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I know a few too. |
Do they? All the adult atheists I know were originally taught a religion at home. Some at school too. |
| I did, but not for elementary. It had no effect on my child's religious beliefs. In fact, he seems to really dislike religion - says he got sick of it. |
| Applicants from small private religious schools (Christian, Muslim or Jewish) tend to stand out among sea of public school applicants. They've an advantage at Ivies and top SLACs. Mostly because their school principals and counselors are really invested in getting them accepted so they can flaunt those statistics to attract more tuition payers while public schools counselors don't care and have too many kids to give individual attention. |
This is an opinion, only, and in this case, a false one. |
This post made me laugh. Almost like indoctrination is the entire point of religious schools. |
| Not for elementary. I did go to a Catholic high school and I am not Catholic, but it was a very special school. I'd send my kids in a heartbeat if I lived near it now. |
NP. We did this. Sent kids to Catholic school. It was an extremely positive experience, and my kids (now late teens/college-aged) have expressed how glad they are they had the experience. We are atheist. |
PP here. Also, my kids moved to Catholic after public school and viewed (and still view) that change as a strong positive change. |
All school is indoctrination. |
| Yes, Jesuit school. Strong academic tradition, good values, some religion, yes but lots of non Catholics attend. |
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I wouldn't, but also, there are considerations like "what are the public schools like?" In northern VA, almost all the public schools are as good or better than the private ones, so the only reason I'd see to shell out the money would be for the religious element.
Literally know a family who put their kids in private religious school to get away from the "bad" neighborhood school, only to transfer them out last year and they found that the local school is more challenging than the private. |
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Well, depends on what school.
Quaker, yes. Episcopalian, yes. Catholic, probably not. |
I guess I just don't understand why you would marry someone who is religious if you feel that you need to counteract this at home. Do you undermine your spouse trying to teach them the faith? |