1 / 19

Creating Independence: Community, Commitment, Collaboration

Creating Independence: Community, Commitment, Collaboration. By Daren M. Houck Headmaster, The Mountain School at Winhall Thursday, May 6, 2010. Those who really desire to attain an independence, have only [to] set their minds upon it, and adopt the proper means, as they do in

leona
Download Presentation

Creating Independence: Community, Commitment, Collaboration

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Creating Independence:Community, Commitment, Collaboration By Daren M. Houck Headmaster, The Mountain School at Winhall Thursday, May 6, 2010

  2. Those who really desire to attain an independence, have only [to] set their minds upon it, and adopt the proper means, as they do in regard to any other object which they wish to accomplish, and the thing is easily done." --P.T. Barnum, American showman and businessman

  3. Who is This Guy? • Educational leader, teacher, and coach for almost 15 years • Worked in public and independent schools (from 70 to 1,400 students) in three states • Certified school leader and elementary and middle school teacher • M.Ed. Educational Leadership • Educational Consultant and writer

  4. The Mountain School at Winhall: A History

  5. The “Why’s” of 1997-1998 • Student performance • Bottom 5-10 elementary schools in VT (unconfirmed) • Tuition costs • Highest K-12 tuition in state (confirmed) • Rate equaled 2009-2010 ($12,600) • Institutional mentality • TV Fridays, principal turnover, tenure, poor teaching (conversations) • So what to do? • Close, stay the same, go private, go Academy?

  6. What is a “Town Academy?” • Dates back to 1700’s • “Private School, Public Mission”--towns contracted with private schools to educate children • Used to be hundreds…now only 20 • Washington and Fryeburg (ME) oldest operating TA’s (founded early 1790’s) • VT Academies: Thetford (oldest, 1817), Burr & Burton Academy, St. Johnsbury, Lyndon Institute, MSW

  7. Core Values: Independence Every child, whole child Governance: Typically private, self-perpetuating Board NAIS “Best Practices” Held accountable by mission and by-laws Some TA’s 1/2 publicly elected Board’s role is strategic Adopts budget, creates Board policies, evaluates the HOS, fund/friendraising Board has one employee: HOS (“CEO”) Board does not make daily management decisions Funding (See “Budget”): TA’s receive funding from two main sources: tuition and fundraising Bulk from tuition (public and private) 501(c)3 status allows for tax-deductible donations from donors, foundations, etc. Tuition: Set by the Board Approved by the sending towns Financial aid How Does a TA Operate?

  8. TA Operations, Cont. • Sending Towns • TA’s work with surrounding towns to guarantee admission to every child the school is able to serve • Partnership with the parents • Designation • Towns can vote to designate (no “choice” to other independent schools) • Must pay for public

  9. Public, Private,Independent • Not all “private” schools are “independent,” but all “independent” schools are “private” • In U.S., 6,049,000 Pre-K-12 students attend private schools (11% of student population) • Private schools make up 25% (33,740) of all schools • Only 1% of American students (10% of all private school students) attend a “true” independent school • Independent schools have the freedom to… • Define their own mission • Admit/retain students the mission states the school should serve • Hire/retain faculty based on the school’s own criteria for excellence • Articulate a curriculum and program as the school/mission deems fit • Other private schools are: • Financed and controlled by the state (i.e. Charter schools), or • Financed and controlled by a church (i.e. parochial)

  10. MSW as an Independent • Vermont recognizes only “Public” or “Independent” • Private v. Independent …just semantics? • MSW a “true” independent school by definition and operation • Same philosophy of admission for town and private-pay students--serve all

  11. Independent schools operate on “real dollars” Current year numbers No back-billing No shadow-student provisions MSW: 75% sending town students, 25% “private pay” Actual costs of educating a public school student v. average announced tuition $15,475 2009-10 “real” costs v. $11,867 (VT, CATO) Independents rely on fundraising Endowments, Annual Campaigns, other MSW alone is responsible for budget 20% of MSW budget is fundraising (Annual Fund, endowment, grants, etc.) Medicaid, Title I, other funds available with strings (10%) School employs Development Director, Board has Development Committee Town savings were realized over last decade Equalized spending per child same today ($15,000-) as 1997-98 The Budget

