Catholic School for Non-Catholic/Non-Christian Families

Anonymous
Catholic schools in this area are generally welcoming of other faiths. In a k-8, the kids will typically have to attend mass weekly, but in my experience it’s not a big deal for the kids to have classmates with a different faith background.

Go take a tour at your local school and see what you think.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:Can I ask what Arlington middle school your kids would go to? I’m asking because what you are describing has not been our kids’ experiences in APS at all.


They don't go to middle school yet. They are in elementary school. I'm concerned about lowered academic standards (especially when it comes to writing) and disciplinary issues. I may be wrong so feel free to convince me otherwise!
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:OP, we are a Catholic family. I attended Catholic school my entire life. When we moved to Arlington we considered Catholic school. But here’s the thing: the public schools are better academically. They just are, and always have been.

It’s so interesting that you think the Arlington middle schools are full of kids going wild and undisciplined. The typical complaint by the middle school parents are that the schools are too strict. That was our experience.


How old are your kids? The disciplinary problems seem to be very recent (past few years).
Anonymous
Will add that one kid did try a secular private school for a year as well and we were not impressed. Kids have been all over the place due to covid. We could afford it back then but cannot now. Happy with the elementary school we are in now but that's elementary school.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Can I ask what Arlington middle school your kids would go to? I’m asking because what you are describing has not been our kids’ experiences in APS at all.


They don't go to middle school yet. They are in elementary school. I'm concerned about lowered academic standards (especially when it comes to writing) and disciplinary issues. I may be wrong so feel free to convince me otherwise!


I’m the poster you are responding to. With the caveat that middle school tends to be the worst school experience for many kids, my kid who recently completed middle school had a positive experience. DC made a lot of new friends, was challenged academically, grew emotionally, and did very well. He’s had several lengthy writing assignments and I’ve seen his writing evolve and improve over the last three years. I do think some of this depends on the kid and the support they receive at home—my kid is strong academically and very driven and as a result may have avoided some of the problems you referenced (because a school experience may depend on the crowd a kid runs with). I also appreciate that Arlington is a diverse place with several different middle schools, and so my kid’s experience might have been different if they went to a different school (though, to be honest, I don’t think so based on what I know of my kid).

Have you spoken with parents of kids at your future middle school? That may provide more accurate information than this forum. (The same is true for any Catholic schools you might be considering—I would suggest speaking to some parents directly about their experiences).
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:OP, we are a Catholic family. I attended Catholic school my entire life. When we moved to Arlington we considered Catholic school. But here’s the thing: the public schools are better academically. They just are, and always have been.

It’s so interesting that you think the Arlington middle schools are full of kids going wild and undisciplined. The typical complaint by the middle school parents are that the schools are too strict. That was our experience.


It’s not universally true that publics are better. I don’t want to start an argument, but I’ve worked in both public and Catholic. The Catholic schools I’ve worked in have been much better at writing instruction, for example. Also, students are able to focus better because discipline is stressed; therefore, teachers can get though more content.

I’ve also notice that professional development opportunities are stronger in the Catholic schools I’ve worked for. I’m encouraged to take classes for more reasons than simply recertification.

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:OP, we are a Catholic family. I attended Catholic school my entire life. When we moved to Arlington we considered Catholic school. But here’s the thing: the public schools are better academically. They just are, and always have been.

It’s so interesting that you think the Arlington middle schools are full of kids going wild and undisciplined. The typical complaint by the middle school parents are that the schools are too strict. That was our experience.


It’s not universally true that publics are better. I don’t want to start an argument, but I’ve worked in both public and Catholic. The Catholic schools I’ve worked in have been much better at writing instruction, for example. Also, students are able to focus better because discipline is stressed; therefore, teachers can get though more content.

I’ve also notice that professional development opportunities are stronger in the Catholic schools I’ve worked for. I’m encouraged to take classes for more reasons than simply recertification.



I never said it was universally true. I was talking about Arlington public middle schools and the local Catholic schools.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:OP, we are a Catholic family. I attended Catholic school my entire life. When we moved to Arlington we considered Catholic school. But here’s the thing: the public schools are better academically. They just are, and always have been.

