Tag: The Barclay School

  • Barclay School closes

    RIDGEWAY – The small special needs school in Ridgeway that was struggling under the weight of financial challenges closed its doors last week, after more than a decade in operation.

    In a hastily planned graduation, four students were recognized to receive their diplomas – and the remaining 12, who were not set to graduate this year, had to find other schooling options, said Gillian Barclay-Smith, head and founder of the school, whose vision for a holistic, abilities-focused model of special education was what got the school started 11 years ago.

    “It just breaks my heart,” said Barclay-Smith of the closure, ex pressing gratitude for the way the community has wrapped its loving arms around the school in the years it’s operated. “People have been nothing but kind.”

    The Barclay School was part of the community in Ridgeway, a town with a tiny downtown but a big heart.

    The school always operated on a shoestring, and the community offered up its love in everything from donations of used books and equipment to volunteers who taught things like art, gardening, and life skills and helped to facilitate regular excursions for the students in the town.

    The school, which was known for its family-like atmosphere and kept several class pets, regularly involved the students in community service projects; the children were always taught to give back. 

    It became public in December that the school had suffered funding disruptions and was struggling to pay its bills.

    In an effort to help it stay open, landlord MEKRA Lang North America – a major industrial employer in Ridgeway – gifted the school a year of free rent. Parents and others pitched in with fundraising in an effort to help the Barclay School finish the spring semester and allow time to make a plan for the future.

    Donations came in from around the community and also from far outside, but in the end it was not enough, and at the end of last week the school closed its doors. 

    Barclay-Smith, for whom education has been a lifelong passion, expressed her thanks to everyone who played a role – big or small – in keeping this special place going for the past 11 years.

    “The community – everybody’s been wonderful,” she said. “What a privilege to spend the time in the company of these amazing kids and the wonderful support that we always got from the community, the kindness of people. That’s kind of what I’m left with.”

  • Community responds to Barclay School

    School’s Funding Has Been Cut, Not Delayed

    RIDGEWAY – While the Barclay School is not out of the woods financially, the head of the school, Gillian Barclay-Smith, said it seems like everyone associated with the school as well as complete strangers, are trying to move mountains to keep the school open after she learned two weeks ago that an IRS rule change had impacted a major non-profit funding source for the school.

    “It seems everyone has read about our plight and they want to help,” Barclay-Smith said. “It’s been overwhelming. We’ve received a lot of small donations, our landlord, MEKRA-Lang, has given us free rent for 2020, and others have done other things to help us in other ways. One of our parents cleaned up our website and revamped our online presence, literally overnight, which has actually helped our fundraising effort tremendously. So far, we have raised about $20,000 of the $50,000 we need to stay open until Christmas.”

    But that’s not all the school needs. It must have $150,000 to stay open until the end of the school year. But the $50,000 will give us time to put together a new funding plan for the future, according to Barclay-Smith.

    “One of our students’ parents who actually has a background and expertise in fundraising, is giving us invaluable help and advice,” Barclay-Smith said. “It’s literally round-the-clock work for all of us right now just to raise the $50,000. But we just have to stay open.”

    Barclay-Smith said some local media outlets have erroneously reported that the school’s funding is merely delayed.

    “That is not correct,” she said. “We will no longer get that funding. It’s that simple.”

    Begun more than a decade ago in a house on the campus of Columbia College, the Barclay School moved five years ago to Ridgeway. She said the town has welcomed the children with open arms.

    “We work with all children who learn differently. So, some of our children are on the autism spectrum, we have children with Down [Syndrome], we have children who struggle with reading and writing, we have children who struggle with anxiety. We are a hodgepodge of diversity and glad to be so,” Barclay-Smith said.

    She describes the school as a community where the children celebrate each other’s victories, where there’s no homework or “drill and grill” instruction, where chores and social graces are taught along with academics. There’s a farm-like collection of class pets, and the calendar is broken up with frequent field trips and downtown shopping excursions.

    Another important aspect of their learning is community service. The children participate by helping with Meals on Wheels, making cards, decorating downtown, and anything else that they can do to learn how to give back.

    “We’re a very different kind of school. We focus very much on what’s called strength-based learning, which basically flips the paradigm upside-down. Instead of focusing on everything we can’t do,” Barclay-Smith said, “we’re way more interested in what you can do. Where’s your passion? Where’s your love? For a lot of our children it’s music, it’s the arts, it’s drama. We try to find the children’s strengths, and it’s truly metamorphosing when they come here.

    “There is a great need for schools like ours,” Barclay-Smith said. “These children are special. They learn here and they love it here. When they left school this week for Christmas break, they all said to us, ‘we’ll see you after Christmas!’

    “And I truly hope they do,” Barclay-Smith said.

    Debra McCown Thomas contributed to this story.

  • Barclay School looking for Christmas miracle

    School Must Raise $50K by Dec. 25 to Stay Open
    The students at Barclay School celebrate the joys of the season despite the worry that their school may close.

    RIDGEWAY – After an IRS rule change impacted a major nonprofit funding source, a special needs school in Ridgeway is hoping for a Christmas miracle to help keep its doors open in 2020.

    The Barclay School, which currently serves 16 special needs children, has become a valued part of the community in the last few years as it has grown, says Gillian Barclay-Smith, head and founder of the school.

    Begun more than a decade ago in a house on the campus of Columbia College, it moved five years ago to Ridgeway, a town of about 300, which she says has welcomed the children with open arms.