  12. Our Successes • Expansion • K-6 to Pre-K-8 • 36-73 students in 12 years • Extended Program • Offerings (I.e. PK-8 Spanish), averages to other schools • Achievement (89% reading in 5 years, 86% math in 8 years) • Endowment • First ever--provides for the future • Enrollment • Only school in district with level/increased enrollment last 3 years • 2nd homes, private pay (3%-25%) • Diversity (35% Title I 20% SPED)

  13. Our Personal Challenges • Clarity… • Philosophy v. Practice • Accept every child… • Strategic Planning • Unclear direction--6 heads in 6 years • Live for today, plan for future • SPED • No one cares for your children like you do… • Culture of Choice • 2nd homes, limited by state • Identity • Know yourself, and let others know, too!

  14. Advantages to Independence • Independence • 5 P’s (Purpose, promise, principles; philosophy, program) • NCLB • Quality v. qualified teachers • Choice • Families empowered to choose, financial support • Creativity • Curriculum • Teaching • Mission-driven • Focus on whole child, not AYP • Every decision based on core values of the school and community, not the government • “Quality” decisions

  15. Data-driven Independent schools have higher student achievement (Friedman Foundation) Research shows “power to principals” makes all the difference (William G. Ouchi, UCLA, 665 school-study) Quality v. qualified teachers: Many public school teachers hired from bottom 1/3 of college grads (The New Commission on the Skills of the American Workforce report, Tough Choices or Tough Times) The idea of “choice” drives schools to be better--increases public school achievement as well (Friedman Foundation; Markets v. Monopolies) Data-driven, cont. Real estate values (higher in Choice towns) Vermonters voice: 89% choice, 44% private (VT Survey) Changing Tides of Ed. Push for something different Can adapt quickly (I.e. Pre-K, Int’l students) Specialize to community, student needs Sense of ownership If you fail, school fails Advantages, Continued

  16. Disadvantages to Independence • Independence! • School alone determines budget and income…no bailouts! • Choice! • Students can go elsewhere • Lack of universal choice, students must pay to come to you • Fundraising • Aren’t you a public school? • My taxes are too high… • Declining population • Tied 1st (23%)/2nd (22%) in declining student population v. nat’l avg. (VHA, USDOE) • Bottoms out 2014 or 2018 • Lack of security • The unknown… • Process • Must have a core group of committed, selfless individuals with passion, time, and resources

  17. Keys to Moving Forward • Strong Leadership • Board and Head • Strategic Vision • Foundational • Visionary • Clearly Defined Mission • Child and learning-centered • Rigor and creativity • Guides every decision • Commitment • Founders, school, community • Staffing Decisions • Who stays? • SPED • Must take control of all aspects of your school • Clarity of Change • Avoid MSW’s identity crisis

  18. Other Questions • The facility? • MSW, WSD, and the Town of Winhall • The staff? • Severance package? Employment status? • Have families moved to Winhall for MSW? • Yes--more than 20 current students have moved to Winhall for our school • However, others have moved for other schools (Holderness, etc.) and some have left MSW for local public or independent schools • Has the community thought of expanding 9-12? • No…BBA! • What agencies helped start MSW? • Vermonters for Better Education, VISA, Pat Pallas-Gray (DOE), individual consultants

  19. Other Resources • www.themountainschool.org • www.vermontersforbettereducation.com • The Maine View (Maine Policy Heritage Center) • They Spend What? The Real Cost of Public Schools (CATO) • Vermont Spending Data (VTDOE) • Private/Public School Achievement (Friedman Foundation) • Survey (Strategic Vision) • Markets v. Monopolies (CATO) • MSW History

More Related