The Forum 2014

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SUMMER 2014

CLASSICAL | CHRISTIAN | COLLABORATIVE 1


Collin County blessed with many pairs of boots—with years of lessons, instruction, blessing, and mentorship that have been poured into us by our parents and teachers. And now, we are standing on the edge of a great, lovely, opportunity-filled world of grown-upness—a world that is also fraught with pitfalls, with distractions, with discouragement, with challenges, and—dare I say?—with radioactive slime.

F

Emily McCalley

riends, families, guests, Fabulous Five—I’d like to start the night off with a proposition. The world needs more boots. Perhaps that sounds a little outlandish, but hear me out. Thick and sturdy, boots are the shoes of choice for almost anyone who does something worthwhile. Firemen wear them when they save cars, houses, and people from burning—boots allow them to save lives from places they couldn’t have gone before. Boots allow explorers to go farther through tougher conditions than they could with any other shoes—through the Grand Canyon, across the Sahara, up Mount Everest. Astronauts wear them—the giant leap for mankind was made by a man who was wearing boots. But perhaps most importantly, superheroes wear them. Why? Boots are sturdy and action-ready; they protect the supers’ feet from shattered glass and thousand-foot falls and oozing radioactive slime. Boots make it possible to go to adventurous places; they carry the supers into the unknown and back out again. Superheroes can go anywhere, do anything, face any evil when they’re wearing their boots. Our class, the Fabulous Five, has been 2

As graduating seniors, we are often given the charge, “Go out and change the world.” Personally, I’ve always found this somewhat daunting. Ok, very daunting. Do you realize there are 36.48 billion acres of land on this planet? And over 7,165,000,000 people alive right now? The thing is, we were never meant to change this world on our own. In fact, we were never even meant to design our own changes. When our focus becomes following Christ, everything else falls into place. He has defeated evil. He tells us to take heart; He has overcome the world. In the past few years, we have been given innumerable blessings. First of all, the gift of each other. In the past handful of years, we’ve grown together, this class; we’ve shared times of joy and struggle, moments of laughter and tears, days of elation and of dejection. The bond between the five of us is stronger than I can describe. This friendship—even over the thousand miles that will separate us in three months—will remain strong, a source of strength and comfort in difficult times. Second, we’ve been given the blessing of fantastic teachers who have not only expanded our knowledge of English and trigonometry and history and physics, but have instilled in us a curiosity and a desire to dig deeper into the wonders of the world, have taught us to think critically, ask difficult questions, and wrestle with the difficult answers that follow; and have personally mentored us and shared their life experience. And finally, our parents—the indescribably

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wonderful people who have been with us through our naughtiest toddler mischief and sassiest teenage moments, the people who have taught us through their wisdom and through their actions what it means to live like Christ. Truly, we have been given innumerable blessings. And to whom much has been given, much will be required; with great power comes great responsibility. As we follow Christ and live out our callings in life, we are going to need some heavy-duty boots.

Sometimes, that calling will come by wearing “superhero” boots. Sometimes doing the work Christ calls you to do involves standing in the limelight, doing the heavy lifting, organizing others to follow you, and knowing that you’re accountable to dozens, hundreds, thousands, maybe even millions of people. And other times it means wearing work boots: standing in the mud alone, getting your hands dirty, breaking unbroken ground. It’s not fun. It’s not pretty. But, sometimes, that’s where God calls us. So now, as we stand on the brink of that great grown-up world, I want to give some encouragement and issue a charge. To the class of 2014, know that you’ve been given incalculable blessings—and know that with those gifts comes a responsibility. Know that we are not called to live out that responsibility on our own, but that our calling comes through Christ and He promises to be with us through it all. And know that living out that calling involves a lot of work. Be prepared to wear your boots. Thank you, and God bless.


ict orians I

Kyle Swank

magine with me for a moment, building a house. You may dream of designing striking architectural features in order to make your home stand out. Maybe you are wishing for a chance to reorganize and refresh your interior starting from a blank slate. Wherever your mind may have drifted, you probably were not fantasizing about the foundation. However the foundation is one of the first and most important parts of any building. Jesus talks about the importance of a foundation in Matthew 7. In this wellknown passage he describes the wise man and foolish man who built their houses on the rock and on the sand. When the storms came, the wise man’s home stood, but the foolish man’s house collapsed. Anyone deeply grounded in their faith and the teachings of God will be able to withstand trials when they come, like the wise man’s home. I’m sure the wish of our family, friends, and teachers is that we will follow the example of the wise man. You, CDA, friends, and family, helped to build a foundation, preparing us to follow the future plans God has for us. There is no doubt in the rigorous academics of our school. Everyone here has survived AP tests, Rhetoric portfolios,

