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MID-ATLANTIC CHRISTIAN SCHOOL ASSOCIATION (MACSA) APRIL 2009 Leading Our Schools Through Uncertain Economic Times Dr. Barrett Mosbacker All Rights Reserved

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Page 1: MID-ATLANTIC CHRISTIAN SCHOOL ASSOCIATION (MACSA) APRIL 2009 Leading Our Schools Through Uncertain Economic Times Dr. Barrett Mosbacker All Rights Reserved

MID-ATLANTIC CHRISTIAN SCHOOL

ASSOCIATION (MACSA)APRIL 2009

Leading Our Schools Through Uncertain

Economic Times

Dr. Barrett MosbackerAll Rights Reserved

Page 2: MID-ATLANTIC CHRISTIAN SCHOOL ASSOCIATION (MACSA) APRIL 2009 Leading Our Schools Through Uncertain Economic Times Dr. Barrett Mosbacker All Rights Reserved

Global Economic Crisis

Page 3: MID-ATLANTIC CHRISTIAN SCHOOL ASSOCIATION (MACSA) APRIL 2009 Leading Our Schools Through Uncertain Economic Times Dr. Barrett Mosbacker All Rights Reserved

Unemployment by Industry

Page 4: MID-ATLANTIC CHRISTIAN SCHOOL ASSOCIATION (MACSA) APRIL 2009 Leading Our Schools Through Uncertain Economic Times Dr. Barrett Mosbacker All Rights Reserved

Yearly Job Loss Worst

Since

1945

8.5%March

Page 5: MID-ATLANTIC CHRISTIAN SCHOOL ASSOCIATION (MACSA) APRIL 2009 Leading Our Schools Through Uncertain Economic Times Dr. Barrett Mosbacker All Rights Reserved

Aprox. $71 Billion in housing wealth will be directly destroyed through the process of foreclosures.

More than $32 Billion in housing wealth will be indirectly destroyed by the spillover effect of foreclosures, which reduce the value of neighboring properties.

States and local governments will lose more than $917 Million in property tax revenue.

There will be approximately 1.3 million foreclosures and a loss of housing wealth of more than $103 billion through the end of 2009.

Page 6: MID-ATLANTIC CHRISTIAN SCHOOL ASSOCIATION (MACSA) APRIL 2009 Leading Our Schools Through Uncertain Economic Times Dr. Barrett Mosbacker All Rights Reserved
Page 7: MID-ATLANTIC CHRISTIAN SCHOOL ASSOCIATION (MACSA) APRIL 2009 Leading Our Schools Through Uncertain Economic Times Dr. Barrett Mosbacker All Rights Reserved

Impact on Our Families

• Many of our families will experience job losses for one or both spouses

• Many families will receive little or no pay increases, some will experience reductions

• Employers are shifting health insurance premiums to employees and increasing co-pays thus reducing disposable income

• Families have lost wealth making paying for college more difficult or impossible

• Families are worried about retirement• Grandparents may have less

disposable income to assist with tuition

• Many families will focus on reducing debt and saving money

Families Await Sharpest Tuition Increases in Years

                                              While families are finalizing college plans, they know it's probably going to cost more than they had planned. Even in good economic times, states and colleges have largely failed to hold tuition increases in line with inflation. Now as the slumping economy forces states to slash spending, students can expect the sharpest increases in years.

Page 8: MID-ATLANTIC CHRISTIAN SCHOOL ASSOCIATION (MACSA) APRIL 2009 Leading Our Schools Through Uncertain Economic Times Dr. Barrett Mosbacker All Rights Reserved

Impact on Our Schools

Page 9: MID-ATLANTIC CHRISTIAN SCHOOL ASSOCIATION (MACSA) APRIL 2009 Leading Our Schools Through Uncertain Economic Times Dr. Barrett Mosbacker All Rights Reserved

Private School Tuition is Elastic

Page 10: MID-ATLANTIC CHRISTIAN SCHOOL ASSOCIATION (MACSA) APRIL 2009 Leading Our Schools Through Uncertain Economic Times Dr. Barrett Mosbacker All Rights Reserved

A bitter brew for Starbucks: As American consumers rein in spending on non-essentials, coffee-shop operator posts weaker-than-expected earnings

Page 11: MID-ATLANTIC CHRISTIAN SCHOOL ASSOCIATION (MACSA) APRIL 2009 Leading Our Schools Through Uncertain Economic Times Dr. Barrett Mosbacker All Rights Reserved

The “law of demand”: the higher the price of a good, the less consumers will purchase … Goods that are more essential to everyday living, and that have fewer substitutes, typically have lower elasticities …

Goods with many substitutes, or that are not essential, have higher elasticities.

