Desks under a tent serve as an outdoor classroom at the Lake Champlain Waldorf School in Shelburne on Saturday, August 15th, 2020. The school is building more outdoor classrooms before re-opening in September. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDigger

Some private schools working to attract students have a new, pandemic-era selling point: in-person learning.

โ€œAre you trying to make a decision about your child’s schooling? Feeling confused or frustrated by your current school’s reopening plan?โ€ read one Front Porch Forum post last month touting Bishop Marshall School in Morrisville, which plans to reopen for in-person learning five days a week.

Like their public counterparts, Vermontโ€™s independent schools are not taking a uniform approach to reopening in the fall. Many, including St. Johnsbury Academy and Burr and Burton Academy, are going the same route as a majority of public schools and opting for a hybrid model, with students alternating between in-person and remote learning. (Some Vermont public schools, particularly at the primary level, plan to offer full-time in-person instruction.)

But several privates, particularly smaller ones, are opening for face-to-face instruction full time. And families in Vermont โ€” as well as elsewhere โ€” are noticing.

โ€œThereโ€™s certainly been an uptick in interest,โ€ said Amy Brennan, enrollment director at the Lake Champlain Waldorf School. 

The Shelburne school is fielding calls from as far away as California from newly-remote workers thinking about decamping for Vermont, Brennan said. The preK-12 school says it has built outdoor classrooms and is capping enrollment at about 150 so it can offer in-person learning as safely as possible.

Jennifer Zaccara, the head of school at Vermont Academy, a small boarding school in Saxtons River, said the school had been receiving more attention even before the pandemic hit, and thereโ€™s been a noticeable increase in queries from families looking for a more rural setting for their children. 

โ€œHouses are turning over pretty quickly in Vermont right now,โ€ she said.

The majority of the prep schoolโ€™s 200 students live at the school and either come from out-of-state or foreign countries. Like most colleges, Vermont Academy says it will administer Covid-19 tests to all students and staff upon arrival. Students coming in from outside Vermontโ€™s borders will be required to quarantine, per the stateโ€™s travel guidance.

In Westminster, the Compass School, a small private middle and high school with just 70 students, announced this week it will offer five days of in-person teaching as well as a fully remote option for families who request it.

Eric Rhomberg, the schoolโ€™s director, said he hasnโ€™t yet seen any big changes in enrollment patterns. But that could change.

โ€œWe have not noticed a trend yet. But weโ€™ve been wondering, too, if that may develop,โ€ he said.

Tim Fowler of Richmond helps assemble desks for outdoor classrooms at the Lake Champlain Waldorf School in Shelburne on Saturday, August 15th, 2020. Photo by Glenn Russell/VTDigger

Previously VTDigger's political reporter.