Flower Mound finals, and a senior author presentation with only perhaps a sacrifice of some sleep. Every class has given us an opportunity to explore writings, discoveries, and history; but more than remembering the exact definition of osmosis, the quadratic equation song or the date of the start of the French Revolution, every class provided a common valuable lesson. That lesson: to analyze and think critically through problems, to manage our time wisely, and to apply our Christian worldview to all aspects of our education and life. Not only teachers, but to our families and friends, we are thankful for helping us to implement those into our life. It sets us up for success in the future, as we look towards working through more complicated and real world problems. It is important that we realize that the success we seek in the future is all meant to glorify God. We are thankful, family, teachers, and friends, for the spiritual foundation you have helped to build by both your example and guidance. We look up to you as role models of how we should live, act, and worship. Living in a Christian environment at school, church, and home has provided us the blessing of godly figures that become examples for us to follow during times of great joy, deep struggle, or daily life. You have also challenged us to dig in and analyze the Word of God, to find truly what we believe. When that truth was discovered you taught us how to apply it to our own lives and have given us tools to defend it against opponents and share it with the world. Grounding ourselves in Jesus, the Rock, we become lights to a dark world and dedicated disciples. Our activities and relationships also helped to form our foundation. We have athletes who have learned dedication, team work, and good sportsman-ship through many practice hours and games. Our artists recognize the beauty of God’s creation and with patience work to por-

tray it; musicians, diligence and perseverance. House, class, and community leaders discover the ability to direct and the value of being a servant. Our parents teach us other important things, making right and moral decisions, and the really important things such as how to wash our own clothes. They have been there to pick us back up when we have stumbled. Our classmates and friends have provided support during our hard times, and fun and laughter for the rest. So many things have impacted us and will follow us in the future that the limit may not exist. (I will have to calculate that out later to be sure.) The future is a scary thing and it will always be; it is unknown and may be filled with trials and difficulties. However, we do not need to fear it. We have built a solid foundation, one that will support us through the trials of life and guide us to accomplish the goals set before us. God knows where he wants us to go and what we are to do; his will is “good and acceptable and perfect” (Romans 12:2). I believe we have been expertly prepared to follow his will, and my wish is that my classmates, our family and friends, and I will all be able to like Paul fight the good fight, finish the race, and keep the faith. (2 Timothy 4:7) The world is looking for intelligent, critical thinkers who can solve the problems and complications it has, and you have been prepared. The world is looking for moral and virtuous men and women to be leaders who make the right decisions and provide examples for other; the world is looking for creators, thinkers, and players who glorify God in their actions and accomplishments, and you are prepared. The world is looking for Christian disciples grounded in what they believe and that are able to share it, and you have been prepared. You have been given a foundation, so, what will you build? Thank you. 3


Collin County array as beautiful as it is unfathomable and undeserved. We’ve climbed into the branches of sycamore trees to see over the much taller heads of the saints, only to find a lamb staring us in the face. We have built with our own two hands houses that will be homes long after we’ve gone for the generations to come, and we see now that it was not truly ourselves that did the building, but a larger, more skilled pair of Hands guiding our own. But this is not the sum of our knowledge.

A

Grace McClure

nd now, finally here we are. Each one of us brought from vast diverging pathways to here, now, in this room, together. We have seen many things, you and I. Standing in the streets of Pompeii, we have beheld mountains picking themselves up and throwing themselves into the sea. We have watched from the hillsides of Rhodes as the everlasting Colossus crumbled in a single moment that lasted a thousand years. We have seen galaxies being twisted into double helix strands, speaking the same cosmic language as the cells of an embryo. We have watched as the hills became emeralds on the third day, and sheep covered the hillsides like clouds as the Good Shepherd spoke His creation song. And yet, this is not the sum of our knowledge. We have done many things, you and I. We were there when kings and nations and men rose up to rage, rage against the dying of the light. And we were there when they fell and were covered once again by the emerald hills, and the sheep none the wiser. We’ve sailed oceans by moonlight, guided by the constellations of parents and teachers and mentors; shining points of wisdom and grace, an 4

