Southwood PCA “Adopts” Strapped
Elementary School—and Its Families Editor’s note: Amy L. Sherman
serves as Editorial Director for the FASTEN initiative and has
been active in the MNA’s Urban and Mercy Steering Committee. She
is a member of Trinity Presbyterian in Charlottesville,
Virginia, and the founder and former Executive Director of
Charlottesville Abundant Life Ministries. Sherman has authored
many books and has been a regular faculty member for the CE&P
and MNA’s bi-annual mercy ministry conference. She writes about
one PCA congregation that has grabbed an opportunity to make a
difference in their community.
The members of Southwood
Presbyterian Church in Huntsville, Alabama, are heavenly
minded--and earthly good. The most visible example of this is
the giant replica of the solar system they’ve constructed for
Lincoln Elementary School, where 94 percent of attending
children are poor enough to qualify for the government’s free
lunch program. Bright stars and six foot planets bedazzle the
eye as they stretch across the 2000-foot black-painted ceiling
of the school’s old gym, now remodeled as a giant science
laboratory complete with a salt-water aquarium and terrarium.
“The whole idea was to study sea, space, and earth,” enthuses
Southwood’s Director of Mercy Ministries Mark Stearns. “We
wanted the kids dreaming.”
The science lab’s not the only
new thing at Lincoln. With help from Southwood and other
churches, the school now boasts a refurbished library with a
state-of-the-art computer lab and scores of new books. And in a
renovated greenhouse attached to the school, Lincoln students
are now busy taking horticulture classes.
These kinds of facilities may be
standard fare at private, suburban schools, but they are a
rarity in the school districts serving Alabama’s low-income
kids. As Lincoln Elementary principal Christy Jensen says, “I
don’t believe there is any other elementary, middle or high
school in the Huntsville City School District that has anything
like this connection” with a congregation like Southwood.
The most important service
Southwood PCA has offered to Lincoln, though, hasn’t been money
or things. It’s people. Over half of Lincoln’s 212 students now
enjoy personal, one-on-one mentor-tutors, thanks to volunteers
from Southwood and other congregations, like Cove United
Methodist, that Southwood leaders have recruited.
The Ministry of Overhead
Projectors
Southwood’s collaboration with
Lincoln Elementary won the church $5000 in a ten-state
competition sponsored by FASTEN (Faith and Service Technical
Education Network), a capacity building initiative of the Pew
Charitable Trusts. Southwood beat out 33 other Alabama entrants
for FASTEN’s “Partners in Transformation” award. The award
honors faith-based organizations that operate a successful
social program in collaboration with some organization outside
the faith sector. The mercy ministries department of MNA
promoted the contest and at the most recent Mercy Ministries
conference, I had the opportunity of talking about the need for
PCA churches to engage in non-traditional partnerships to
transform their communities. Southwood is a great example of
putting this concept into action.
The partnership began when Mark
Stearns became acquainted with the low-income neighborhood
surrounding Lincoln Elementary, the community a mere eight
minute drive from the church. One day in 2002, he walked into
principal Jensen’s office and asked her what needs she had that
the church might assist with. Taken aback - and somewhat
skeptical - Jensen thought for a while. Then she proposed that
some new overhead projectors would be a boon to the teachers. A
few days later, five projectors arrived. “I’d wondered,” Jensen
admits, “whether this guy was for real. I didn’t know if I’d
ever see him again.” With the credibility of five overhead
projectors behind him, Stearns shared his heart for the
community with Jensen, emphasizing that the church really wanted
to help. Now, three years later, Jensen reports she and her
teachers have been “overwhelmed” by the support. “I’ve been in
the education business for a long time,” Jensen says, “and I’ve
never seen anything like this. It is very unique.”
When asked whether she is
concerned about church-state issues, Jensen says no, because the
church volunteers know “what’s allowed and what’s not allowed
between 8:00 and 2:30.” In fact, she wishes that more
collaboration between the faith community and needy public
schools were occurring. “In the U.S., in schools when people say
they’re coming from a church, sometimes people get fearful.
[But] there’s not anything to fear—it’s a help.”
Poured Out Like A Drink Offering
The collaboration has been a new
experience for church members, too. “Southwood was great at
equipping people and taking care of its own folks,” Shari Jones,
assistant mercy ministries director, notes. “But as far as
really getting out into the community and serving—golly, not
much. It was more [about] having comfortable settings to bring
people in, instead of really getting out.”
