|
Is bigger better?
Elite schools rush
expansions to snare top students
|
Directory
of private schools in Virginia
|
Ed
Silansky has grown accustomed to the reactions of first-time
visitors to his daughters basketball and lacrosse
games at the private Flint Hill School in Oakton. The
first impression is, Wow, what a wonderful place.
The coed prep school moved to a new 130,000-square-foot,
$25 million campus 17 months ago thats loaded
with fancy trappings, such as atrium ceilings, a 9,000-square-foot,
two-story library, dance and art studios and new athletic
facilities that this year will let Flint Hill field
its first football team in a decade. It provides
you with most of the advantages of a small college,
Silansky says.
Pricey
private schools in Virginia and much of the nation are
in the midst of an unrivaled building boom, driven mostly
by fierce competition for students. Parents are willing
to pay top dollar at prep schools with fabulous plants
so their children might win admission to the Ivy League
and other top colleges. Tuition for Flint Hills
high school, for example, is $17,850 this year. In the
fray, fueled by Baby Boomers having their own kids,
independent schools have to stand out, or at least keep
up with the competition.
These
days many prep school administrators are proudly showcasing
science labs that rival those of many colleges, or sports
centers capable of hosting national tennis tournaments.
Youve got to offer the right kind of programs
to get those kids in, whether its top kids in
arts or drama or dance or athletics or Latin,
says Ruth Little, Flint Hills admissions director.
You cant just offer one or two things and
think youre going to get your kids into the best
[college] for them.
But
do Ivy League schools really care about the tennis complex,
bathrooms with a Romanesque design or massive atriums?
Obviously not some of what schools are spending
their fundraising dollars on is purely about status,
not SATs. Ivy League schools and other highly selective
colleges take public school kids all the time. Student
experiences in and out of the classroom are most important,
though a student at a school with more offerings has
more opportunities to get a leg up on the competition.
We admit applicants and not schools, says
Robert Mitchell, spokesman for the Harvard University
Faculty of Arts and Sciences, which includes Harvard
College. Still, Mitchell says it is understandable
that schools compete against each other to offer
students any possible edge. The same thinking applies
to elite, non-ivy colleges. We want to see applicants
who take advantage of a wide variety of academic and
extracurricular activities if they are available,
says Georgetown University spokeswoman Julie Bataille
Green. Students are not penalized, she says, if their
school does not offer programs such as advanced placement
classes or ballet.
Some
schools are taking on capital projects to expand their
enrollment capacity, often because thats the only
way they can start offering a diversity of programs.
Flint Hill, which has gone from 720 students in 2000-01
to 890 this year, plans to add another 60 students next
year and grow enrollment to 1,100 over the next few
years. It built a new campus in part because it needed
the space the schools 18 sports teams shared
a single home field and borrowed tennis courts and track
fields from other area schools and facilities. We
were spread all over the place, says Operations
Director Ann Peterson. But it also needed to grow so
it could add programs such as dance, jazz band or even
the football team. We knew that to run a good
program we needed more kids and more facility to do
it, Peterson says. Theres a certain
critical mass that you need, and we didnt have
it.
A
number of Virginias independent schools are growing.
At St. Catherines School in Richmond, the 70,000-square-foot
sports and fitness center due to open in March with
a new eight-lane swimming pool, a track, sports medicine
center and room for kickboxing and yoga will replace
a 30-year-old gym that had a single volleyball court
and a fitness center that was pitiful, says
Sue H. Schutt, the schools development director.
The new facility will allow all 815 girls and faculty
at the K-12 school to gather in a single place for the
first time.
The
Jane L. Goll Center for Arts and Athletics at the Westminster
School in Annandale will nearly double the size of the
K-8 coed school, adding a new gymnasium, a library with
a brick patio that will allow students to sit outside
and sketch nearby woods and the schools first
computer lab. The new space offers arts and music rooms,
allows the existing gym to be converted to a dedicated
theater and frees up space in the existing building
for expanding the kindergarten. In a lot of ways
this is our statement about our commitment to the arts
and athletics and how important we think that is to
the development of the childs spirit, says
Headmaster Ellis Glover. Were doing all
of this and it wont bring us any more income.
Were not going to have more students, but the
program will be so advanced.
St.
Catherines brother school, all-boys St. Christophers,
is also upgrading its athletic facilities after putting
on a $35 million addition to its lower school, adding
a $4 million science center and renovating many academic
and other buildings all in the last few years. Yet both
schools only turned to sports and extracurricular upgrades
after renovating and expanding academic facilities during
the 1980s and 1990s. Its academics first
for us, says St. Christophers Development
Director Delores Smith. The current campaign by the
boys school seeks to raise $30 million, $10 million
of which will be used for faculty salaries and scholarships.
Many
school leaders also cite the rising cost of technology
from wired classrooms where high-tech whiteboards
have replaced the traditional chalkboard to wireless
connections. Flint Hill, for instance, budgeted $1.3
million when it upgraded its computer and telephone
network, and installed workstations in each classroom.
In
many cases, schools are also using other schools
capital expansions to justify their own plans and pepper
alumni and students families with requests for
donations. The all-boys Georgetown Preparatory School
in North Bethesda, Md., for example, is so keen on keeping
up with plant improvements at competing private schools
that it plans on selling off some of the prime acreage,
including part of a golf course, that it owns near the
Capital Beltway to help pay for new facilities, including
a gymnasium. The long-term price tag is $43 million,
plus $20 million for maintenance. The school gets some
students from Virginia.
Most
schools launch major fundraising drives for specific
projects such as a new library or sports center. But
fundraising is increasingly becoming a full-time business
for private schools much as it is for colleges and nonprofits.
You really never get out of a capital campaign
mode, says Schutt of St. Catherines, which
raised $18 million in a campaign that ended in 1998
and is now seeking another $25 million. Many schools
are also resorting to issuing tax-exempt bonds to finance
improvements as well.
From
the outside all the attention seems focused on shiny
new buildings or sports facilities, which administrators
say they are forced to continually upgrade. That certainly
appeals to prospective students families and gives
parents the sense that they are getting their moneys
worth. Still, schools say, there continues to be an
emphasis on attracting the best faculty. Many, like
St. Christophers, are using capital campaigns
to endow funds for hiring new faculty, raising salaries
and additional scholarships. Flint Hills expansion
also meant it needed to hire additional teachers. It
doesnt matter how good the facilities are if you
dont have the quality teachers, says Flint
Hill Development Director Gordon Oliver. And it doesnt
matter how good your teachers are if you cant
fill the classrooms.
Return
to Virginia Business - February 2003
|
|