The Roots of Independence

A Definition of Independence
Independent schools within the NAIS membership share certain fundamental characteristics of purpose, structure, and operation — such characteristics being the defining factors of their independence. NAIS-member schools are "independent" in that they have....- Independent incorporation as not-for-profit institutions with clearly stated educational goals and non-discriminatory policies in admissions and employment. ¥ Individually developed missions and philosophies, which in turn become the basis for the schools' programs.
- Self-perpetuating boards of trustees whose roles are to plan for the future, set overall policy, finance the school (largely through setting tuition and generating charitable giving), and appoint and evaluate the head of school.
- Administrations free to implement the missions of the schools by designing and articulating their curriculum, by hiring and developing capable and qualified faculty, and by admitting those students whom the school determines it can best serve.
- A commitment to continuous institutional growth and quality manifested by participation in the rigorous and comprehensive evaluation and accreditation process of state or regional accrediting bodies (whose accrediting processes are recognized and endorsed by NAIS).
The Four Fundamental Freedoms that Independence Grants
Independence, in terms of governance and finance, affords independent schools four fundamental freedoms:- To define the school's mission without dictates from the government or diocese.
- To admit and retain just those students the mission indicates the school should serve, since enrollment in independent schools is a privilege, not a right. ¥ To hire faculty based on the school's own criteria for excellence, as opposed to state or union stipulations regarding education degrees or certification.
- To articulate a curriculum and program as an individual school sees fit, without being tied by the state (or any other outside agency) to a particular program, set of texts, or achievement assessment instruments.
Threats to Independence
At NAIS, we believe that the organization must assume a higher profile in protecting the above freedoms because the schools' independence is under increasing threats from governmental intrusion and from constituencies unfamiliar with or unsupportive of the principles of independent school governance. These threats are increasingly manifest in a more intrusive stance taken by the states and by the "boundary-crossings" of various constituencies within independent schools.To wit, governmental incursions....
- In Ohio, mandated state proficiency testing of students of all public and private schools, despite the independent schools' strong protests that the testing they already do is more appropriate and more rigorous than that of the state, and that taking a week to prepare for and administer the state tests is constitutionally improper and educationally counterproductive.
- New York legislation dictating that all public and private schools must teach a unit on the "true causes of the Irish potato famine," opining, when challenged, that legislators are particularly well-situated to offer curricular guidance.
- The Kansas Board of Education's mandate that all public schools must now teach "intelligent design." (Fortunately, a federal court judge in Pennsylvania ruled that it was unconstitutional for a local school district to require the presentation of intelligent design as an alternative to evolution in science classes.)
- The Iowa State Department of Education's attempt to close down the single-sex middle school classes in math and science at a coeducational NAIS-member day school, arguing that the school's decision to structure part of its program by separate gender is in violation of state law.
- A Pennsylvania locality's attempt to collect millions of dollars in real estate taxes from an independent school, arguing that, since it was historically an all-boys school, its status was a violation of the state constitution's prohibition against discrimination, thus voiding the school's tax-exempt status.
As voucher experiments proliferate, especially when there are significant dollars on the table ($7,500, for example, in the case of the Washington, DC Voucher Initiative promoted and funded by the federal government), schools will have to consider carefully whether the money (and the increased access to the school it brings for lower- and middle-income families) is ultimately worth the potential risk that the government will regulate away the freedoms that make the school strong in the first place. As the old saying goes, "He who sups with the devil should bring a long spoon."
And boundary-crossings...
We also know that NAIS must take on more governance training to mitigate the dangers from our own internal constituencies who, in some cases, do not understand or appreciate the various roles and boundaries of governance in our independence model. We are increasingly confounded by....
- Board members who attempt to micromanage day-to-day operations or intervene in school decisions, not understanding their role to be strategic rather than operational.
- Parents who see themselves as "stockholders" rather than "stakeholders," attempting to expropriate and influence institutional decision-making in inappropriate ways.
- Faculty and administrators who fail to remember that parents are partners with the school, with valuable knowledge about their own kids and strong opinions, often, about the agenda of schools.
Ironically and providentially, it is the very threat to this core value, independence, that has motivated schools to collaborate with NAIS and each other increasingly over recent years, manifesting a complementary core value, interdependence. Without both, we are lost.
Note
1. Frederick C. Calder, NYSAIS Bulletin, #226, March 23, 1998.