Fewer children and fewer jobs aren't affecting just the
public school system in Michigan. The weak economy has private schools looking
for a new business model, too.
These fifth-grade students attend Huron Valley Catholic School near Ypsilanti, where Principal Tim Kotyuk said fundraising and adding a preschool are part of the school’s fiscal strategy.
Nonpublic schools are generally reliant on tuition as a
major funding source, followed by private donations and fundraising. But since
the state economy has put a damper on endowment income and in some cases on
private donations, and since raising tuition has diminishing returns,
fundraising is becoming more important as well as more sophisticated.
"If they sit back and do nothing, then they'll close," Brian
Broderick put the case bluntly. Broderick is executive director of the Michigan
Association of Nonpublic Schools, an organization that works with its members
on marketing and business plans, among other services.
"Urban schools are finding it increasingly difficult to keep
the doors open because of the tuition-based model," Broderick said in a
telephone interview with Michigan Education Report.
Families in Michigan today have less disposable income, and many have left the state altogether. Either
scenario spells fewer tuition dollars for private schools.
In response, those schools are working both to boost enrollment
and to raise more money through non-tuition sources, administrators told
Michigan Education Report. That includes everything from bake sales to alumni-giving
programs to general community outreach. A number of nonpublic schools also are
sharing students with public schools.
None of that is news to Principal Timothy Kotyuk of Huron
Valley Catholic School in Ypsilanti.
"We've had to dramatically step up our major fundraiser, and
that's a dinner auction," Kotyuk told Michigan Education Report.
FOCUS ON FUNDRAISING
Enrollment at Huron Valley stands at 185 students in
pre-kindergarten through eighth grade, but, "To be really viable, we need to be
above 215," Kotyuk said. A new development committee has been tasked with
building financial support from sources outside the school's 110 families.
Those families pay up to $5,050 in tuition per child and are
required to dedicate 15 service hours to the school — five hours in the
lunchroom, five hours assisting the auction, and five hours in another service
of their choice. The school also sponsors a myriad of fundraisers in which
families are expected to participate.
The system works because the families are committed, Kotyuk
said.
"If I had a lot of turnover, it wouldn't work as well," he
said.
Tuition accounted for about 60 percent of income in
2008-2009, according to the school's annual report. Fundraising added about 15
percent, with donations earmarked for scholarships at 11 percent, at-large
donations were 10 percent, and smaller categories made up the remainder.
According to the National
Center for Education Statistics, the average annual tuition at Catholic
schools nationwide in 2007-2008 was approximately $6,000; at other religious
schools, approximately $7,000; and at nonsectarian schools, approximately
$17,316.
Elementary school
tuition is significantly lower than high school tuition. For example, about 47
percent of the Catholic elementary school population attended schools where
tuition was between $3,500 and $6,000, and an additional 39 percent attended
schools where the average tuition was $3,400 or less.
About 81 percent of private school students attend a
religious school, according to the latest NCES Private
School Universe Survey.
Schools that are members of the Michigan Association of
Christian Schools report that about 60 percent of income comes from tuition,
while about 40 percent comes from fundraising and affiliated churches, said
executive director Tim Schmig.
PARENT, BUSINESS SUPPORT
"We have a number of parents who will work a second job to
keep their children in a Christian school," Schmig told Michigan Education
Report. "That's the kind of sacrifice we see parents willing to make."
Most member schools are working to increase revenue from
non-tuition sources, he said. For example, "We have businessmen who will pay
for scholarships for kids to attend Christian schools."
Businesses play a large role at Cristo Rey Academy in
Detroit, too, President Mike Khoury said. In a unique program, every Cristo Rey
student spends one day a week working at a local job arranged in advance
between the Catholic high school and the business or organization. The money
they earn goes toward their tuition.
"The key to our school being sustainable is the jobs
program. We're at full employment," Khoury said. About 35 employers and 120
freshmen and sophomores are involved, and the program covered about 35 to 40
percent of the school's total expenses this year, he said.
Tuition
assistance helps keep some families in nonpublic schools, as do tuition
"caps" based on family income and reduced tuition for enrolling more than one
child.
Requests for financial assistance are rising in the
Archdiocese of Detroit, Superintendent Bernadette Sugrue said in a telephone
interview. The archdiocese offers $600 in tuition aid per child at the
elementary level and $700 at the high school level. Some individual schools
also offer assistance, she said.
"It's harder and harder, because more families are applying
for help, and when the money's gone, it's gone," Sugrue said. In some cases,
parents must decide whether to spend money on elementary tuition, high school
tuition or save it for college.
"There are families, given this economy ... who have to take
a reality check," she said.
The archdiocese currently is home to 80 elementary schools
and 22 high schools. Enrollment has dropped by 8 percent since 2005-2006, she
said, with decreases ranging from 3 to 5 percent in each of the last three
years. The decline is greater at the elementary level than in high schools,
according to Sugrue, and higher in the city of Detroit than in the suburbs.
Sugrue attributed the declines to unemployment, population
loss, the growth of charter schools and reduced family income.
