Donald Ray Howard
Donald Ray Howard was an American educator and author. With his wife Esther, he co-founded Accelerated Christian Education, a fundamentalist Christian school model and curriculum.
Background
Howard was born in Topeka, Kansas, to LaVerne Glenn Howard and Mildred Norrean Howard. He graduated from Topeka High School in 1951. He graduated from Washburn University, then served in the U.S. Marine Corps. Howard studied at Talbot Theological Seminary and earned his M.Th. and his Ph.D. from Bob Jones University. His dissertation was entitled “An Investigation of the Secular School Relative to the Needs of the Christian Community.”Howard married Esther Hilte in 1956. They had five children: Melody, Harmony, Donald, Daniel, and Duane.
Educational career
Howard founded Calvary College, a Christian institution, in Letcher, Kentucky, in 1966. He also founded the School of Reform.Accelerated Christian Education
Howard's most significant contribution to education was the formation of Accelerated Christian Education with his wife Esther. The Howards opened their first A.C.E. school in Garland, Texas, in 1970. At A.C.E.’s peak in the 1980s, approximately 8,000 schools used the curriculum.Howard opposed the U.S. public school system, denouncing it for teaching “humanism” instead of Christian Americanism. According to him, “to avoid political, social, and economic disaster, there must be a Christian curriculum which ‘establishes the presuppositions of fundamentalism in the mind, heart, and life of a new generation within the sphere of academic education.’”
Howard's identification as a fundamentalist Christian influenced his approach to education. “Fundamentalism teaches that man is by nature sinful, that he is born a lost sinner, that men who are lost go to a literal burning hell, that men can be saved by grace through faith … and then man saved can go to heaven,” he wrote. “That is fundamentalism. I am a fundamentalist. If I can be any more fundamental than fundamental, that is what I want to be.”