Lindbergh School District

Grades PreK–12
St. Louis County, Missouri
Public/Suburban
Enrollment 5,599

2008 National District of Character

You’re on a journey. Never, never give up. In the commitment to graduating competent and caring students, character education is an incredible force.
–Dr. James Sandfort, Superintendent (retired)

The Lindbergh School District has always been in the vanguard of character building. When it took its first steps in 1989 to introduce character education in all of its buildings, the world was a different place. No cell phones, no laptops, no iPods, no text messages, no Character Education Partnership (CEP). However, the founding committee had the vision to see that a district-wide espousal of character, with all schools and the community on board, would be the best way to achieve the district’s goal: to develop competent and caring graduates through exceptional programs, services, and personnel. The Lindbergh campaign for character was just two years old when Jim Sandfort took the reins as the district’s superintendent of schools. It was the district’s commitment to character that prompted Sandfort to join Lindbergh, and it was the board’s support of it that sustained him for 17 years. The now-retired superintendent says, “Even though individual board members have come and gone, the board has always cared deeply about students, staff, and families. They have had only one agenda: what is best for children.”

Lindbergh’s achievements attest to the effectiveness of its intentional and structured approach to character development. CEP honored Kennerly Elementary School as a National School of Character in 2000 and Sappington Elementary as a National School of Character in 2008, and seven of the district’s eight schools, as well as the district itself, have won one or more Promising Practices awards (see Promising Practices below).

Read more about Lindbergh in the 2008 NSOC book:Having a Heart for Kids

SIGNATURE PRACTICES

Sample Practice: Character Education Initiatives
Schools submit their character education action plans to their district for comment.

Promising Practices:

Lindbergh: Stewards of Service
A superintendent challenges all staff, students, and parents to commit to service projects.

Lindbergh Leads Legacy and Learning for our Environmental Future
A district promotes community involvement and environmental awareness.

District-Wide Character Education Symposium
Focusing on a selected issue, an amalgam of student representatives, teachers, administrators, parents, and community leaders work together to develop character initiatives for the upcoming year.

Lindbergh Organization for Optimistic Parents
Instead of attending only the events in which their own child is involved, parents and other community members who participate in LOOP are challenged to attend at least one event for each of the extra-curricular activities offered in the Lindbergh School District.

See also these winning practices from Lindbergh schools:
Crestwood Elementary: Crestlandia Character Café 
Early Childhood Education: Family of the Month
Kennerly Elementary: Schoolyard Habitats with Character: "Character Stewardship"
Lindbergh High School: Reaching Adolescent Drivers
Lindbergh High School: The Lindbergh Academy Commitment to Service Learning
Long Elementary: Buddy Block
Long Elementary: The Pride Journal
Sappington Elementary: Buddy Families 
Sappington Elementary: Olympic Day 
Sappington Elementary: A Day for Character 
Truman Elementary: Kids Helping Kids
Truman Elementary: History Comes Alive: In My Own Backyard

CONTACT INFORMATION

Amy B. Richards, District Coordinator for Character Education
Lindbergh School District
4900 South Lindbergh Boulevard
St. Louis, MO 63126
Telephone: (314) 729-2400, ext. 8914
E-mail: arichards@lindberghschools.ws
Web site: www.lindbergh.k12.mo.us