Franklin Road Academy

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Franklin Road Academy
"Building scholars with integrity and balance."
Location
4700 Franklin Road
Nashville, Tennessee, USA
Information
Type Independent co-educational college preparatory
Established 1969
Head of school Dr. Margaret "Sissy" Wade
Grades PreK-12
Enrollment 817
Student to teacher ratio 10:1
Color(s) Blue and White
Athletics conference TSSAA - Division II-A
Mascot Panthers
Newspaper 'The Panther Post'
Yearbook 'The Blueprint'
Website http://www.franklinroadacademy.com

Franklin Road Academy is a Pre-K-12 private, non-denominational Christian school located in Oak Hill, a suburb of Nashville, Tennessee. It was established in 1971. Its Head of School is Margaret W. ("Sissy") Wade.

History

Beginnings

Franklin Road Academy was founded in 1971 in coordination with First Christian Church. In order to build the school, over $300,000 in mortgage bonds were sold to church members, parents, and the community at large.

With construction still ongoing, Bill Bradshaw, Head of Franklin Road Academy, tested students in the office of Howell Hardware Store on Twelfth Avenue. Soon after completion of the new building, students began classes on September 7, 1971.

The next school year, many more students applied for enrollment at FRA. In order to meet the demand, Sunday School rooms at a nearby church, Brentwood Methodist Church were leased. Students were ferried between the two buildings, First Christian Church and Brentwood Methodist Church (at the time this was at the corner of Church Street and Franklin Pike, in an old six door limousine.

In 1973, FRA added additional classrooms and Lower School library. This addition was built not only through monetary donations, but also through gifts in-kind, such as labor, materials, and "know how" (such as plumbing, brick laying, electrical, etc.). In that same year, FRA also received approval from the Tennessee Department of Education and became accredited by the now non-existent Mid-South Association of Independent Schools.

Bill Bradshaw, founder and first Head of School of Franklin Road Academy

In 1975, FRA decided to establish a high school. The first class of 9th graders were housed in a building known as the Burke House. The following year, additional land was purchased in order to construct a formal high school building. In the Fall of 1976, both 9th and 10th graders began in the new building despite the lack of a fully completed roof. Each year, an additional grade was added until, in 1979, a class of 40 12th graders graduated from Franklin Road Academy.[1]

The 1980s

In 1981, Bill Bradshaw retired and was replaced as Head of School by William L. Campbell.

On June 3, 1982, Franklin Road Academy became its own separate organization incorporated under the name Franklin Road Academy, Inc., thereby achieving its goal to become an independent, denominational, Christian, co-educational, college-preparatory school. Following its incorporation, FRA received accreditation from the Southern Association of Colleges and Schools.

In 1983, an anonymous donor provided funds to add a second floor to the high school for the creation of a middle school. Four years later, FRA raised $3 million through a capital campaign for the construction of a separate lower school (conventionally known as an elementary school). In 1988, the new lower school was dedicated as Danner Hall.[2]

The 1990s

In 1994, the George A. Volkert Athletic Complex was completed. Referred to as "The Hill" by students and faculty, the complex houses a Football stadium, Baseball stadium, Tennis courts, a track, and a Softball field.

Aerial Photograph of the George A. Volkert Athletic Complex (Track and Softball Fields not shown)

During the 1990s FRA's middle school partnered with IBM to give students laptop computers. This was a ground breaking project, as laptops were relatively new at the time, and were very rarely used outside of the business sector. However, the project became a burden on IBM and the school, so it was ended several years later.

In 1999, FRA completed a $7 million middle school and fine arts building. The 3 story building houses approximately 300 students grades 5th through 8th in one building. The same building also features a state-of-the-art theatre as well as 2 art rooms,a band room, a choir room, 4 practice rooms with pianos, and a dance studio.[3]

The 2000s

Franklin Road Academy decided in 2000 to change the school mascot to a Panther.

