Computer Lab
The computer lab is a room full of computers equipped with educational technology including typing instructors and many sorts of games. Our fastest students maintain a top speed of 60 words per minute.
The Art Room
In art class students learn many techniques of fine arts including paper mache, watercolors, and occasionally 3D models. At the end of the school year students are encouraged to participate in the Fine Arts Competition.
Music
PCS students participate in choir where they receive training in vocal technique, taking the changing voices of our students into consideration. Providence Christian is also famous for its Christmas Program and Spring Concert. Music class is also the place where our students become familiar with primary composers and master works within each of classical music’s historical periods as well as various historical forms of music in Christian worship.
Study Hall
Study Hall is a time set aside solely for students to get a head start on their homework. Students may do a variety of activities as long as they remain quiet.
P.E.
Physical education is the place where students can let out six hours' worth of pent-up energy and play games like football, dodgeball, kickball, and volleyball. An overview of the athletics philosophy is quoted below:
"Winning is a satisfying and just reward for time spent practicing and preparing. Providence also believes that athletics must ultimately complement and reinforce the basic goal of Christian education, which is to bring the student to a position of conformity to the image of God through Christ (Romans 12:1-2). An athletic program with the wrong focus will work counter to this goal; thus Providence must have an athletic program that is Christ-centered in philosophy and biblically based in practice. The athletic program must be more than a secular philosophy in a Christian environment, as the athletic event is a temporal event, and it loses its value if the only goal is winning."
"Winning is a satisfying and just reward for time spent practicing and preparing. Providence also believes that athletics must ultimately complement and reinforce the basic goal of Christian education, which is to bring the student to a position of conformity to the image of God through Christ (Romans 12:1-2). An athletic program with the wrong focus will work counter to this goal; thus Providence must have an athletic program that is Christ-centered in philosophy and biblically based in practice. The athletic program must be more than a secular philosophy in a Christian environment, as the athletic event is a temporal event, and it loses its value if the only goal is winning."