| Latinos are increasingly conservative, FWIW. Trump made significant inroads with Latinos in 2020. |
| Not Catholic, not Republican (and if I was would be a never Trumper). I feel totally fine and welcomed and so does my kid. That said I am black and not used to only being comfortable if people are just like me. I am surprised by this thread. I can't speak for how a Latino would feel because I am not one but in no way does this school feel conservative or liberal. Feels like a mix with most being Catholic but no one treating you any sort of way based on whether your are also Catholic. The many Catholic families I have met and become friendly with I don't know if they support Trump. I suspect some do and some do not. I have no idea how an atheist would feel either (I am Baptist) but I suppose if you are ok with your kid studying religion from a Catholic perspective each of the 4 years and doing the required volunteer service (at least one is tied to serving your faith community--which doesn't have to be a Catholic community) then I suppose it would be fine. It's a great school and in my opinion diverse on the whole. Some of everything with great kids and nice parents. |
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Hi, thank you for this thread. My son wants to apply to the school because he's interested in the entrepreneurial center. I read the information on the SJC website, but would love to hear more first-hand from someone whose kid is in that program.
I know that sports, especially football and basketball, are quite competitive at SJC. Are there any sports at the school that a recreational athlete has a chance of walking on to play? |
Just make sure you are honest with the admissions people. And I’d suggest you keep your atheism under wraps if accepted. The majority are sending their kids there BECAUSE it’s a Catholic school, not in spite of it being a Catholic school (as you appear to want to do.) |
I disagree about keeping your beliefs under wraps. Catholic higher education is all about learning to debate and discuss in a civil manner and absolutely requires that many different sides of an issue be explored. An Atheist has much to add to a high school and college theology class discussions, but of course classroom decorum and respectful discussion skills must be maintained. |
And on the Supreme Court now. |
College, yes. The purpose of Catholic elementary and high schools is to reinforce the faith, not debate it. But, when non-Catholics want to take advantage of the Catholic schools they’ll use just about any justification. |
| OP, are you asking about St. Johns Catholic Prep in Frederick county? (Previously know as St. John's at Prospect Hall) |
My son goes to a Catholic HS and while they teach the faith in religion, it's more like a history class. They debate certain topics like abortion in class. |
| To some it is approached like a history class, for others it is not. No issue with non-Catholics in our school, but for practicing Catholics it is history plus Faith. And that should be respected. |
| I have two nieces there. They love it. I went to their graduation last year and there were a good number of different ethnicities represented. The place has Uber school spirit. I’d say yes, Latino friendly and I agree that the presence of trumpsters, so what by the way as they are everywhere, is actually evidence of the diversity of the place not the opposite. |