Franklin Road Academy

In 2001 in an effort to create a friendly rivalry among students, FRA instituted a high school-wide competition dubbed Alpha-Omega whereby the high school students were split into two teams, the Alphas and the Omegas. The two teams compete in a year long competition with events ranging from Basketball and Powderpuff Football to Lip-Sync and Homecoming skits. Points are awarded to the winning team for each event. The year-end competition, called May Day, is an all day event with Soccer, Ultimate Frisbee, Three-Legged races, and many other games. The event culminates in the awarding of the trophy to team with the most points. Currently, the Alphas are the reigning champions, although the omegas have an overwhelming lead in the overall series.[4]

Starting in 2005, Franklin Road Academy began a roll out of Tablet PCs to every high school student. The tablets, which are purchased by the students in grades 7-12, allow for classes such as Math, Science, English, and Music (Band and Choir) to conduct classes with greater ease. The school also reviews the students information on personal websites such as Facebook and Myspace and punishes them for conduct not related to the school. FRA expanded its Tablet PC Program to include 7th and 8th grades in 2006.

Campus expansion

In January 2006, FRA broke ground on its new South campus expansion. The expansion was made possible through the purchase of the First Christian Church property. The purchase of the land increased FRA's campus to a total of 55 acres (220,000 m2).[5] The plan for the property was to construct a Math and Science building with state-of-the-art science labs and classrooms, a new Library and Technology center, the renovation of the original high school, and the renovation of the classrooms in the First Christian Church building. The plan separates the 5 major disciplines (English, History, Math, Science, and Foreign Language) into three separate buildings. The English and History departments are housed in the Humanities Building (the original high school). The Math and Science departments are housed in the aforementioned Math and Science Building. The Foreign Language department is housed in the South Campus building (the First Christian Church building which housed students in the early days of FRA). These three buildings, along with the Library and Technology center open onto a central "quad" (short for quadrangle). Moving the books into the new Library and Technology Center from the old library took a total of 4 days and the involvement of approximately 600 students.[6]

The total cost of the expansion, including the purchase of the First Christian Church property, was approximately $12 million.[7] In order to raise money for the expansion, and to bring more attention to the school Country Music star Alan Jackson donated his 2005 Ford GT to be given away in a raffle.

Technology upgrade

The renovation and expansion of the high school facilities allowed FRA to dramatically upgrade its technological capabilities. With the expansion came campus-wide Wi-Fi, an intercom system in the high school, the implementation of a campus-wide VoIP system, networked projectors in every room, and keypad enabled exterior doors for greater security. Over 32,000 feet (9,800 m) of networking cable was used in the expansion/renovation of the high school.[8]

The Wi-Fi expansion, which had already been implemented in both the high school and middle school buildings, expanded connection to the lower school and outdoor areas such as the new quad and the cafeteria patio.

The intercom system was a necessary addition since the high school hadn't been updated since its original completion in 1975. The beginning and end of classes were marked by the ringing of an actual bell and not electronic buzzers as were available in the lower and middle schools. The new high school system allows for quick, efficient communication between administrators, faculty, and students on a day to day basis, and in the event of an emergency.

The networked projectors allowed for every teacher to have a projector in their room, as well as eliminate the need for televisions carts that were wheeled to classrooms as needed, since each room is equipped with DVD and VCR players connected to the projectors. Teachers are able to wirelessly connect to the projector in order to display notes, PowerPoints, or anything else to the entire class.

The keypad-enabled exterior doors provide greater security by limiting the avenues of access to the buildings for visitors. The doors are accessible by students and faculty alike through the use of special codes entered into the keypads. Doors that are not secured with keypads remain locked at all times however.

Notes

  1. Franklin Road Academy History, retrieved 2007-02-18 
  2. 1980s, retrieved 2007-02-18 
  3. 1990s, retrieved 2007-02-18 
  4. 1990s, retrieved 2007-02-18 
  5. O'Brien, Erin (January 26, 2006), "Franklin Road Academy breaks ground on new facilities, quad", Green Hills News: 14 
  6. "Library Books Touch Students at Franklin Road Academy". News Channel 5, WTVF. 2006-12-18. Retrieved 2007-06-06. 
  7. "Franklin Road Academy going for college look, feel", Nashville Business Journal, 2006-01-20 
  8. "School Graduates to 10-gig Cabling", Communications News 44 (1), January 2007 

External links

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