We have been many things, you and I. We have been dreamers, confidants, explorers, sisters. We have been children, taking from the Giving Trees again and again, until finally we have become the giving trees ourselves. We have been bears in the Hundred Acre Wood, terrified of The Skool but going anyway, because that is where our Christopher Robins went; and learning, unexpectedly, that really it’s not at all what we thought it was if you have a Piglet – or four – to hold your hand. We have been rebels, running from the Lion of Judah, He close on our heels as we run across deserts and endless cities, and storms that rage across the surface of the sun; until finally, at the end of all things and the beginning of everything, we have been caught, angry and filthy and empty. And truly I tell you, we found ourselves not in the jaws of a lion, but suddenly clothed in splendor befitting the Daughters of the Most High King, wrapped in the lion-skin love that freed us and will not let us go. But this is not the sum of our knowledge. We never ceased from our exploration, at every turn and every corner grasping a glimpse, of we knew not what; but it was there always, just the same. It was something in the way that Orion, the Night Watchman, guards the night skies, peering out from earth to the far reaches of the galaxy, watching from his tower for the dawn. Something in the way that a mother blows out a candle and sings her baby to

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sleep; something in the way that a still small voice always seems to speak into the moments when the turning of the earth pivots on the head of a needle. Something in the way that we would follow each other gladly, hand in hand, to the ends of the earth or the city at the heart of the sun, and watch, secure, as the stars and leaves fall like spilled champagne on the unsuspecting congregation below. Something there, always, keeping watch, and with each new discovery it seems we found just how little we knew, how much less we knew than we thought. And these have been the days, have they not? These have been the days of still peace, and of sunsets. These have been the days of mysteries pursued far into the star-filled night. These have been the days of seeding and harvest, of mourning and laughter, of sleep and of song. These have been the days, the days of thunder and glory, when we ran through the fields together, one equal temper of heroic hearts; the essence of life pouring from our bodies in laughter, and sunlight, and music, and sisterhood, while the baritone laughter of the angels rolled above us in earth-shaking tympani. We have known many things, you and I: the sound of a multitude of seraphim, the warmth of laughter late into a rainy night, the vastness of an ancient creation, the love of a hundred endless summers. And we are more ancient now than we have ever been before, perhaps more ancient than we will ever be again (at least, in our own eyes.) But here now, at the end of our exploring, we have come to where we started; and the sum of all our knowledge alone can tell us where it was that we started from. But truly, truly I say to you, that we sit in the palm of a Hand larger than ours; we do not know what lies beneath, and this is the sum of all our knowledge.


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Natalie Mackie

ood evening and welcome to the Commencement Ceremony for the Coram Deo Class of 2014. On behalf of my class, I would like to thank everyone for coming today and witnessing the final moment in our high school career. I know that I speak for everyone when I say that there are mixed feelings about finishing our last year at CDA. There’s relief that we won’t have to take another Dr. Heitschmidt test, but it’s also bittersweet because reality has hit that we really are graduating and we will never be our high school selves again. We are going to different places and meeting new people and having new teachers and well, things won’t be the same ever again. We are moving on into untested waters and that is a scary thought. Much like you plunge into the unknown of a new book with each turn of a page, the life of each student in the class of 2014 is like a book. I know, a CDA student comparing her class to a book, how typical. But think about it, every book is a different genre, has multiple chapters, contains footnotes, and has an author, much like a student. The way students have a different personality types is much like the way books

Flower Mound have different genres. These range from the athletic, to the musically gifted, to the brainy, to the class-clown, to the tech-savvy, to the romantic, to the creative. Every single one is telling a different story, but in our case the pages in the back of the book are blank. As of now, all we know is what college we are going to. None of us are even sure if it’s going to work out, much less what our plans are after college. In a flip of a page we are standing here before you, finishing the chapter entitled ‘High School’, and getting ready to take on the next chapter: College. But let’s not think about the future, instead let’s look back at the past. Back to the beginning, the start of our chapter at CDA. I have been at CDA since 4th grade. And I’m not the only one, nor am I the oldest veteran here. Some have attended CDA since 1st grade. Oh, the memories we’ve collected from back in the day at CDA. We all wore our bright colored polos, ran around on the playground playing capture the flag, and gathered together over the summer to fill out those dreaded summer reading forms. We watched each other grow, through awkward, bracefaced, stages and all, and welcomed new faces, or characters, along the way. Books, as you know, normally have sources that they reference to throughout. In our case, these sources are our CDA teachers. Each and every one of them have left a mark, or in this metaphor, a footnote, on our pages. Thanks to Mrs. Ligon, we all will forever remember the definition of osmosis, Mr. Rector has showed us how to remember topics in math with his interpretative dance skills, Ms. Loe taught us how to stop saying ‘umm’ during a speech by having your audience stand up every time you uttered the blasphemous word, and Dr. Heitschmidt has always reminded us that we are finished, not done, because only turkeys are done. The teachers at CDA have helped each of our stories flow and