With a largely affluent
membership, Mark Stearns knew it would be a stretch getting
Southwood’s congregants hands-on engaged in the distressed
Lincoln neighborhood. He knew he’d need support from the pulpit.
So he took Senior Pastor Mike Honeycutt on a home visit to one
of the families from Lincoln. The house “reminded me of
something from a third world country,” Stearns recalls, noting
that the plumbing was broken and the stench was pungent. A few
minutes into the visit, it became clear to Stearns that
Honeycutt was bothered by the odor. “I remember praying that he
would suffer,” Stearns chuckles. “And he did. It was hard. It
was difficult to see [the conditions]; difficult to be there.”
After they concluded the visit and walked outside, Honeycutt
turned to Stearns and declared, “This is where the Kingdom of
God needs to be.”
Honeycutt began challenging
Southwood to be “poured out like a drink offering” for the
Lincoln Village community. Congregational response has been
tremendous. “Out of 1100 members, I bet half have done something
over there,” Shari Jones reports. “We have people who are
falling in love with the kids, taking them with them on their
vacations,” Stearns adds. “It’s definitely a really important
part of what our Body does now.”
In addition to the tutoring
program, several businesspersons from Southwood have launched
the Lincoln Village Preservation Corporation. Their aim is to
attack the problem of indecent housing in the Lincoln
neighborhood. So far, the Corporation has purchased 25
properties to refurbish. Many church members are also active in
the neighborhood food pantry, connecting with Lincoln residents
as they meet practical needs for food.
Impact
Studies by the U.S. Department of
Education indicate that effective tutoring programs tend to have
the positive impact, on average, of increasing reading
comprehension by half a grade level. Principal Jensen says that
reading and math scores are gradually climbing at Lincoln. In
the first years of the collaboration, tutors especially focused
on the kids’ writing skills. Aggregate scores in this area were
in the “red zone,” well below expected state standards, when
Jensen first arrived four years ago. Now, students’ writing
assessment test scores have quadrupled.
Kids aren’t the only ones being
touched through this ministry. Church volunteers are slowly
forging relationships with the students’ parents as well. Jensen
is thrilled with one effect of that: PTA attendance has
skyrocketed from about a half a dozen participants to over 100
at the most recent meeting. “We pack out the place usually now,”
she exults. “And I think that part of that is that [the tutors]
have helped the parents see the importance of parent
involvement.”
Shari Jones is quick to add that
the transformation occurring is mutual: “I feel like I have
every bit as much to learn as I do to give,” she stresses. “I
look at the culture in Lincoln and think, ‘You know, it’s
probably better to sit on our porches more like the folks there
do, because they’re not so busy with so many activities. So,”
she sums up, “I feel like it’s an exchange, more than a ‘we have
so many answers we want to share with you.’”
Enlarging Worlds
Asked to describe what the
partnership with Lincoln has meant to Southwood parishioners,
Jones talks about tutor Cliff Ibsen. Recently retired from
Boeing, Jones says Ibsen is the type to take notice of things.
He discovered dyslexia in his first “tutee” and encouraged the
school to do some additional testing. Now he’s paired with De
Angelo, a third grader at Lincoln. One of ten kids from a
single-parent home, DeAngelo is “bright,” “responsive,” and
“eager to please.” In addition to the weekly tutoring session,
Ibsen has helped DeAngelo and his brother obtain needed dental
work and treated them to visits to the beach, the theater, and
the Botanical Gardens. It’s about enlarging the kids’ worlds,
Jones explains. A long-time member of the board of directors for
the Community Ballet Association, she laments that poor kids in
under-resourced schools like Lincoln “are almost cut off from
the arts community as a whole.” Last year, she facilitated a
whole-school field trip to attend The Nutcracker. Three children
from Lincoln have also earned scholarships to the ballet school.
These kinds of opportunities
expand the kids’ horizons. As Jones puts it, DeAngelo is “more
broad in his thinking [now]; more open to possibilities.”
She adds, “When I first went out
there and asked the kids what they wanted to be when they grew
up, it was professional football player or hairdresser. That was
pretty much the range. DeAngelo’s one who will consider other
possibilities now.”
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