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An Armenian School In Philadelphia Fights To Survive

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  • An Armenian School In Philadelphia Fights To Survive

    AN ARMENIAN SCHOOL IN PHILADELPHIA FIGHTS TO SURVIVE

    ARMENPRESS
    APRIL 4, 2012
    PHILADELPHIA

    PHILADELPHIA, APRIL 4, ARMENPRESS: Only 16 students walked through
    the door in 1967 when three nuns from Lebanon opened a school for
    Armenian youth in a Southwest Philadelphia house, reports Armenpress
    citing Philly.

    But the Armenian Sisters of the Immaculate Conception held fast to
    their mission. They taught classes, served lunches, and drove buses
    as 16 grew to 225, and the rowhouse eventually was replaced by a
    converted Radnor estate.

    Thirty-five years after the first homework assignment was given, the
    Armenian Sisters Academy - one of about 15 Armenian day schools in the
    United States and the only one in the Philadelphia-South Jersey region
    - is facing the same enrollment and economic challenges confronting
    other schools.Student enrollment is 135, down from 225 10 years ago.

    The pre-K-to-8 academy is faced with the dilemma of competing against
    good schools in the western suburbs at a time when parents are holding
    their purse strings more tightly.Future plans for the independent
    private school include boosting recruitment efforts, expanding
    fund-raising sources, and finding ways to help with transportation for
    students who live in neighborhoods where distance is an issue, said
    Asadur Minasian, chairman of the school's board.The school's mission is
    to educate Armenian American youth and to pass down Armenian culture,
    history, and language. About 90 percent of the students are of Armenian
    heritage.he first wave of Armenian day schools were founded in the
    early 1960s. In the last 10 years at least two Armenian day schools -
    in the Detroit and Boston areas - have closed, Libaridian said.




    From: A. Papazian
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