Florida, geared specifically to families in Broward, Miami-Dade, and south Palm Beach County.

    “It is an honor to be selected for this award by the families in our community who recognize Atlantis Academies for their dedication to supporting students with various learning needs. Each of our Atlantis Academy campuses strives to provide a safe and nurturing environment to enhance our students’ academic and social growth, and help our students reach their full potential.” ~ Mark DiConsiglio, SVP of Atlantis Academies Operations

    This award is nominated and awarded solely by the readers of South Florida FamilyLife as a way for local families to share where their trusted, tried-and-true places are to be. Awarded annually, the Atlantis Academies is a proud recipient of the 2022 Favorite Program for Special Needs.

    About Atlantis Academies 

    Atlantis Academies is a ChanceLight® school. ChanceLight is the nation’s leading provider of behavioral health, therapy and education solutions for children and young adults. Atlantis Academies provides students with various learning needs, the academic, behavioral, social, and emotional supports they need to reach their full potential. Providing a comprehensive education program for students in grades kindergarten through 12th grade (up to age 22) tailored to meet the unique learning needs of each student. Find out more at www.atlantisacademy.com.

    Source: ChanceLight Education

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  • Top Private School in Melbourne Says ‘Cognitive Flexibility’ Key to Learning and Creativity

    Top Private School in Melbourne Says ‘Cognitive Flexibility’ Key to Learning and Creativity

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    Cognitive flexibility allows people to switch gears and find new approaches to solve problems and its importance extends well beyond the classroom.

    Press Release



    updated: Aug 19, 2021

    Originally coined by scientists in the 1960s, ‘cognitive flexibility’ is about being flexible in the way someone learns. In essence, it is the ability to adapt behaviours and thinking in response to the environment. Regarded as one of the best private schools Melbourne wide, Haileybury says flexible thinking is the key to creativity and supports academic work and skills such as problem solving.

    According to Haileybury, cognitive flexibility is a skill which enables people to switch between different concepts or adapt behaviour to achieve goals in a rational way. Unlike working memory, it is largely independent of IQ. While IQ is often hailed as a crucial driver of success, particularly in fields such as science, innovation and technology, creativity is also an important quality for accomplishment in these areas.

    Haileybury explains that several factors challenge cognitive flexibility, including confirmation bias, in which people shape the information given to them to match their view or seek out information they agree with. Information bottleneck can also be an issue, where people can’t look clearly at the information in front of them because there is too much to process. Additionally, for many people, following the same steps and making the same decisions as in the past because they are familiar and comfortable is a challenge to cognitive flexibility.

    Students who exhibit strength in cognitive flexibility can handle transitions easily, shifting between subjects and tasks in stride. Haileybury says these students often have success in tasks that require them to apply learning in one area to problem solving in another context.

    Deemed the best private school Melbourne wide, Haileybury says the good news is that students can be trained in cognitive flexibility. Common strategies for enhancing cognitive flexibility resembles strategies for boosting divergent thinking, creativity and openness. To think flexibly, people must be able to draw from multiple reserves of knowledge and memory to engage with a task or problem.

    In response to the COVID-19 pandemic, students have been forced to adapt their daily living, learn school lessons in a new way and socialise differently. According to Haileybury, this is training them in cognitive flexibility and helps students build higher resilience to negative events in the future.

    As the top private school Melbourne wide, Haileybury says teaching students cognitive flexibility is essential to help them maximise their potential and also for society to flourish in the future.

    Source: Haileybury

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  • Innovative Learner-Driven Private School Opening in Columbia, Maryland

    Innovative Learner-Driven Private School Opening in Columbia, Maryland

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    Every child has a gift that can change the world; Spartek Academy: An Acton Academy develops those gifts in 1st-8th grade students.

    Press Release



    updated: Aug 10, 2021

    Spartek Academy: An Acton Academy [Spartek] is opening its doors in Columbia, Maryland. Spartek is a learner-driven private school where 75% of our curriculum is hands-on and students are in charge of their learning. There are no teachers, only guides, no homework, and no tests. How do our students learn? With a mastery-based approach. It’s simple: every student works at their own pace and shows mastery in that area before advancing. 

    Spartek Academy is an affiliate school of Acton Academy, based in Austin, Texas. Acton Academy has 300+ Affiliate schools worldwide and has been endorsed by Sal Khan, Founder of Khan Academy; Seth Godin, Author; and Sugata Mitra, Founder of School in the Clouds.

    Acton’s disruptive educational model focuses on three things: learning to learn, learning to be, and learning to do. Students participate in Socratic discussions and self-paced challenges, which equips them to be independent lifelong learners. In addition, Hands-on Quests for Science, Entrepreneurship, and the Arts prepare children for apprenticeships and real-world challenges.