    “We work with all children who learn differently. So, some of our children are on the autism spectrum, we have children with Down [Syndrome], we have children who struggle with reading and writing, we have children who struggle with anxiety. We are a hodgepodge of diversity and glad to be so,” says Barclay-Smith.

    “It sounds really trite, but we really are a family; the feel here is different. We meet the children where they are and not where the calendar says that they probably should be.”

    The school’s funding uncertainty going into the new year has a lot to do with a change to IRS rules for tax deductions disbursed through programs like South Carolina’s Exceptional SC, the nonprofit charged with distributing funds donated by taxpayers through an education-focused tax credit program.

    The organization currently helps to fund 142 special needs schools across the state, with funding distributed through a formula based on enrollment. At the Barclay School, this funding supplements the revenue generated by tuition that’s charged on a sliding scale.

    “I love this program because it redirects tax dollars to do something government is not very good at – these kids. It’s not that they can’t learn; they just learn differently,” says Chad Connelly, executive director of Exceptional SC.

    “Once you get a program in place like ours [for] five or six years, they come to count on it – and when something like this happens, what the heck do you do? It puts everybody in a bad fix.”

    The IRS rule change, he says, capped the amount an individual donors can claim a federal tax deduction for at $10,000. So while donors still receive a dollar-for-dollar match in state tax credits at a higher amount, the limit on federal deductions discourages larger contributions.

    The limit does not apply to corporate donors, but corporate taxes are low in South Carolina, he says – so limiting individual donors has cost the program big time. Last year, Exceptional SC raised $17.5 million in a day and a half; this year it raised just $6 million – and that took six months.

    Barclay-Smith says that for a small school like hers, funding received through the program is a big deal. Now, she says, they need to raise $150,000 to get through the end of the school year – $50,000 of that is needed by Dec. 25 to stay open – which will also buy time to put together a new funding plan for the future.

    The community response so far has given her hope in this tiny town, whose iconic main street is fit for a Hallmark movie.

    When the school’s landlord MEKRA Lang North America – a major industrial employer in Ridgeway – heard what had happened, they offered a valuable Christmas gift – free rent in 2020.

    Small donations have started to trickle in from the community: a $300 check from a town community fund, a local tea shop’s pledge to host a fundraiser, smaller donations from individuals giving what they can. It’s a good start – but it’s still a big hole to fill. 

    “People tell me Ridgeway is Mayberry. It’s an amazing little place. And if we could run on kindness, we wouldn’t have a problem,” she says.

    But it takes more than love from the community to cover bills and payrolls taxes. It takes dollars. And while they’ve set up a donation page (savebarclay.com) and parents are mobilizing to help raise funds, it’s a big task. They’re hoping more people will join in the effort.

    For Barclay-Smith, who herself struggled with learning issues as a child, education is a lifelong passion. The Barclay School began 11 years ago with a handful of parents who asked Barclay to work with their children using her holistic teaching methods.

    Her own story is an interesting one. After failing a high-stakes test as a middle-school student in her native England, she was sent to a school for low-performing students. But that school taught differently, and the next time testing came around, she went from failure to prodigy overnight.

    “I knew that I hadn’t changed,” she says. “The only thing that had changed was the approach in how I was taught.”

    She went on to earn a master’s degree in Germany and a Ph.D. in education from the University of South Carolina. At the Barclay School, she says, the teachers understand their students because they too have struggled with issues like dyslexia and ADHD.

    In addition to the school’s five full-time and two part-time teachers, they also rely upon two employees provided by Goodwill, two volunteer art teachers, help from college students studying to become teachers, and countless community groups that help with everything from lessons on gardening to talks on practical life-skills topics to weekly trips to the library.

    Barclay-Smith describes the school as a community where the children celebrate each other’s victories, where there’s no homework or “drill and grill” instruction, where chores and social graces are taught along with academics. There’s a farm-like collection of class pets, and the calendar is broken up with frequent field trips and downtown shopping excursions.

    Another important aspect of their learning is community service. The children participate by helping with Meals on Wheels, making cards, decorating downtown, and anything else that they can do to learn how to give back.

    “We’re a very different kind of school. We focus very much on what’s called strength-based learning, which basically flips the paradigm upside-down. Instead of focusing on everything we can’t do,” Barclay-Smith says, “we’re way more interested in what you can do. Where’s your passion? Where’s your love? For a lot of our children it’s music, it’s the arts, it’s drama. We try to find the children’s strengths, and it’s truly metamorphosing when they come here.”

    In the end, successful education is not about money, Barclay says. It’s about mindset. As a small, independent school, they’ve always operated on a shoestring budget. Still, it takes something.

    “Pretty much every desk, every chair, every book in this building was given to us or we went through Goodwill or we dug it out,” she says. “We’ve got this far on string, so let’s see if we can keep going.”

    To make a donation, go to savebarclay.com or call 803-629-6318.

  • The Pig Gives Back

    RIDGEWAY – Pig on the Ridge committee representatives Tom Connor and Henry Dixon present a check for $1,000 to the Barclay School to help fund its fledgling program for students who learn differently. Below, they also donated $300 to Geiger Elementary Principal Myra Bramlett for the school’s “Look For The Good Project” that the school implemented for the coming school year.

    Committee members not shown are Don Prioleau and Rufus Jones.