It’s so interesting that you think the Arlington middle schools are full of kids going wild and undisciplined. The typical complaint by the middle school parents are that the schools are too strict. That was our experience.


It’s not universally true that publics are better. I don’t want to start an argument, but I’ve worked in both public and Catholic. The Catholic schools I’ve worked in have been much better at writing instruction, for example. Also, students are able to focus better because discipline is stressed; therefore, teachers can get though more content.

I’ve also notice that professional development opportunities are stronger in the Catholic schools I’ve worked for. I’m encouraged to take classes for more reasons than simply recertification.



I never said it was universally true. I was talking about Arlington public middle schools and the local Catholic schools.


OP here. I don't have any direct experience with middle school in Arlington. Everything I've heard is from parents who's kids are in middle school. These are the things that have been worrying me:

1) Lower writing standards. Kids barely write.
(2) Kids do not read novels in class and analyze them (though this seems to vary by school and whether class is an honors class).
(3) disciplinary issues. Increase in bullying post covid, cell phones in schools lead to many distractions, taking pictures of kids using restrooms, drug use, increased mental health issues, weaker friendships & community.
(4) lowering of academic standards generally due to: 50% pass rate rule (though parent who was talking about this didn't live in Arlington county. Think she lives in fairfax), stander based grading, no more accountability for homework, grade based on exam only, no more accountability regarding showing up to class, no points for class participation, quizzes aren't graded. I remember a letter from teachers in wakefield regarding this issue but I forgot what happened.

If I am misinformed please let me know! Would rather save the money
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Can I ask what Arlington middle school your kids would go to? I’m asking because what you are describing has not been our kids’ experiences in APS at all.


They don't go to middle school yet. They are in elementary school. I'm concerned about lowered academic standards (especially when it comes to writing) and disciplinary issues. I may be wrong so feel free to convince me otherwise!


I’m the poster you are responding to. With the caveat that middle school tends to be the worst school experience for many kids, my kid who recently completed middle school had a positive experience. DC made a lot of new friends, was challenged academically, grew emotionally, and did very well. He’s had several lengthy writing assignments and I’ve seen his writing evolve and improve over the last three years. I do think some of this depends on the kid and the support they receive at home—my kid is strong academically and very driven and as a result may have avoided some of the problems you referenced (because a school experience may depend on the crowd a kid runs with). I also appreciate that Arlington is a diverse place with several different middle schools, and so my kid’s experience might have been different if they went to a different school (though, to be honest, I don’t think so based on what I know of my kid).

Have you spoken with parents of kids at your future middle school? That may provide more accurate information than this forum. (The same is true for any Catholic schools you might be considering—I would suggest speaking to some parents directly about their experiences).


OP here. Thanks! This makes me less worried. Do you mind sharing which middle school your child is in? Also was your child in general ed or honors classes? My understanding is that the experience is vastly different depending on which classes your kid takes. I have one child who is gifted so no doubt she will be able to handle the rigorous honors classes. But worried about my other child ending up in general ed.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:OP, we are a Catholic family. I attended Catholic school my entire life. When we moved to Arlington we considered Catholic school. But here’s the thing: the public schools are better academically. They just are, and always have been.

It’s so interesting that you think the Arlington middle schools are full of kids going wild and undisciplined. The typical complaint by the middle school parents are that the schools are too strict. That was our experience.


It’s not universally true that publics are better. I don’t want to start an argument, but I’ve worked in both public and Catholic. The Catholic schools I’ve worked in have been much better at writing instruction, for example. Also, students are able to focus better because discipline is stressed; therefore, teachers can get though more content.

I’ve also notice that professional development opportunities are stronger in the Catholic schools I’ve worked for. I’m encouraged to take classes for more reasons than simply recertification.



I never said it was universally true. I was talking about Arlington public middle schools and the local Catholic schools.