Patrick L. Anderson, Richard McLellan, Joseph P. Overton, & Wolfram, G. (1997). The universal tuition tax credit: a proposal to advance parental choice in education, Midland, MI: Mackinac Center for Public Policy. P. 65-66

Page 12: MID-ATLANTIC CHRISTIAN SCHOOL ASSOCIATION (MACSA) APRIL 2009 Leading Our Schools Through Uncertain Economic Times Dr. Barrett Mosbacker All Rights Reserved

Let’s Walk Through This

•Point Elasticity = (% change in Quantity) / (% change in Price) •Point Elasticity = (∆Q/Q)/(∆P/P) •Point Elasticity = (P ∆Q) / (Q ∆P) •Point Elasticity = (P/Q)(∆Q/∆P) •Note: In the limit (or "at the margin"), "(∆Q/∆P)" is the derivative of the demand function with respect to P. "Q" means 'Quantity' and "P" means Price

Page 13: MID-ATLANTIC CHRISTIAN SCHOOL ASSOCIATION (MACSA) APRIL 2009 Leading Our Schools Through Uncertain Economic Times Dr. Barrett Mosbacker All Rights Reserved

Variables Affecting Elasticity

Substitutes: The more substitutes, the higher the elasticity, as people can easily switch from one good to another if a minor price change is made

(How many good options for education do parents have in your local community?) What about distance learning?

Percentage of income: The higher the percentage that the product's price is of the consumer’s income, the higher the elasticity, as people will be careful with purchasing the good because of its cost

What percentage of NET DESPOSAL income is the TOTAL COST for your school for two children for your average family?

Duration: The longer a price change holds, the higher the elasticity, as more and more people will stop demanding the goods (i.e. if you go to the supermarket and find that blueberries have doubled in price, you'll buy it because you need it this time, but next time you won't, unless the price drops back down again)

Tuition and Fees never go down. This increases elasticity Breadth of definition: The broader the definition, the lower the elasticity. For example,

Company X's fried dumplings will have a relatively high elasticity, where as food in general will have an extremely low elasticity (see Substitutes, Necessity above)

Presbyterian and Reformed Education (higher elasticity)Christian Education (high elasticity)

Education (lower elasticity) Necessity: The more necessary a good is, the lower the elasticity, as people will attempt to buy

it no matter the price, such as the case of insulin for those that need it.

Unfortunately, few consider a Christian education a necessity—it is a COMMODITY.

Page 14: MID-ATLANTIC CHRISTIAN SCHOOL ASSOCIATION (MACSA) APRIL 2009 Leading Our Schools Through Uncertain Economic Times Dr. Barrett Mosbacker All Rights Reserved

Remember, if your community (market place) is blessed with a large number of high quality public and private schools—and increasingly virtual schools--parents have a smorgasbord of quality educational options.

If parents perceive the alternative educational options to be safe, high quality learning environments, they are more likely to consider enrollment in the Christian school to be a discretionary “luxury” purchase.

THIS IS PARTICULARLY TRUE DURING AN ECONOMIC DOWNTURN.

Only the most diehard adherents to a Christian philosophy of education will consider enrollment in the Christian school a necessity.

Page 15: MID-ATLANTIC CHRISTIAN SCHOOL ASSOCIATION (MACSA) APRIL 2009 Leading Our Schools Through Uncertain Economic Times Dr. Barrett Mosbacker All Rights Reserved

The “Christian” in Christian School Not Worth the $$

The Archdiocese of Chicago provides a compelling example of this principle. Faced with declining enrollments and a school deficit of $20 million, the Archdiocese commissioned a study to determine how to boost school enrollment. Boffetti (n.d.) reports that researchers discovered that:

Struggling schools, at the very least, needed to fill every available seat with tuition-paying students. Surprisingly, many inner-city parents, both Catholic and non-Catholic alike, did not know that Catholic education would only cost them $1,000 a year, with the diocese picking up the rest of the tab. When they learned the facts, many said they would eagerly pay to get their children out of the awful and dangerous public schools they were in.

Suburban parents were more sanguine. Parents who believed in the importance of Catholic education already sent their children to Catholic schools. The rest of the parents did not think it would be worth the added expense because they felt that their suburban public school system was at least equal to, if not better than, the Catholic schools in terms of academics and amenities [emphasis added]. In other words, the “Catholic” in Catholic education was not worth an extra $1,000 per year to them.