NO STIMULUS IN PRIVATE SECTOR
Statewide, the number of nonpublic school students decreased
by about 17 percent from 2005 to 2009, going from approximately 158,000 to
approximately 130,000, according to data submitted by schools to the state's Center
for Educational Performance and Information. The number of nonpublic schools decreased
from 931 to 820 during the same time period.
While the federal education stimulus filled much of the gap
in public school budgets in Michigan over the past two years, the same cannot
be said for private schools. The lion's share of stimulus
money — about $1.1 billion — went to public schools through the state's
per-pupil funding mechanism.
A smaller amount of
stimulus dollars went to federal "Title" programs that are intended to serve
both public and nonpublic students and teachers, including services for disadvantaged
students and for teacher professional development. Nonpublic schools are not
required to participate in those programs, but in schools with high populations
of disadvantaged students, the funding can play a significant role, Broderick
said.
To the extent that stimulus dollars increased those funds, eligible
private schools may have benefited. As of 2007, however, a national assessment
of the Title I program for disadvantaged youth showed that only about 1 percent
of all recipients were private school students.
"A lot of it is contingent and reliant on how much time (it
takes) and how much administrators are aware of it," Broderick said of
nonpublic school participation in federal funding programs.
In other cases, schools make a deliberate choice not to
accept federal funding because it requires accepting the federal mandates that
accompany the money.
"We have never accepted one dollar of federal money or Title
I or state money," Schmig said of the members of the Michigan Association of
Christian Schools. "On principle, we feel that's the worst thing we could do.
We really prefer to be left alone."
While 15 states and the District of Columbia have programs
that offer some form of vouchers, scholarships or tax incentives that make
private schools a viable choice for more parents, Michigan does not.
MARKETING STRENGTHS
Even as they work to add revenue, schools also are attempting
to protect and even boost enrollment. One strategy is to enroll more preschoolers.
The Academy of the Sacred Heart in Bloomfield Hills
announced in April that it will reduce tuition for its infant, toddler,
preschool and primary school programs in 2010-2011 in hopes that once parents
enroll at the school, they'll remain.
Similarly, Huron Valley opened a preschool two years ago as
a way to build its own feeder program, Kotyuk said.
"It's already borne fruit, because we had a full
kindergarten this year," he said. "Without that stream, we're not seeing growth
in the middle school."
Eric VanDerhoof, administrator of Midland Christian School,
told Michigan Education Report that he doesn't expect a major increase in
enrollment even if the economy improves. Families just aren't having as many
children, he said, and there is competition for limited students not just
between the public and private school sectors, but within those sectors.
That means that nonpublic schools are looking for ways to
attract students by setting themselves apart, Broderick said.
"They're trying to show how they're distinct. The main
distinction is the faith-based component they offer," he said.
At Midland Christian, officials decided several years ago that
adopting a classical Christian curriculum would be advantageous to students — with the side effect of becoming a marketing tool. Today the school's Web site
identifies it as: "Mid-Michigan's Only Classical Christian School."
"There is a question: How can we set ourselves apart and do better? There's a niche in
classical Christian education," VanDerhoof said.
Budget cuts also are on the table in private schools.
"Starting salaries at private schools are already lower than
public schools," VanDerhoof told Michigan Education Report. "When salary is 80
percent of your budget, you look at no raises. There were no raises this year,
but we're considering them next year."
At Huron Valley, "We've not had to lay off any teachers, but
we've frozen wages for two years and other benefits have been reduced," Kotyuk
said. The school has cut back from two sections each of sixth, seventh and
eighth grade to just one, with staffing levels reduced through attrition.
Also this spring, two Catholic high schools in Grand Rapids
announced that they will share a principal and possibly other staff and
teachers beginning this fall. Grand Rapids Catholic Central and Grand Rapids
West Catholic each reported nearly half a million in unpaid tuition, according
to The Grand Rapids Press.
Meanwhile, about 73 percent of the members of the Michigan
Alliance of Nonpublic Schools said in a survey that they participate in shared-service
arrangements with public schools, Broderick said. Under these arrangements,
public schools may provide instruction in non-core classes, such as band and
art, to private school students.
There is no charge to the private school or the private
school students, but the public school is allowed to include them in its
full-time equivalent pupil count, and receives pro-rated state funding for
them, according to information from the Michigan Department of Education. The
actual instruction can take place either in the public school or in the
nonpublic school.
According to data collected by the Center for Educational Performance
and Information, nearly 2,900 nonpublic students were included in public school
enrollment counts in the spring of 2009. (That number is a full-time
equivalent, not a headcount. Home-schooled students who take courses at public
schools are also included in the total.)
While the number of participating students has remained at
about 2,900 since 2007, the percent of Michigan public schools reporting at
least one nonpublic school student has increased from about 25 percent to 27
percent during that time period, the records show.
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Lorie Shane is the managing editor of the Michigan Education Report, the Mackinac Center’s education policy journal. Permission to reprint in whole or in part is hereby granted, provided that Michigan Education Report is properly cited.