Vision
A Christ-centered academic community bound together for the formation of children who increasingly delight in God and are prepared for skillful and full-hearted participation in life.
Mission
Employing Charlotte Mason and classical methodologies, Tyndale Christian School provides a distinctively Christian education devoted to cultivating academic excellence and love for all that is God's.
Distinctively Christian
Understanding God as Creator and His saving purposes in Jesus Christ undergirds all our teaching and conduct. We believe a distinctively Christian education should emphasize the following:
Lordship
We honor the Lordship of Jesus Christ over all things, acknowledging that all truth, all beauty — everything in all creation — was created by Him, reflects Him, is sustained by Him, and exists for Him.
Wisdom
We apply biblical truth to all of life so that the heart and mind of a student, quickened by the Holy Spirit, might know, love, and obey God.
Worldview
Our core beliefs are those of orthodox Christianity, as revealed in the Bible and summarized historically in the Apostles’ and Nicene Creeds. We are rooted in historic Anglicanism, a Christian tradition born out of the Protestant Reformation in England.
Excellence
We aim to do everything with vigor and industry, as an act of worship to God, with all our heart, mind, and strength.
Tyndale Christian School upholds the timeless wisdom of the Scripture, integrating a deeply biblical worldview into all subject matter and a Bible class at every grade level.
We want to nurture young people who have a genuine love of learning, are equipped to live as vibrant Christians who integrate their faith in their various callings and can articulate and defend the Christian message with clarity, creativity, and conviction.
Academic Excellence
Our faith calls us to undertake all we do, including learning, wholeheartedly and with all our might as an act of worship to God. At Tyndale Christian School, we place a high value on excellence and effort, with particular emphasis on the following:
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Classical learning supports a Christ-centered education in our experience. Unlike modern educational philosophies, classical education is committed to the pursuit of truth, virtue, and the acquisition of wisdom. The classical Greek and Roman understanding of education as a process that forms the whole person is consistent with the biblical understanding of learning that guides us, for example, to give all diligence to add to our faith qualities of virtue, knowledge, temperance, patience, godliness, brotherly kindness, and charity (2 Peter 1:5-7). Classical education does not take a value-neutral stance. Rather, truth-guided values are considered central for learning and insight. Instead of solely basing our understanding of the world on our experience, classical education recognizes that we must learn from the wisdom and failures of the past, including the wisdom of Christian thinkers — from St. Augustine to John Bunyan to C.S. Lewis — who have contributed to the great body of Christian literature.
We are inspired by the example of William Tyndale whose classical education included fluency in Greek, Latin, and four other languages and led to the development of exceptional precision and beauty with words. His commitment to truth motivated him to risk and, ultimately, lose his life for the aim of providing the Scriptures to all English-speaking people in their native tongue. He did this with such excellence that he is considered the Father of modern English.
Tyndale Christian School carries on the classical tradition, sharing a devotion to the development of virtue, an appreciation of the insights gained by reading the great works of the past, a commitment to the study of language, including Latin, and benefitting from a pathway of learning that involves the trivium and quadrivium.
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A classical educator from late-nineteenth-century England influences our view of how students learn best. She emphasized that children reflect the image of God, possessing a highly relational nature and bearing the responsibility and dignity of being moral agents. Her ideas inspire the following in our school.
Discovery of Living Ideas: Through teaching, writing, and modeling, we communicate facts together with “living ideas” (those that are revealing of truth and goodness) that grow and bear fruit in a student’s life.
Cultivation of Good Habits: "I am, I can, I ought, I will" is the language Charlotte Mason offers children to express the power of habit for character formation. We emphasize developing such habits as kindness, listening, attentiveness, respect, order, and follow-through.
Impressing Values Through Atmosphere: While words matter a great deal, what matters most is often expressed by other means. We work to build a warm, beautiful, and good atmosphere and believe, like Charlotte Mason, that this is essential for whole-person formation.
Tools of Learning: We emphasize short lessons in the early years to develop full attention and focus, ultimately strengthening students' ability for deep work and rewarding learning over a lifetime. Through nature study, students become careful observers, able to distinguish detail, accurately measure, and inquisitively discover, laying a foundation for a lifetime of delight in and stewardship of God's world. Narration, dictation, recitation, and literature, picture, and composer study develop skills of expression and love for what is true and beautiful.
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We attract and train gifted teachers who believe in and are committed to Christ-centered expression of knowledge and learning and develop classroom practices in keeping with our commitment to Charlotte Mason and classical methodologies.
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We inculcate exceptional study habits and challenge students to use and develop their God-given gifts to their highest potential to the glory of God alone and in humble service to others.
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Our curriculum provides a challenging pace, guiding students to consistently offer their very best. We value each student to strive toward his or her next level of ability because we value progress over static measurements of percentage marks and grade levels.
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Our curriculum philosophy is rooted in the biblical understanding that all knowledge is revealed in Christ and, therefore, has coherence and meaning. We shape each grade level’s courses so that students apprehend the natural relationships between subjects.
Whole-Person Formation
At Tyndale Christian School, we are committed to the growth of the whole person in mind, body, spirit, and relationships. We seek to cultivate this growth as a community and do so, in part, through a focus on strengthening healthy rhythms of life for students and their families.
Sabbath Rest:
We are made in God’s image, and God the Father rested on the Seventh Day. We follow his example and encourage our families to experience the gift of Sabbath rest by worshiping, spending time outdoors, and having uninterrupted time with loved ones.
Outdoor Exploration in God’s Creation:
We share Charlotte Mason’s conviction that God’s creation is a gift to humankind, is a vital part of good education, and is essential for human thriving. Through generous time in nature, children experience greater physical, emotional, and mental health and significant cognitive and relational benefits, as evidenced by ample empirically verified studies.
Service to Others:
Christians worship a self-giving God, who calls us to do the same. We desire to integrate service into our school rhythms, as we believe that even the youngest learners are able to “use whatever gift [they] have received to serve others.” (1 Peter 4:10).
Limited Technology:
We limit technology in our classrooms and do not permit students to have devices during the school day. We aim to partner with parents to foster appropriate boundaries around technology usage. We encourage parents to cast a positive vision for healthy family habits concerning technology.
In Partnership with Parents
Partnership with parents is at the core of who we are as a community of faith and learning. By partnership, we mean we are in covenant with one another and God in a shared vision and mission. The relationship between parents and school must be cooperative and collaborative for us to succeed.
We believe learning can be a “garden of delight,” where young plants are given excellent nourishment, rich “soil,” and joyful encouragement. By partnering with parents who are growing amidst the care of a church community, the hearts and minds of students are cultivated in the home, at school, and at church. We pray that in each setting, our students are equipped to bear fruit for the glory of God and the good of others.