sound more complete with their constant encouragement, devotion, and, of course, faith. We will forever cherish each thought provoking, and also hand-raising, topic they have taught us and will always remember, that it was our teachers who taught us first, and our teachers who allowed us to turn our pages and grow, and it is because of our teacher’s that we were able to finish this chapter. While we would like to fancy ourselves as the authors of our books, we are not. We are simply the main character, switching between the role of the protagonist and the antagonist. You see, God is the author. While it is still ‘our’ book, and ‘our’ life, God is in control. Every person we’ve met, every topic we’ve learned, the college we are attending, and the places we are going have all been part of God’s plan. I’d like to end with our senior verse.

“Don’t let anyone look down on you because you are young, but set an example for the believers in speech, in conduct, in love, in faith and in purity.” - 1 Timothy 4:12. Even though our story so far is short, we can still set a good example for the people around us by the way we act. As each of us moves on, never forget to stay strong in your faith and do your best to present yourselves the way God wants you to be presented. With that in mind, I bid farewell to CDA, to my teachers, and my friends. It’s been one crazy chapter, and I’ve loved every minute of it. I want to thank everyone, especially my parents, for being there for me in through the good and the bad, and reminding me to stop being a perfectionist. I love you all, and I wish each and every one of you the best of luck. 5


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Teacher & Parent Collaboration And these words that I command you today shall be on your heart. You shall teach them diligently to your children, and shall talk of them when you sit in your house, and when you walk by the way, and when you lie down, and when you rise. You shall bind them as a sign on your hand, and they shall be as frontlets between your eyes. You shall write them on the doorposts of your house and on your gates. - Deutoronomy 6:6-9 (ESV)

Faculty, Staff, & Parents are professing Christians who submit to the authority of the Holy Scriptures

Bibically

Intergrated Curriculum

Rigorous College Prep

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OVER GRADUATES

In Christ alone my hope is found, He is my light, my strength, my song; This Cornerstone, this solid Ground, Firm through the fiercest drought and storm. What heights of love, what depths of peace, When fears are stilled, when strivings cease! My Comforter, my All in All, Here in the love of Christ I stand. In Christ alone! - who took on flesh, Fullness of God in helpless babe. This gift of love and righteousness, Scorned by the ones He came to save: Till on that cross as Jesus died, The wrath of God was satisfied For every sin on Him was laid; Here in the death of Christ I live. There in the ground His body lay, Light of the world by darkness slain: Then bursting forth in glorious day Up from the grave He rose again! And as He stands in victory Sin’s curse has lost its grip on me, For I am His and He is mine Bought with the precious blood of Christ. No guilt in life, no fear in death, This is the power of Christ in me; From life’s first cry to final breath, Jesus commands my destiny. No power of hell, no scheme of man, Can ever pluck me from His hand: Till He returns or calls me home, Here in the power of Christ I’ll stand. Stuart Townend & Keith Getty Copyright © 2001 Thankyou Music

We train ethical servant-leaders and wise thinkers who will shape culture for the glory of God.

A Love for Learning Classical Education progresses through the grammar, logic, and rhetoric stages of learning with the ultimate goal being philosopia, a love of wisdom.

Our students participate in a variety of athletic programs as well as visual arts, drama, band, chior, speech and debate, and more.

