Native American Preparatory School

Native American Preparatory School

The Native American Preparatory School (NAPS) was started in 1988 as a summer academic program by Richard Ettinger, son of the founder of the Prentice Hall publishing dynasty and the Education Foundation of America (EFA). At its inception, NAPS operated in schools in New Mexico, Arizona, and the University of California, Irvine. EFA poured $20 million into acquiring land some ten miles east of Pecos, New Mexico, next to the village of San Ysidro. The property purchased was formerly a corporate retreat developed by the 3M Corporation. The Pecos River ran through the southern part of the campus. The ranch of movie star Val Kilmer bordered NAPS to the west and north. And just a few miles more to the northwest lay the foothills of the Sangre de Christo range of the Southern Rockies.

In 1996, after Richard's untimely death, the leadership of NAPS passed to his daughter from his first marriage, Barbara Ettinger. In 1996, Barbara became Chair of NAPS' Board of Trustees. That year, NAPS began its permanent existence as a four-year college-prep school still guided by Richard's vision of increasing the number of Native American students having post-secondary educational opportunities. NAPS, the only existing intertribal, privately-funded preparatory school for Native Americans, drew its students from tribes across the United States and Canada. These students received full to partial scholarships according to need.

In 2000, Barbara was forced off the Board by a group of its members including her stepmother, Richard's third wife, Sharon Ettinger. Barbara and her soon-to-be husband, Head of School Sven Huseby, left NAPS for good.

In 2000, after graduating its first two classes, NAPS could boast that 100% of its students had been placed in post-secondary educational opportunities ranging from community college to admissions to Stanford and Harvard. Under the leadership of then Academic Dean Diana Gruendler, 83% of NAPS' students were admitted to their first choice college or university. Still on the Board were soon-to-be Chair Cheryl Hamer Mackell (then a Santa Fe attorney, now heading the Washington, D.C. office of Pomerantz Haudek Block Grossman & Gross) and Knott's Berry Farm heiress Frances Knott. In the fall of 2001, new Head of the School Gruendler, Dean of Students Leslie Lopez, and Dean of Admissions Christopher Johnson, were fired by Mackell, Knott, and the Board. NAPS would later settle with these administrators after a suit for wrongful termination and a related civil rights claim. All administrators fired were Native American. None of the Board members of the Native American Preparatory School were themselves Native American.

The school would be closed forever in 2002 due its financial situation. But when Sharon offered to put up the money needed to keep NAPS going so long as the then existing Board dissolved itself, that plan was rejected by the Board. The events leading up to NAPS' demise were the focus of an investigation by the New Mexico Attorney General.

The NAPS Restoration Committee was begun in Spring of 2002 in an effort to save the school. The Attorney General's investigation into NAPS' closure found evidence of fraud and financial mismanagement by the Board. Still, the cost of a full-blown criminal investigation and prosecution against well-heeled Board members with powerful connections was deemed an unwise use of limited government resources. With the student body having already found other schools to attend, and the teachers already accepting other positions for the following school year, there was nothing left to save for 2002-2003. The only punishment metted out to the Board which oversaw the destruction of NAPS was a negotiated settlement of one-million dollars to assist former students with future academic expenses.

The NAPS property has been on the real estate market for years and remains unsold as of 2011.

References

  • "Native American Preparatory School," by Jackie Bissley. September 1999. Cowboys & Indians [1]
  • "Native American Preparatory School Graduates its Last Class," by Christina Boyle. The Santa Fe New Mexican, reprinted in Canku Ota, June 1, 2002. [2]
  • "A Summer Journey: The 1999 College Horizons Program," by Barbara Sorensen, Winds of Change, the magazine of The American Indian Science and Engineering Society [3]


Wikimedia Foundation. 2010.

Игры ⚽ Нужно решить контрольную?

Look at other dictionaries:

  • American International School-Salzburg — The American International School (AIS) Salzburg is an international college preparatory boarding and day school located in Salzburg, Austria. The school is operated on an American High School curriculum accredited by the Middle States… …   Wikipedia

  • American International School of N'Djamena — The American International School of N’Djamena (AISN) is a small international school in the Chadian capital, N Djamena. It is an independent, coeducational day school which offers an American style educational program from prekindergarten… …   Wikipedia

  • Seton Hall Preparatory School — Infobox School name = Seton Hall Preparatory School native name = motto = Hazard Zet Forward (Despite hazards, move forward) established = 1856 address = 120 Northfield Avenue city = West Orange state = NJ province = zipcode = 07052 country = USA …   Wikipedia

  • North Broward Preparatory School — North Broward Prep Address 7600 Lyons Road Coconut Creek, Florida, 33073  United St …   Wikipedia

  • Navajo Preparatory School — Address 1220 West Apache Street Farmington, New Mexico, 87401 United States Information School type College Preparatory School Motto …   Wikipedia

  • St. Augustine College Preparatory School — Infobox School logo = motto = Veritas Unitas Caritas (Truth, Unity, Love) name = St. Augustine College Preparatory School type = Roman Catholic, Augustinian, Private secondary established = 1959 address = 611 Cedar Avenue city = Richland state =… …   Wikipedia

  • Flintridge Preparatory School — Infobox Secondary school picture = name = Flintridge Preparatory School native name = motto = established = 1933 city = La Canada Flintridge state = California province = country = campus = type = Private affiliation = affiliations = president =… …   Wikipedia

  • American literature — For the journal of the same name, see American Literature (journal). American literature is the written or literary work produced in the area of the United States and its preceding colonies. For more specific discussions of poetry and theater,… …   Wikipedia

  • American and British English differences — For the Wikipedia editing policy on use of regional variants in Wikipedia, see Wikipedia:Manual of style#National varieties of English. This is one of a series of articles about the differences between British English and American English, which …   Wikipedia

  • School for the Talented & Gifted — Infobox School name = School for the Talented Gifted type = Public, Secondary location = 1201 E. Eighth St. Dallas, TX 75203 imagesize = 100px district = Dallas Independent School District grades = 9 12 principal = F. Michael Satarino [http://www …   Wikipedia

Share the article and excerpts

Direct link
Do a right-click on the link above
and select “Copy Link”