Although Southwest Florida is best known as a destination for part-time
residents and retirees, the group that has shown the most recent population
growth in the area is young families. In fact, Lee County has seen a 26 percent
increase in its school-age children since 2000, and Collier County expects to
serve several thousand more students by 2010.
With this growth comes the need
for more funding for more schools, teachers and education options. Doing their
part, the region’s schools have stepped up with improved test scores, facility
additions and faculty incentives for area schools.
Lee County
Seventy-five percent of Lee County schools earned an A or B
grade in 2006, based on the criteria for the state’s A-plus School
Accountability program, as well as other rigorous and innovative education
programs. For example, the intensive college prep courses at Fort Myers High
School’s International Baccalaureate program earned the school a place in
Newsweek’s “Top 100 High Schools” for the past several years.
But like any
good report card, these achievements didn’t come without effort. According to
Joseph Donzelli, director of communications and public relations at Lee County
Public Schools, the greatest challenges facing Lee County public schools are,
indeed, growth and funding. In 2005–2006, Lee schools served approximately
75,565 students, and projections estimate that the schools will take in another
3,500 to 5,000 students every year over the next decade. In 2005, eight new
elementary schools opened in Lee County, and three more schools were added for
the 2006–2007 school year. Existing schools are expanding as well. Over the past
decade, Lee’s School Choice program, which allows parents to choose their
children’s school within a particular zone, continues to diversify the county’s
student population. In addition, the 2006 salary increase for Lee teachers is
one of many steps that have been taken to attract quality instructors in Lee’s
competitive hiring market.
Lee has also set the pace for “attractor” schools
with specialized art or technology programs, and secondary schools that promote
real-world experiences, such as Dunbar High School’s Academy for Technology
Excellence.
“We’ve opened up comprehensive high schools that are truly on
the edge of innovation,” says Donzelli. “Students already can focus on a
particular area of study—which [complies] with the new high school reform that
asks students to declare a major.”
Charter schools—publicly funded, privately
operated, community-based schools organized by parents and teachers—are a
growing option to traditional public education. Lee County already has 11 such
schools and will see four new charter schools in 2007, such as Gateway Charter
High School.
Collier County
Children under five outnumber people over 80 in Collier
County, according to the U.S. Census. The region is expected to serve 50,000
students in its schools by 2010, an increase of 6,000 from this year. The
Collier School District, awarded the Florida Seal of Best Financial Management
in 2006, enjoys a solid tax base and will benefit from funds gained through
increased impact fees later this year. This will allow Collier to build and
expand programs, including the voter-approved, voluntary pre-kindergarten
program and the addition of technical high schools and charter schools. Collier
currently has two charter schools. Another, Marco Island Charter Middle School,
currently housed in portable facilities, broke ground for its new building in
the summer of 2006.
The county earned a B grade from the state in 2006, with
a majority of schools improving their grades from previous years. Like Lee
County, Collier is also addressing the challenge of recruiting and retaining
high-quality instructors. School officials are weighing in at the state level on
trying to provide more affordable workforce housing in the county, offering
ideas such as building teacher housing on school grounds.
Collier’s
secondary education is marked by innovations in curriculum that allow students
to forge connections with career goals. The county’s expanding technical high
school programs in new schools such as Walker Career and Technical High School
have been inundated with student applications. The school’s student body will
grow over the next four years to 600, grades nine through 12. Construction on
the permanent campus is slated for June 2007.
Private Education
Private-school enrollment is estimated to rise
nationally by 7 percent over the next six years. In Southwest Florida, schools
such as Evangelical Christian have reported enrollment increases of up to 13
percent.
Lee County has more than 59 private schools, from traditional
Catholic schools such as St. Francis Xavier to Canterbury School, Fort Myers’
prestigious college preparatory academy. There is also a
growing segment of
smaller religious and alternative schools, such as Providence Christian School
in Cape Coral, serving 157 students from pre-K through eighth grade, and
Renaissance Inc., a Montessori school with 60 students from
pre-K through
sixth grade. Collier has approximately 17 private schools, both religious, such
as Christ Community Lutheran, and secular, such as the Community School of
Naples.
Home schooling is another increasingly popular option in Southwest
Florida. The Florida Parent-Educators Association recognizes 13 religious and
secular home-school support groups for Lee and Collier counties. Homeschoolers
of Collier County saw its membership grow from 45 families in 2005 to 60
families in 2006.
Higher Education
With tech-friendly classrooms, off-site learning centers
and innovative facilities, the colleges and universities of Southwest Florida
offer programs that reflect contemporary concerns and job markets. Edison
College, the oldest institution at 44 years, houses campuses in Naples and Fort
Myers and offers 36 different associate’s degrees and professional certificate
programs. Florida Gulf Coast University, the newest state university in Florida,
has nearly 7,000 students, up 1,000 students from the 2004–2005 academic year.
FGCU offers 57 graduate and undergraduate programs, with the colleges of arts
and sciences and business attracting the most students.
International
College, founded in 1990, is a private, four-year college that specializes in
flexible schedules with classes taught by working professionals. It offers its
1,342 students bachelor’s and master’s degrees in 16 disciplines.
The
private Catholic university, Ave Maria University, poured the foundation for its
landmark oratory in May 2006. During the construction of the Immokalee campus,
undergraduate and graduate classes will continue at the temporary Naples
campus.