University Schedule

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Present ing

The Class of 2014 NAME

PROUDEST ACCOMPLISHMENTS

COLLEGE

MAJOR

Flower Mound Chelsea Michelle Baker

• •

Serving as Editor of the Yearbook Playing Varsity Volleyball senior year

Samford University

Nutrition and Dietetics

S

Lauren Michelle Boyer

• •

TPSMEA All-State Band Three Years in a Row Serving as the President of the House of Homer

Baylor University

Biology

M

Hayden Elizabeth Brandenburger

University of North Texas

Allied Health

Multi-Sport Athlete in Cross Country, Basketball, Track, and Golf All-State Athlete in Track, Placing 3rd in the 4 by 200 relay, and earning All-District Honors in Basketball and Golf

M

Michael Evan Bullock

• •

Earning Eagle Scout Award Playing Varsity Football for Four Years

Texas A&M University

Petroleum Engineering

S

Charles Jefferson Clinkscales

1st Team All District in Football and Soccer and Academic All-State Earning Eagle Scout Award Accepted into the Leadership Living Learning Community at A&M Four-Time US Equestrian Federation Varsity High School Athlete Earning Eagle Scout Award TPSMEA All-State Band Two Years

Honors College Texas Tech University

Mechanical Engineering

Texas A&M University

Biomedical Sciences

Honors College University of Oklahoma Gap Year to Work and Volunteer

Business

University of North Texas

Economics

Qualifying for the State Tennis Tournament all Four Years and Winning 2nd in Singles Junior Year and State Champion in Doubles Senior Year Earning Summa Cum Laude every year at CDA

Honors College Texas A&M University

Engineering

Qualified for State Tennis All Four Years of High School Serving as Chaplain of the House of Wright Junior and Senior Year

Texas Woman’s University

Kinesiology/Physical Therapy

Serving on two mission trips to the Czech Republic Serving as Chaplain for the House of Homer Junior and Senior Year

Dallas Baptist University

Nursing

M

Adrianna Mariel Drake

• • •

M

Davis Allen Ewoldt

• •

C

Patrick Stephan Allan Gaskamp

C

Austin James Guthrie

• •

S

Rebecca Marie Harris

M

Sound Engineering

Aubrien Alia Henderson

Katie Marie Henderson

S

Lillian Page Hoover

• •

Serving as Vice-President of the House of Wright Participating as a Yell Leader Senior Year

Benedictine College

Political Science and Business Management

S

Andrew Reed Kuykendall

• •

1st Team All-State in Baseball 1st Chair Trombone in the All-State Jazz Band Two Years in a Row

Babson College

Finance and Entrepreneurship

M

Allison McCall Lewis

1st Team All District, 2nd Team All-State, and Academic All-State in Volleyball Academic Achievement in Dr. Heitschmidt’s Classes

Baylor University

Athletic Training

Helping to Raise Money for an Orphanage in Lusaka, Zambia Going to State in volleyball, making the All-Tournament Team and 1st Team All-State

Oklahoma Baptist University

Biology

C

M

8

Earning “Top Gun” award at FAA Ground School from Military Officers Association of America Serving as Color Guard for the CDA Football Games Earning Honor Roll Through Junior Year Playing Varsity Football all Four Years and Tennis Senior Year

Kaleigh Katherine Longcrier

• •


S C

NAME

PROUDEST ACCOMPLISHMENTS

COLLEGE

MAJOR

Zachary William Machi Natalie Elizabeth Mackie

• •

Captain of the Cross Country Team Offered Presidential Scholarship at Texas Tech

Texas Tech University

Pre-Law

2012 State Singles Champion and 2014 State Doubles Champion in tennis 2013 Distinguished Student Award Qualifying for State Volleyball Tournament Junior Year Academic Achievement on Senior Author Presentation Serving as Captain of the Yell Leaders for Two Years 3rd Place at State Tennis Tournament Junior Year 1st Team All-District in soccer and qualifying for State in Tennis Serving as the President of the House of Wright Serving as President of the Class of 2014 His Achievements and Friendships in Football

Texas A&M University

Engineering

Collin College

Psychology

Texas Christian University

Nursing

LeTourneau University

Materials Engineering

Honors College McMurry University

Undecided

Attaining a work ethic that will serve him throughout his life Overcoming his neck injury while succeeding academically Being part of the State Volleyball Team Her hard work, academic achievement, and acceptance to UT Austin

Texas A&M University

Geology

University of Texas at Austin

Radio/Television/Film

2nd Team All-District and Academic All-State in Baseball Academic Accomplishments and Honor Roll All Four Years

