Community Corner
Community Corner

Stay current with the latest private-independent school news.

What are the latest trends impacting private-independent school enrollment? How can you be the most effective in your role as an administrator? How can you help your school meet its mission and best serve your students?

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See articles for School Heads, Business & Operations, Advancement, Academic Leadership, and Trustees, in addition to Private School News.

Astonishing Health Care Statistics

Business and Operations // September 23, 2013

It seems that with mandates, constantly evolving policies, and looming deadlines, health care nowadays is anything but a light topic of conversation. A much larger portion of your responsibilities involves keeping atop the reform and how adjustments to legislation will impact your school. Changes to your job duties may have caused you to catch yourself shaking your head, wondering why it is again we’re going down this rocky path to launch the Affordable Care Act. It’s certainly a topic that our field advisers face on a daily basis. Politics aside, here are some health care statistics from the past few years that might help shed light on that question. If nothing else, they’ll give you an idea (or a few other ideas) of the critical state our health care system is in.

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What Motivates Donors to Give?

Advancement // September 23, 2013

Recently, Christopher Davenport of Movie Mondays for Fundraising Professionals asked three donors what was the number one factor that motivates them to give. The answers should not surprise you.

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Pregnancy-Bias Discrimination Risks

Business and Operations // September 23, 2013

Whether your school is religious or secular, you can find yourself in court facing discrimination charges if you fire a faculty or staff member because she is pregnant—even if you have clear policies in your employee handbook addressing your school’s mission and expected behaviors. There have been several recent cases to make headlines, which have brought new attention to this matter. Yes, even in today’s world of heightened workplace sensitivity, discrimination cases continue to make headlines.

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Sustaining Member Programs Do Work

Advancement // September 23, 2013

If you listen to public radio or watch public television, you’ve heard their appeals to be a sustaining donor. That is, you have the option of contributing X number of dollars a month, usually via a credit card or debit card. This can be quite appealing to an individual who can’t quite see themselves writing a $720 check, for example, but who says “Yes, I can do that” to a monthly $60 deduction to support the station, program, or cause. It’s all the same amount in the end; it's all about the delivery method.

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Is Your College Prep School Meeting Placement Expectations?

Academic Leadership // September 18, 2013

The ACT annual report is out. The Condition of College and Career Readiness 2013, shows only 26% of ACT-tested students met the standards for English, reading, mathematics, and science. ACT also reports a U.S. trend of unprepared ACT-tested students enrolling in four-year and two-year colleges. As you know, your school’s goal is to develop students into your Portrait of the Graduate. Then, your portrait-driven curriculum can ideally prepare students for college. As Division Head, you must recognize program weaknesses to then alter curriculum and meet student expectations.

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Look to Nonprofits for New Board Members: The Benefits

Board of Trustees // September 13, 2013

When you update your Board profile, consdier the benefits of bringing representatives from the nonprofit world on your Board. The benefits will usually outweigh the risks by a wide margin. (In next month's e-letter, we'll discuss the risks and strategies for reducing them.)

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School Policies on Student Food Allergies

School Heads // September 11, 2013

Chances are, at least one student in your school has a food allergy. Cases of foodallergic children have been rising since medical researchers first started following patient reports several decades ago. A recent study reported 5.9 million U.S. kids suffer from life-threatening food allergies. The good news is, food allergies (most common are nuts, wheat, soy, fish, shellfish, and dairy) are manageable if proper policies and protocols are in place.

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