Tuesday, June 3, 2008

The End of (School) Days

As we close the end of the 2007-08 school year we bring to an end some school and personal milestones. This was the tenth year our school has been located in Summerlin. That happens to coincide with the number of years I have been the head administrator here. The first is not much of the surprise; the 2nd is.


I am amazed and humbled at what God has accomplished in just ten years at this school. With the exception of the tennis courts and a dedicated soccer field, the original Master Plan is now complete and the buildings are much bigger than than what was originally envisioned. Even with that, we have had to keep and grow the portable classroom farm on the southwest side. Over the last ten years our student population and faculty have more than doubled. Faith has become a school of importance in our community.
Mary and I have been glad to ride along. After stops in Portland, OR; New York City; Cleveland, and Chicago, Las Vegas is now the longest place we have ever lived. My previous connections with the city were not remarkable. In the early 80s the school had contacted me about being a teacher but I had no interest in moving west again. In the mid-90s we took the longest of any of our family vacations, travelling from Chicago down to I-40 and across the southwest to LA and then back northeast up to I-90 and back to Chicago. One of our stops was a July day in Las Vegas. I remember it being 103 degrees at 10:00 am and declaring with great certainty that only crazy people lived in such a climate. My antipathy was lessened somewhat when Mary won $40 at a Caesar's Palace slot.
But man plans and God laughs. Not that much later I would consider and then accept the call to be Faith's principal. My 1st goal was simply to be the longest serving administrator in the school's brief history. Reached that milestone a while ago. We crossed the 1000 student plateau and kept going.
As we approach graduation it is hard not to be nostalgic. The last Moyer is graduating which ends a streak of more than a dozen years of having a student at Faith. Other families are bringing long associations with school to a close. Some will watch students cross the stage and know that it took an act of God to make it happen; others will wonder what will become of their son, daughter, niece, nephew, grandchild or friend who may have talents and abilities that surpass most of us regular folk. Is there a future Bill Gates, Mother Teresa, John McCain or Hilary Clinton among them? Are there teachers and preachers to inspire another generation?
The future for them and for us is in God's hands. My prayer for those who graduate is that they are happy and make a difference in the lives of people around them.
Take a look at the progress our building is making:









We have some sidewalks!



This is the support structure for seating below the mezzanine.




This monster pump supports the sprinkler sytem for the tallest building on campus.

This will be the drama classroom/green room. It is really big!

1 comment:

Anonymous said...

I am so glad that you have turned Faith into what it has become. It is the most excellent school in all of Clark County.
My son has been at Faith since 6th grade and will be completing Grade 10 in a few days.
Each year new and exciting things are happening and evolving at the school.
The academics are far superior to any other private school and just keep getting better.
I am so glad that the school is based on Lutheran principles, as that is so very important to both me and my son.
I am looking forward to the completion of the new Chapel and Performing Arts Building and each year I am impressed by the improvements made to the campus.
Thank you so much for your guiding hand and the fantastic teachers and support staff. You all work so well as a team to provide the best education experience possible.
God Bless You!