    About the Founder:
    Janear Garrus, the Founder of Spartek Academy, is an entrepreneur and educator. She has founded several other organizations and programs serving the Baltimore-Washington area: Chesapeake Educational Alliance, Launch Business Camp, Greater Purpose Christian Homeschoolers, and the Baltimore Children’s Business Fair (which is hosting its fifth annual event this fall). In addition, she and her husband have homeschooled their children for their entire education. Garrus found that Acton Academy aligned with her desires for her children’s education and felt compelled to start one in Howard County. “I chose to start an Acton Academy in Howard County because I truly believe in the model. It takes the best elements of homeschooling and combines them with innovation and collaboration amongst students. Spartek is an environment where there are no limits to students’ learning and discovery. What students are good at, they can focus on now, and that’s powerful.”

    Spartek is enrolling in grades 1-8 for the 2021-2022 school year. The school will add a grade-level each following school year. For more information about Spartek Academy: An Acton Academy, contact Janear Garrus at 410-343-9780 or hello@spartekacton.org.

    Source: Spartek Academy

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  • Award-Winning Montessori School is Expanding Its Education Offerings with Lower Elementary Program

    Award-Winning Montessori School is Expanding Its Education Offerings with Lower Elementary Program

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    Montessori Reggio Academy in Sugar Land, Texas, introduces program for children in grades one to three.

    Press Release



    updated: Jun 28, 2021

    Starting in the 2021-2022 school year, Sugar Land-based Montessori Reggio Academy (MRA) offers their new Lower Elementary Program, serving grades one through three. Parents interested in the program can get their children on the waiting list for the upcoming school year.

    The focus of the Lower Elementary Program is to challenge students to advance beyond their potential academically, educate them with a firm foundation to become confident individuals with higher self-esteem, and create a fun learning experience.

    Montessori Reggio Academy has won the “Best of Sugar Land Award” five years in a row. The school’s selection for the 2021 Best of Sugar Land Award in the Montessori School category by the Sugar Land Award Program is an honor for the school and its extensive history. The award recognizes local businesses that have shown the ability to use their best practices and implement programs to generate competitive advantages and long-term value in the community.

    Montessori Reggio Academy has now demonstrated success two years running, qualifying the school for the Business Hall of Fame. MRA takes pride in such recognition, striving to create an atmosphere of learning, acceptance, and growth for its students, educators, and parents.

    MRA follows the traditional Montessori Method, believing that cognitive development results from an interaction between the individual and the environment. Their goal is to spark a child’s interest in learning, helping them to become lifelong learners.

    MRA accepts students from infants to lower elementary, creating an encouraging environment for children to share thoughts and exchange ideas with both peers and teachers. 

    Through its private lower elementary program, MRA hopes to address the pain points that parents face with the many unknowns involved with public school education by creating a quality, consistent educational environment for students.

    Montessori Reggio Academy is an icon in the community, as seen from parents of current students. Parents know the academy’s staff and faculty as friends because of the efforts to genuinely connect with students and parents. Education and care at the school are provided by Montessori-certified or trained teachers who are CPR certified, have classroom experience, and receive continuous training.

    “My wife and I have been very happy with this school, particularly under the new direction and leadership of Ms. Martina,” said parent Andrew Lee. “She is super professional and yet enthusiastic, fun, and approachable. The culture and administration of MRA are strong.”

    Head of School Martina Murphy is both a respected leader and longtime educator within the Sugar Land community with over 14 years in education. Her attention to detail, childhood understanding, and enthusiasm have been noted by parents and colleagues. Under her leadership, MRA achieved Best in Sugar Land for a 4th consecutive year.

    Lower Elementary Program curriculum expectations include:

    • Math – Master all operations abstractly and apply them throughout the curriculum
    • Language – Identify, construct, and analyze nine parts of speech and sentence elements. Write creative stories.
    • Cultural – Able to select a topic, use various resources, analyze data, write a paragraph on that topic, and present it.
    • Social/Emotional – Functioning member of a class meeting, able to identify problems, contribute solutions, and negotiate a resolution that is practical, respectful, reasonable, responsible, and relevant.
    • Reading – On level or above, with comprehension and understanding of sequencing and predicting
    • Problem Solving – Ignore it. Talk it over respectfully with the other person. Work together on a win/win solution. Write it in the concern book.

    Parents interested in signing up their children for a Montessori Reggio Academy education, particularly for the Lower Education Program, can reach out to the school via phone (832-939-8898), email (admin@mrasugarland.com), or by filling out the MRA Contact Form.

