Categories
Family and Community

Family Pride

By Lara Gajkowski
Assistant Head of School, Lakehill Preparatory School 

Growing up in a large family certainly has its benefits. I was undoubtedly never alone or without built-in playmates and I rarely can remember a time when my nuclear family of eleven lived alone. Grandparents, cousins, aunties and uncles, my sister, her spouse, and their child all lived at my house at one time or another and it was not uncommon to have overlapping families living with us at one time. It was a rich, active, boisterous, loving household. I am still very close to all my siblings, my ninety-year-old mother, and my extended family. However, being one of twenty as a nightly crowd for dinner or sharing one bathroom among the myriad of people does have its challenges!

My father was a high school science teacher and coach and a very good one at that. My mother stayed home and managed the crowd, the meals, the laundry, the conflicts, the holidays . . . in a word, everything! In her spare time, she made most of my clothes and those of my sisters and cooked all of our meals. She was and remains a remarkable, formidable woman.

The values instilled in me at home as a child – loyalty to family, commitment to hard work, taking care of others, showing gratefulness for the things given, and enjoying the spirit of a high energy community are the values that drew me to Lakehill as a professional.

When I first entered the halls of Lakehill years ago, I was warmed by a community that seemed so child-centered, warm, nurturing, and spirited. In many ways, I felt like I was coming home. What I most value about Lakehill is the opportunity children of all ages are given to try on different hats. It is an environment that challenges and encourages students to strive, to give, to learn, to play, and to work hard. I love seeing the same faces on the athletic fields, in the plays and musicals, in the choirs, in various competitions, as well as on stage receiving recognition for academic accomplishments.

It is an environment where kids may squabble like siblings yet revel in each other’s accomplishments. Our children grow up together and form relationships that last a lifetime.

Lakehill isn’t a school that just cranks out highly skilled students but rather a school that helps to create well-rounded individuals who are confident, poised, and competent. I love it when our college students come back to visit us and tell us with pride how well prepared they are for their new lives.

It’s the moments when I see our children excel, blossom, and most importantly feel happy that my motherly pride wants to pop the buttons off my shirt. I am proud of our community and of our beautiful children.

Categories
Family and Community

Saying Thanks

By Roger L. Perry
Headmaster, Lakehill Preparatory School 

As we celebrate the 40th Anniversary of Lakehill, I thought it might be of interest for you to know some of the people who have made the many facilities we enjoy possible. People who have attended basketball games over the years are probably familiar with a tall, lanky fellow with a light colored beard, who generally has been one of the loudest and most vocal supporters of our basketball teams.

His two sons, Andrew and Austin, have both been great contributors to the success of basketball at Lakehill over the years. This will be Austin’s senior season for the Lakehill team and Andrew is now in Graduate school at Wichita State University. I would guess that virtually every current student has been taught by his wife, Tina, as she has been a prolific substitute teacher for us over the years. She also served the school well as the president of the Parent Faculty Club.

Now on to Grant, the man who has always – and I mean always – come through for me when the school wanted to build something. I want to focus on a few of the major projects, as there have been so many times that he has helped us that I am sure I would forget a few if I tried to list them.

Grant Simpson is an architect. He is a celebrated and well respected expert in his field, as noted by his AIA fellowship. He has generously given of his and his firm’s time and expertise, and has convinced specialists in their respective fields to do work for us at no cost to the school. He has done this over and over again. The value to the school, over the years, has been several hundreds of thousands of dollars of architectural work. Realistically, many of the projects would not have been done if we had to pay the architectural fees.

He has drawn the auditorium and the Upper School wing, the layout of the entire Ferguson Road campus, the football field, the baseball field, the softball field, the tennis courts, the locker room facility, and most recently, the new Sports Court on the main campus. He also did the earliest drawings of the Environmental Science Center.

When asked why he does all of this, he always says, “I do it for the kids to enjoy”. I can assure you that the kids are enjoying the wonderful facilities that he helped make possible for them. So if you see Grant Simpson at an athletic event or around campus, please take a moment to just say “thanks”.