ΔPeople, Planet, Place: Case Studies in Organizational Transformation
A Summit on the Future of Olney Friends School
October 28-30, 2010 / Barnesville, Ohio
Query
Welcome
We invite you to join us.
What is Olney?
Small school, big vision.
Four strengths:
Speaking to the world’s needs.
Place-based learning.
Wise use of resources.
Conservation, as a way of life, is deeply rooted in the culture of the Quaker farming community that founded the school. A wise use of resources, on many levels, is characteristic of student and staff decision making. The Quaker word for choices made in this vein is “simplicity” – using what you need, but no more than that.
To take just a few examples: the buildings where students live and study were built, most of them, 100 years ago. We grow much of our own food. In the last six months, students built a new dock for the pond and a mobile goat shed, while maintenance staff carefully fashioned matching spindles to bring a 100-year-old porch railing up to modern code. What we can’t make or repair ourselves (e.g., SmartBoards for classrooms), we readily purchase, after careful consideration of priorities.
Our neighbors and our land.
Two dreams:
Sustainable independent schools.
Across the country, many families can no longer afford the cost of an independent school education. Independent schools such as Olney offer a chance for students to grow and learn in a setting that encourages personal attention, safety, academic excellence, and leadership opportunities in the campus community.
Olney Friends School has attracted a socioeconomically diverse group of students since its founding more than 170 years ago. Many of our students today receive scholarships and financial aid. We aspire to a different model of funding, one that is more accessible to students regardless of financial need, and therefore, is not dependent on tuition for its primary income stream.
A new green economy in Appalachia.
Join us:
Summit in the foothills.
Join the conversation.
Three outcomes:
Models for an emergent Olney.
The summit process is ongoing. Three directions emerged for continued consideration:
1. Making more intentional the international focus of an Olney Freinds School education;
2. Joining with local and regional partners in a sustainable agriculture initiative; and
3. Exploring the addition of a continuing education program for lifelong learners.
A demonstration project for others.
Queries about the school’s future.
Here are some examples of the questions we are holding – in Quaker terms, these are known as “queries” – as we begin to imagine the future of the school.
- How will the educational program of Olney Friends School stay the same?
- How will it change?
- What new, income-producing program(s) are we uniquely suited to deliver?
- What new partnerships and other relationships may emerge in the near and long-term future?
- What is our funding model?
- How can we better serve our students, their families, our community, and our bottom line?
- What communities will the new, emergent Olney Friends School draw from; and what are the shared values of those communities?
- Who are the lifelong learners we hope to attract?
- How can we be of service in creating a new green economy in Appalachia?