    ###

    About Montessori Reggio Academy

    A Montessori Reggio Academy education is an investment in your child’s future. We take great pride in offering an authentic Montessori education enriched with a Reggio Emilia arts and science program in Sugar Land, Texas – a unique combination of proven learning methods. As educators, our goal is to set a strong foundation of life-long emotional and mental well-being in each of our students. For more information, visit montessorireggioacademy.com or follow us on Facebook (@mrasugarland) or LinkedIn (@montessori-reggio-academy-of-sugar-land).

    Source: Montessori Reggio Academy

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  • The Atonement Academy is Ranked No. 3 Best K-12 Private School in 2019 Report

    The Atonement Academy is Ranked No. 3 Best K-12 Private School in 2019 Report

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    Press Release



    updated: Nov 2, 2018

     The Atonement Academy has been named the Third Best K-12 Private School and the Sixth Best Private High School in the San Antonio area for 2019, according to Niche. Each school is ranked comprehensively based on six categories including Academics, Teachers, Clubs & Activities, Diversity, College Prep and Sports. 

    “We at The Atonement Academy are honored to be recognized as the No. 3 Best K-12 Private School and No. 6 Best Private High School in the San Antonio area,” said James F. Growden, headmaster for The Atonement Academy. “We are the only Catholic classical school in all of San Antonio. Classical education focuses on inspiring students to read more and logically think about what they read and training them how to effectively communicate that new knowledge. We are not outcome-based, but rather focused on forming critical thinkers and problem solvers which prepares students for the real world they will face as adults.” 

    Niche.com is a ranking and review website that allows people to discover the schools, companies and neighborhoods that are right for them. Niche rigorously analyzes data from the U.S. Department of Education as well as millions of reviews to produce comprehensive rankings, report cards and profiles for K-12 schools. The Atonement Academy has significantly improved in each category from previous years as a result of the new administration’s vision and mission for the school.

    “At The Atonement Academy, our faculty is eager to invest themselves fully to form our students into joyful disciples of Christ who think critically and can express their ideas articulately in oral presentation and written word,” said Growden. At TAA, Christ illuminates each and every discipline studied by our students, whether they encounter truth, goodness and beauty when learning, calculus, philosophy, history, Chemistry, English, Latin, Spanish, music or art.”

    The Atonement Academy provides an accredited classical education and unparalleled Catholic culture to boys and girls. With a “Fides et Ratio” (Faith & Reason) motto as a guide, The Atonement Academy’s environment inspires the development of both faith and reason.

    Source: The Atonement Academy

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  • Renowned Physician, Psychologist, and Author Visits Glenelg Country School to Discuss 21st Century Parenting and Social Media

    Renowned Physician, Psychologist, and Author Visits Glenelg Country School to Discuss 21st Century Parenting and Social Media

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    Dr. Leonard Sax is the Acclaimed Author of The Collapse of Parenting: How We Hurt Our Kids When We Treat Them Like Grown-ups

    Press Release



    updated: Nov 29, 2017

    Glenelg Country School (GCS), a leading independent college preparatory school for age two through grade twelve, kicks off its Dragon Dialogues speaker series with renowned physician, psychologist, and author, Dr. Leonard Sax. In his presentation, titled Instagram Ate My Kids: Social Media and the Collapse of Parenting, Dr. Sax will share evidence-based strategies to help parents limit and guide their kids’ use of social media. He will highlight methods that have been shown to improve the odds for girls and boys to develop into healthy, happy, and successful adults. The Jan. 10 event is free to the public and begins at 7:00 p.m. at the GCS Mulitz Theater.

    The Dragon Dialogues platform fosters communication between parents, faculty, and students on matters that directly affect the education, health, and emotional well-being of students. As a result, participants will be able to apply strategies that will give their children a solid foundation and confidence. Additionally, Dr. Sax will answer these frequently asked questions:

    • What do parents need to know about Twitter, Instagram, and Snapchat?
    • What are kids really doing on their smartphones?
    • How can parents effectively monitor this technology?
    • Which video games are OK and which are not?
    • How much time playing video games is too much?

    Dr. Sax has led workshops for teachers, spoken to parents, and visited schools, not only all across North America – from California to Nova Scotia and from Alaska to Florida – but also in Australia, Bermuda, England, Germany, Italy, Mexico, New Zealand, Scotland, Spain, and Switzerland. He has written four books for parents:

    • Why Gender Matters 
    • Boys Adrift 
    • Girls on the Edge 
    • The Collapse of Parenting – a New York Times bestseller

    “Dr. Sax’s presentation catalyzed something very difficult to attain: behavioral change. He brought the key points home with power. I was gladdened and heartened to see a standing-room-only crowd, riveted, spellbound. His message resonates,” said Dr. Patricia Shanley, Princeton Common Ground, Princeton, New Jersey.

