Discussing
The Cardus Survey's challenge for Christian education

Dave Larsen

Tim Hendrickson
September 15, 2011

The problem here is how Christian schools can produce leaders of culture while simultaneously isolating their students from certain aspects of it. Learning about other worldviews in a classroom is not the same as living with, and learning from, those whose worldviews differ from your own.

Epistrophy
September 15, 2011

One of the most important things that Christian schools could do is to quit discriminating against the poor and disabled. Low-income kids have almost no hope of receiving a Christian education because money trumps education in that realm, and disabled kids are usually turned away because they're too "inconvenient" for the teachers to deal with (even though public school teachers have been dealing with them just fine for a long time now). I have an incredibly bright, gifted son who has mobility and continence issues related to spina bifida. When he was four and we were seeking a preschool program for him, all twelve of the Christian schools we contacted either refused outright to take him or wanted to put him in with the two-year-olds because his disability affected his potty training. Never mind that he would have been one of the smartest, best-performing and best-behaved kids in the school. It was just a blanket "No". One church school was downright rude about it; their director just said, "We don't have to take him and we won't" and hung up on us. Ironically, the only private school that was willing to take him was run by the local synagogue.

It would also help if Christian schools held their teachers to the same standards of education as public schools. Public teachers have to have at least five years of college instruction before they can begin teaching, while many Christian schools practically pull people in off the streets. There are certainly many Christian schools who have well-qualified teachers that know how to educate properly, but too many of them skimp on that very important matter. That lack of preparation eventually shows in their students' inability to spell, do math or think abstractly.

Steven Koster
September 15, 2011

While I echo the call for Protestant schools to be academically excellent, I would suggest that elite academic status is not a primary goal of the average Protestant school. Rather, developing well-rounded citizens of God's Kingdom should be. That means spiritual formation AND academic formation with the GOAL of sending students into their communities to glorify God in all areas of life.  Should we challenge our brightest to be a Christian presence in the Ivy League and board rooms? Sure, but not at the expense of Christian accountants and plumbers.

And this same Cardus report seems to suggest that is indeed happening. Though they may not perform academically much better than comparable pubilc schools, Protestant graduates "stabilize their communities by their uncommon and distinctive commitment to their families, their churches, and their communities, and by their unique hope and optimism about their lives and the future...In many ways, the average Protestant Christian school graduate is a foundational member of society."  That sounds like transforming society to me.

In contrast, Catholic schools are more Ivy League, but less spiritually faithful:

"This research finds Catholic schools are providing high quality intellectual development but at the expense of developing faith and commitment to religious practices in their graduates, while Protestant Christian schools are seemingly providing a place where students become distinct in their commitment to their faith, but are not developing academically at any better rate than their public school peers."Should we challenge our brightest? Absolutely. Have we arrived, or kept our schools from becoming hiding places rather than beacons? Certainly not. But I would take the Protestant results over the Catholic (or Public) any day.

Should we challenge our brightest? Absolutely. Have we arrived, or kept our schools from becoming hiding places rather than beacons? Certainly not. But I would take the Protestant results over the Catholic (or Public) any day.

Dave
September 16, 2011

Your experience of Christian education is indeed deeply disappointing. I can only say that the schools with which I'm familiar in urban Chicago intentionally serve communities of poverty, and whenever they are able and it serves the best interests of the student do all they can with and for students with disabilities and a variety of learning needs and styles. Christian schools with the standards you seek are out there; I'm troubled that there were none to serve you and your son.

Dave
September 16, 2011

Steven, I read the report as endorsing what Protestant Christian schools do already accomplish, among them the record you cite. At the same time it asks if more could be done to mirror their own hopes and claims expressed in most school mission statements. Cardus thinks it possible and desirable, without sacrificing their significant contributions to society and culture.

Billwald
January 28, 2012

My denomination is fanatical about Christian schools. The large majority of my local congregation went to a Christian elementary school and and many to a Christian high school.

Many of the mothers work outside the home to pay the school bill.

Far as I can tell the outcome is no different than if they all had gone to public schools. As in public schools, the education of the children mirrors the education of the parents and the retention of adult children in the denomination doesn't seem any different than denominations that don't push Christian schools.

Edwinnic
June 2, 2012

I also agree with Cardus report that Christian schools must strike a balance in emphasizing spiritual formation, cultural engagement and academic achievement. I am also headmaster of a teens Christian camp and I will recommend all parents to admit their child in to Christian academy as these academies follow the rules of Bible.

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