Torchbearers Bible College

Sports/Camp Ministry

Winning the Distinguished Albion Scholars Program for Solving Math Problems Beyond Calculus I. Member of State Championship Hockey Team while Earning Summa Cum Laude Junior Year

Honors College Albion College

Chemical Engineering

Earning Summa Cum Laude all Four Years of High School Serving on Three Overseas Mission Trips

Texas A&M University

Agricultural and Biological Engineering

Claire Ann Maxam

• • •

S

Emily Catherine Mooney

M

Peter Nathan Morriss

C

Samuel Joseph Perrone

M

Isaac Franco Rowland

M

Erin Christine Royal

• •

M

David Nikolai Scott

• • • • • •

S

James Major Stanulis

• •

S

Kyle Jacob Swank

• •

M

Elizabeth Christine Tally

• •

Earning Her Pilot’s License Being a Part of the Yell Leaders and Bringing More School Spirit to CDA

University of Alabama

Restaurant, Hotel, and Meetings Management

S

Neeya Joi Toleman

• •

Earning the AWANA Citation Award Her Congressional Internship with Congressman Michael Burgess’ District Office

Honors College John Brown University

Electrical Engineering

S

William Maxwell Whitney

Persevering and Successfully Completing 12 Years at CDA Becoming a Certified Coffee Barista

LeTourneau University

Mechanical Engineering

Ashley Victoria Zimmerman

University of North Texas

Undecided

Undefeated Season of Competitive Cheer at Spirit of Texas The Honor of Performing for the Holiday HalfTime Show at the Dallas Cowboys/Green Bay Packers Game

Abigail McKenzie Koons Emily Meghan McCalley Grace Caitlin McClure

• •

Serving as Worship Team Leader for Chapel Serving as Senior Class President

Moody Bible Institute

Elementary Education and Bible

• •

2013 Distinguished Student Award Outstanding Senior Award for Band

Honors College Baylor University

University Scholars/ Pre-Med

Serving as a House President for two years and helping to establish the Collin County House System National Merit Finalist

Honors College University of Texas at Dallas

University Scholars/ Pre-Med

Dallas Baptist University

Communications

Dallas Baptist University

Music Education

C

Collin County M S S

M

Melissa Lauren Mullen

• •

Serving as the Vice-President of the House of Luther 2013 Most Improved Athlete for Cross Country

Catherine Elizabeth Patterson

• •

The National School Choral Award Superior Rating for Solo at TPSMEA Competition

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Collin County

C

ompletion of Milestone 1 allowed CDA to procure funding for a purchase and construction of a new home for our Collin County Students. In order to complete this project, an additional $379,000 must be raised to furnish the interior of the facility.

Flower Mound

D

ue to the continued student growth on our Flower Mound campus, CDA is planning to build a new multi-purpose facility that includes new classrooms, a gymnasium, and a stage for our performing arts programs. To complete our first Milestone, we intend to raise a $ 800,000 to begin formal construction plans, develop planning and zoning applications, and determine the bank/bond financing options.

Revised Donation numbers

“At its foundation, Coram Deo is not a school or even a community, but an approach to developing the whole person: one that has taught me to see beyond subject boundaries, to embrace challenge, and to actively pursue learning inside and outside of school. Leadership opportunities taught me what it means not simply to live in a community, but to take part in shaping it; and to lead not by “being in charge,” but by serving my fellow community members in any way I can. While the coursework was certainly far beyond basic, and I am grateful for the constant academic challenges that helped me grow as a student, it is the Coram Deo method that helped me grow into the person and the leader I am today.” - Grace McClure, Collin County Salutatorian. Class of 2014

Collin County

$506,582 raised: milestone 1 complete $379,000 Needed to complete project

Flower Mound

$735,000 raised $65,000 need to reach milestone 1 milestone 1 = $800,000 If you have any questions or if you would like to make a donation to the capital campaign please contact Donnie Brake by email at donnie.brake@coramdeoacademy.org or by phone at 972-584-9159. “Many are the plans in the mind of a man, but it is the the purpose of the Lord that will stand” - Proverbs 19:21 (English Standard Version) www.coramdeoacademy.org

800-465-0561

Collin County 9725 Independence Pkwy Plano, TX 75025

Dallas 6464 E. Lovers Lane Dallas, TX 75214

Flower Mound 4900 Wichita Trail Flower Mound, TX 75022


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