    Register today to hear him in person on Jan. 10. 

    About Glenelg Country School:

    Founded in 1954, Glenelg Country School is a private, coeducational, nonsectarian, college preparatory day school for students age 2 through grade 12. The school is located in Howard County, with bus transportation. The 90-acre campus boasts four academic buildings, a performing arts center, two gymnasiums, a turf field, observatory, outdoor classrooms, amphitheater, saline pool, campus pond, and more. Our balanced, holistic education philosophy and project-based learning programs incorporate multiple disciplines that help children grow into exceptional adults. Visit www.glenelg.org to learn more.

    About Dr. Leonard Sax:

    Dr. Sax has been a guest for the TODAY Show (five times), CNN (three times), Headline News, PBS, Fox News (four times), NPR, the BBC, and many other national and international media. His essays about a wide range of child and adolescent issues have been published in the Washington Post, The Wall Street Journal, The Los Angeles Times, First Things, and many other outlets including the websites of The New York Times and Psychology Today. His scholarly work has been published in a wide variety of journals including the Journal of the American Medical Association (JAMA), American Psychologist, Behavioral Neuroscience, Environmental Health Perspectives, Journal of the American College of Nutrition, Journal of Sex Research, and Annals of Family Medicine. You can watch streaming video of some of the TV interviews, and read some of his articles, at www.leonardsax.com.

    Media Contact

    Rosa Brantley
    Director of Marketing & Communications
    410-531-7336

    Source: Glenelg Country School

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  • Private School Looks to Balance the Scales With College Access Initiative; Makes Long-Term Investment in Underserved, High-Achieving Public School Students

    Private School Looks to Balance the Scales With College Access Initiative; Makes Long-Term Investment in Underserved, High-Achieving Public School Students

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    Press Release



    updated: May 18, 2017

    After years of research and preparation, Campbell Hall has launched the Campbell Scholars Program, a tuition-free academic enrichment and college access program designed to support underserved, high-achieving students who aspire to be the first in their family to graduate from a four-year college. The program, which recently completed a 3-year pilot phase, extends the core resources, learning philosophy, and opportunities of the independent school experience to students enrolled in under-resourced schools through continuous, year-round enrichment and mentoring programs from 7th grade through college graduation and beyond.

    It is well understood that first-generation college aspirants face an exceedingly difficult path to college graduation. While researchers and policy-makers have sought to understand this gap in educational attainment, private independent schools have quietly shown success in preparing low-income first-generation students for college. One school, Campbell Hall, a K-12 private school in North Hollywood, has committed to deepening its impact to underserved children by sharing its college preparatory capacity with its broader community.

    “It’s time independent schools looked beyond their gates to forge partnerships that impact our community at large.”

    Eileen Powers, Director of Public Partnerships, Campbell Hall

    “We are a selective independent school, but that doesn’t mean we are closed off to our role in the broader community,” said the Rev.  Julian P. Bull, headmaster, Campbell Hall. “Our school’s mission implies a public purpose, and Campbell Scholars is an example of how private schools can serve the public good.”

    The independent school experience serves as a completely different learning context for Campbell Scholars, all of whom are enrolled in Title I schools. In small class sizes and long-term relationships, students grow their cultural capital and social-emotional skills, areas of emphasis that today’s under-resourced public schools are not properly resourced or incentivized to develop.

    According to John Rue, Campbell Scholars program director, none of the parents in the program have graduated from college, and a significant number have not graduated from high school. “We work closely with each family to offer support, explain choices, and answer questions at every point along the college and career pathway,” said Rue. “It’s what we do in our program, but like most of our program’s components, it’s inspired by the college preparatory work we do at Campbell Hall.”

    The first three years of the Campbell Scholars program focuses on preparing middle school students for rigorous, college preparatory coursework in high school. Once students complete the Summer Enrichment phase, they matriculate into the College Access Program to help prepare them for college and beyond. Once in college, the program will continue to support students through academic counseling and internships.

    Gwen, a Campbell Scholar who is thriving in the program, states, “What I love most about Campbell Scholars is the fact that I’m being surrounded by other kids who want to go to college, have a career, be successful, and do something with their lives, just like me.”

    “There are few responsibilities more important and more complex than educating children,” said Director of Public Partnerships Eileen Powers. “It’s time independent schools looked beyond their gates to forge partnerships that impact our community at large.”

    Source: Campbell Hall

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