Page 16: MID-ATLANTIC CHRISTIAN SCHOOL ASSOCIATION (MACSA) APRIL 2009 Leading Our Schools Through Uncertain Economic Times Dr. Barrett Mosbacker All Rights Reserved

http://online.wsj.com/article/SB123301904801417967.html

… Trinity Episcopal School is one of many kindergarten-through-12th-grade private schools caught in the middle of an economic tempest: anemic endowments, dwindling donations, financially strapped parents slashing tuition from the family budget, and an exodus to suburbs with more appealing public schools where costs are lower.

"The discourse has shifting from sustainability to survivability," says Myra McGovern, a spokeswoman for the National Association of Independent Schools.The association also has seen more applications from families seeking financial aid…

Impact on Private Schools

Page 17: MID-ATLANTIC CHRISTIAN SCHOOL ASSOCIATION (MACSA) APRIL 2009 Leading Our Schools Through Uncertain Economic Times Dr. Barrett Mosbacker All Rights Reserved

A New Competitor / A New Opportunity

Alabama, not historically known for innovation or high quality education, is leading the nation in connecting every public school in the state to online asynchronous courses and synchronous courses offered through video conferencing and other interactive technologies.

According to Drs. Horn and Christensen (authors of Disrupting Class) of the Harvard Business School, public education enrollments in online classes have skyrocketed from 45,000 in 2000 to roughly 1 million today. It is projected that by 2020 over 50% of high school classes will be available online.

The Florida Virtual School (FLVS) reflects this explosion in D.L. Founded in 1997, FLVS currently enrolls 63,675 students in grades 6-12. Enrollment is open to public, private, and home school students. FLVS offers more than 90 courses—including core subjects, world languages, electives, honors, and over 10 Advanced Placement courses.

Page 18: MID-ATLANTIC CHRISTIAN SCHOOL ASSOCIATION (MACSA) APRIL 2009 Leading Our Schools Through Uncertain Economic Times Dr. Barrett Mosbacker All Rights Reserved

Projected Growth

Drs. Horn and Christensen outline four reasons why distance learning will continue to grow:Distance learning technologies will keep improving.Distance learning provides the ability of teachers, students, and parents to select right learning pathways for differentiated learning thus customizing the education to the learning preferences and needs of each child.The looming teacher shortage caused by the retirement of baby boomers will propel schools to move to distance learning to gain access to hard to hire teachers in math, science, and other subjects.The cost of distance learning will fall significantly.

Page 19: MID-ATLANTIC CHRISTIAN SCHOOL ASSOCIATION (MACSA) APRIL 2009 Leading Our Schools Through Uncertain Economic Times Dr. Barrett Mosbacker All Rights Reserved

Projected Growth

The Sloan Consortium has issued its fifth annual state of online learning in U.S. higher education report based on responses from over 2,500 colleges and universities. Titled Online Nation: Five Years of Growth in Online Learning, some of the study’s key findings include:

Almost 3.5 million students were taking at least one online course during the fall 2006 term

Nearly twenty percent of all U.S. higher education students were taking at least one online course in the fall of 2006.

Virtually all (83 percent) institutions with online offerings expect their online enrollments to increase over the coming year.

Page 20: MID-ATLANTIC CHRISTIAN SCHOOL ASSOCIATION (MACSA) APRIL 2009 Leading Our Schools Through Uncertain Economic Times Dr. Barrett Mosbacker All Rights Reserved

Many of the problems faced by our schools are systemic and have existed for some time. The recession highlights and exasperates the weaknesses.

The recession can be a “refining fire” for our schools.

We should respond aggressively and proactively but not overreact.

We must guard against being Christian fatalists using God’s sovereignty as a pretext for poor decisions , inaction, or mediocrity.

Page 21: MID-ATLANTIC CHRISTIAN SCHOOL ASSOCIATION (MACSA) APRIL 2009 Leading Our Schools Through Uncertain Economic Times Dr. Barrett Mosbacker All Rights Reserved

Strategies

Page 22: MID-ATLANTIC CHRISTIAN SCHOOL ASSOCIATION (MACSA) APRIL 2009 Leading Our Schools Through Uncertain Economic Times Dr. Barrett Mosbacker All Rights Reserved
Page 23: MID-ATLANTIC CHRISTIAN SCHOOL ASSOCIATION (MACSA) APRIL 2009 Leading Our Schools Through Uncertain Economic Times Dr. Barrett Mosbacker All Rights Reserved

Source: http://blogs.edweek.org/edweek/DigitalEducation/2009/01/teacher_education_program_trie_1.html

Example

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Discussion