MFS Moorestown Friends School

Strategic Plan - Vision/Program Goals

Spiritual and Ethical Education and Academic Rigor

The vision of the school is the starting point of the planning process because it is the vision that drives the program, and it is the program that in turn drives the needs of the school. The following four goals have their root in the school’s mission statement and provide the foundation for the centerpiece of the Plan: spiritual and ethical education grounded in academic rigor. The transformational nature of a Moorestown Friends School education is a hallmark of the MFS experience. This has been affirmed by our students, parents and alumni. By building on this strength, the overarching theme of spiritual and ethical education can move the school, its graduates and its faculty forward to greatness. Viewed in this light, the goals of the “Examined Life” program, academic rigor, service learning and diversity have emerged as the engines that working together will drive the Strategic Plan.

Plan Goal #1
Design and implement a distinctive and compelling program in spiritual and ethical education
that develops students who have learned to live an “Examined Life,” characterized by dedication to critical thought, openness to the Spirit, ethical development, and resilience.

Rationale
The phrase “Examined Life” is drawn from Socrates’ axiom: “The unexamined life is not worth living.” The goal of such a life is to integrate a tough mind and a tender heart with the result that our students go out into the world as compassionate problem solvers enlightened by spiritual discernment and are able to draw on the power of their intellect to make moral and ethical decisions.

Strategies
Integrate spiritual, ethical, and religious study throughout the PS-12 curriculum with programs designed to teach critical thinking skills, conflict resolution skills, and to support problem-solving behavior.
Provide on-going formal training and instruction for students and faculty in ethical and moral development and leadership that supports the centerpiece of spiritual and ethical education.
Support the development of personal integrity, empathic practice, openness to the Spirit, and moral leadership across the community.
Provide a structure in which spiritual insight can be examined and can lead to action.
Design a program supporting the development of resilience, defined as “the capacity to face, overcome, and even be transformed by adversity.”
Pursue opportunities to publicize this program and have it serve as a national model.


Plan Goal #2
Design and implement a unique and inspiring program in service learning
that teaches students how to identify and meet community needs as well as intentionally reflect on the underlying structure that creates or prevents real change.

Rationale
Students learn best through first-hand experience. In no area is this more the case than in their gaining understanding of the problems and needs of others through community service, often called service learning.  Students provide important assistance to those in need and in the process, gain knowledge and skills, advance their own personal development, and learn how communities address problems and issues. This effort will build upon and significantly enhance the school’s existing community service program.

Strategies
Create a program in which each student can identify his or her own areas of strength and interest as well as community needs.
Create opportunities to develop and demonstrate leadership in community service by providing training for students and teachers in leadership skills.
Provide opportunities for MFS students to have the profound experience of intensive, off-campus, service projects in which they work closely with other MFS students in unfamiliar settings.
Create connections between students' service and the social problems that make the service necessary.
Require intentional reflection about service learning experiences by each student as a foundation to examine themselves, their society, and their future.
Develop a plan to promote and communicate the service learning program and have it serve as a national model.


Plan Goal #3
Enhance the level of academic rigor at every level throughout Moorestown Friends School.

Rationale
Moorestown Friends seeks to serve students who are capable and are clearly college-bound. The academic program does a very good job of preparing students for college, a conviction buttressed by the surveys completed by young alumni. This goal is aimed at increasing even further the level of academic rigor for all students and particularly for gifted students, helping them realize their full potential.

Strategies
Study a variety of ways to offer accelerated courses including Advanced Placement, International Baccalaureate, and honors courses and implement the programs that will work best for MFS.
Enhance the level of instruction and curriculum in foreign language.
Require each academic department to develop a scope and sequence for grades K to 12 to ensure cohesiveness throughout the curriculum.
Enhance the effectiveness of the college guidance department in the preparation of students and families for the college selection process.
Implement programs to enhance student performance on college entrance exams.
Explore and implement other avenues for academic challenge (on and off campus) outside of the school day including competitive summer programs, contests and fairs, off-campus and online academic courses, and travel.
Improve the size and quality of the applicant pool.


Plan Goal #4
Increase the diversity of students and faculty at Moorestown Friends School
to a level that compares favorably with that of other large Pre-school through Grade 12 independent schools. Diversity in this case includes race, ethnicity, religion, socio-economic status, and sexual orientation.

Rationale
The Mission Statement of MFS makes a clear commitment to diversity, and the importance and value of diversity is widely recognized by most independent schools and especially by Friends schools. Serving students from a wide range of backgrounds benefits all by sharing the experience of an MFS education with underserved communities and exposing the more privileged students to a more vibrant mix of cultures and issues. For the same reasons, a diverse student body is best served by an equally diverse faculty and staff.

The annual Inquirer “Report Card on Schools” reveals that the non-white student population at MFS is greater than most independent schools in the Philadelphia area. However, MFS has a lower proportion of African-American and Hispanic students than most of our peer schools.

Strategies
Increase the population of students of color by 5 percentage points overall (to 30% of enrollment) with emphasis on increasing the African-American and Hispanic population PS-12.
Create an environment of acceptance for gay and lesbian students, faculty and families.
Provide more inclusion education for students, faculty, and parents.
Develop a program to publicize the school's openness to students of all faiths.
Increase by at least one teacher per year the number of faculty of color with emphasis on attracting males of color.
Increase the Quaker population among students.
Increase financial aid to 15% of operating budget to attract a broader socio-economic mix of students.
Drop the current 50% cap on financial aid grants.

 

 

 

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