Letter From Mrs. Bonjorni
Let’s talk about the new Warrior building. There have been several questions about upcoming school year for the 7th-12th graders. We have a frequently asked questions list below to help answer those questions:
Let’s talk about the new Warrior building. There have been several questions about upcoming school year for the 7th-12th graders. We have a frequently asked questions list below to help answer those questions:
Let’s talk about the new Warrior building. There have been several questions about upcoming school year for the 7th-12th graders. We have a frequently asked questions list below to help answer those questions:
One of the best things as a parent is to see your children thrive at school, not only academically but with other students. And that’s exactly what Elizabeth and Andrew Mason-Leister are seeing at Clovis Christian Schools
Elizabeth and Andrew Mason-Leister are proud parents at Clovis Christian Schools and advocate for what CCS stands for.
New year, new semester, new campus. Clovis Christian Schools is expanding! We’re excited to start welcoming our K-2nd Grade students to the Shields campus, now open this year!
One of the most important things for Elizabeth and Andrew Mason-Leister is that their children feel at home when they go to school.
We hear many different reasons why parents love Clovis Christian Schools, but the one we hear the most and the one we’re most proud of is that their kids love going to school. For parents Candace and Sean Tambagahan, that is what they love about CCS.
As a parent, you want to be involved in your child’s learning, but more importantly, you want to see your child excited about learning. And that’s what happened to Candace and Sean Tambagahan after they enrolled their three boys at Clovis Christian Schools.
Candace Tambagahan, along with her husband Sean, has three boys who attend Clovis Christian Schools. Before they came to CCS, they home-schooled their kids, as both considered themselves victims of the public school system.
“When you throw a kid that has a different way of learning into a class with 40 other kids, and they are all taught to