"THAT OF GOD IN EVERY
PERSON"
The central concept that "there
is that of God in every person" colors what we do throughout
the school. That tenet leads us to value each child for
his or her accomplishments, to believe in encouraging students
from diverse ethnic, racial and religious backgrounds to
attend the school, to discuss peaceful resolution of difficulties
whether those difficulties occur on the kindergarten playground,
the Upper School playing fields or in the world beyond Penn
Charter, and to foster a commitment of service to others.
If asked about Quakerism at Penn Charter, most students
would focus on Meeting for Worship, a time of silent meditation
punctuated by thoughts any member of the group wishes to
share. For the kindergartner, that meeting may be five minutes
of silence. By the close of the year, the meetings have
reached twenty minutes. Upper and Middle School students
meet for forty minutes weekly. Most often, students who
choose to speak share a reflection about some event of importance
in their lives. Adults within the group are often moved
by the clarity, simplicity and truth of the words of students.
For many students, participation in service projects is
an important influence and a vital expression of Quaker
social concern for others.
Parents also wonder how Quakerism will fit with their own
religious tradition if that tradition is apart from the
Society of Friends. Parents of children who have gone through
the school comment that the period of silence is a time
that has helped their children to refine their own moral
positions and to consider their own spiritual roots. Quakers
in no way wish to deny the validity of other religious traditions.
Rather, it is the school's desire to help a student reflect
on the meaning of that tradition in a way that supports
the work of the family.