Our Mission
To share the Gospel of Jesus Christ in word and deed through excellence in education with young children and their families
To share the Gospel of Jesus Christ in word and deed through excellence in education with young children and their families
Prince of Peace Lutheran School, known originally as the Christian Day School, opened in September 1969, with a staff of three and an enrollment of 39 children. Pastor Ralph Wiechmann conceived a quality Christian Pre-Kindergarten school that, despite modest origins, would grow with the community. He turned to Marianne Latall, a Prince of Peace Member and former Lutheran Kindergarten teacher to begin organizing such a school and to serve as its Director/Principal. The school’s mission at its inception is the same as it is today: “To share the Gospel of Jesus Christ in word and deed through excellence in education with young children and their families.”
In 1999, Principal Cina Deaton oversaw the planning and development of our beautiful new school facility and playgrounds.
The school has always featured a play-based model of learning and made process art, music, and worship integral to the curriculum. Art and Music Specialists work alongside our teachers to enrich the children’s school day. And we enjoy simple, liturgical, special music written and curated for our school by long-time church members and school staff: Kathy Forsythe, Lola Coyle, and Stacy Adducci.
The church/school campus has four playgrounds designed specifically for different ages of children, starting with our littlest 2 ½ year olds and extending to our elementary-aged Kindergarteners.
The church has loved and supported the school ministry since its inception, and the ministry has been blessed with strong staff retention and low turnover rates, and the privilege of serving several generations of families in our community.
a child's early and first school experiences help form the foundation for a lifetime of learning. Our faculty and staff believe it both an honor and a privilege to be in partnership with parents as their children embark upon their first journeys into formal education. It is through experiencing school as "another ripple" in the ever-widening circle of their world that children continue to learn about attachment, trust, and community, and continue to develop a "disposition for learning" [Lillian Katz].
fostering a child's growth, development and learning in all the domains of learning (i.e., social and emotional, intellectual and language, spiritual and physical). We believe that all children grow and develop on a continuum and we know that in that continuum we accept and celebrate the range of individual differences that occur.
Our understanding of curriculum is one that is informed by constructivist theory and the Reggio approach. This view is one in contrast to curriculum planning based solely on a behaviorist theory that sees learning as a transactional process and understands curriculum as a product that is “covered” or “delivered” rather than created.
Rather, we believe curriculum is a complex, kinetic process and that deep and meaningful learning occurs in communities of learning that are influenced by the dynamic interaction of teachers, children, materials and the environment. Together, these participants and components create learning communities that value play as an important vehicle for learning, and that recognize and appreciate children’s curiosity, interests and desire for connection which promote an active role in learning. Our team meets regularly to review and develop the curriculum that we use in our classrooms. At the core of our curriculum is Christ’s love for us, a love that prompts us to love one another as He loved us in active, concrete and dynamic ways.
Because Prince of Peace Lutheran School believes that fostering learning in children is supporting their growth and development, the school's learning objectives relate to each of the developmental areas. These learning objectives are planned for all children attending Prince of Peace Lutheran School and are cited with the understanding that they will be met in age-appropriate and developmentally appropriate ways, with an attention to individual differences. Teachers plan the environment, gather learning materials and resources, and design learning.