OP here. I don't have any direct experience with middle school in Arlington. Everything I've heard is from parents who's kids are in middle school. These are the things that have been worrying me:

1) Lower writing standards. Kids barely write.
(2) Kids do not read novels in class and analyze them (though this seems to vary by school and whether class is an honors class).
(3) disciplinary issues. Increase in bullying post covid, cell phones in schools lead to many distractions, taking pictures of kids using restrooms, drug use, increased mental health issues, weaker friendships & community.
(4) lowering of academic standards generally due to: 50% pass rate rule (though parent who was talking about this didn't live in Arlington county. Think she lives in fairfax), stander based grading, no more accountability for homework, grade based on exam only, no more accountability regarding showing up to class, no points for class participation, quizzes aren't graded. I remember a letter from teachers in wakefield regarding this issue but I forgot what happened.

If I am misinformed please let me know! Would rather save the money


You REALLY need to relax. The bottom line is that with parents as over the top concerned and involved in the intricacies of their kids’ education as you appear to be the kids will be just fine. I don’t think you need to send them to a school that devotes an hour a day to a religion that you don’t believe in to educate them.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:Can I ask what Arlington middle school your kids would go to? I’m asking because what you are describing has not been our kids’ experiences in APS at all.


They don't go to middle school yet. They are in elementary school. I'm concerned about lowered academic standards (especially when it comes to writing) and disciplinary issues. I may be wrong so feel free to convince me otherwise!


I’m the poster you are responding to. With the caveat that middle school tends to be the worst school experience for many kids, my kid who recently completed middle school had a positive experience. DC made a lot of new friends, was challenged academically, grew emotionally, and did very well. He’s had several lengthy writing assignments and I’ve seen his writing evolve and improve over the last three years. I do think some of this depends on the kid and the support they receive at home—my kid is strong academically and very driven and as a result may have avoided some of the problems you referenced (because a school experience may depend on the crowd a kid runs with). I also appreciate that Arlington is a diverse place with several different middle schools, and so my kid’s experience might have been different if they went to a different school (though, to be honest, I don’t think so based on what I know of my kid).

Have you spoken with parents of kids at your future middle school? That may provide more accurate information than this forum. (The same is true for any Catholic schools you might be considering—I would suggest speaking to some parents directly about their experiences).


OP here. Thanks! This makes me less worried. Do you mind sharing which middle school your child is in? Also was your child in general ed or honors classes? My understanding is that the experience is vastly different depending on which classes your kid takes. I have one child who is gifted so no doubt she will be able to handle the rigorous honors classes. But worried about my other child ending up in general ed.


Williamsburg Middle School. At the time, the only intensified (honors) classes available were in math, so by default all other classes were general education (this is changing starting next year, so I can’t speak to what it will be like in the future).

Regarding your other post, DC read multiple novels; kids were required to leave their cell phones in their lockers during the day (so no access to phones); no standards based grading—to the contrary, kids that DC hung out with all tried to get As; quizzes etc were graded (I will confess DC did not have a lot of homework).
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:OP, we are a Catholic family. I attended Catholic school my entire life. When we moved to Arlington we considered Catholic school. But here’s the thing: the public schools are better academically. They just are, and always have been.

It’s so interesting that you think the Arlington middle schools are full of kids going wild and undisciplined. The typical complaint by the middle school parents are that the schools are too strict. That was our experience.


It’s not universally true that publics are better. I don’t want to start an argument, but I’ve worked in both public and Catholic. The Catholic schools I’ve worked in have been much better at writing instruction, for example. Also, students are able to focus better because discipline is stressed; therefore, teachers can get though more content.

I’ve also notice that professional development opportunities are stronger in the Catholic schools I’ve worked for. I’m encouraged to take classes for more reasons than simply recertification.



I never said it was universally true. I was talking about Arlington public middle schools and the local Catholic schools.


OP here. I don't have any direct experience with middle school in Arlington. Everything I've heard is from parents who's kids are in middle school. These are the things that have been worrying me:

1) Lower writing standards. Kids barely write.
(2) Kids do not read novels in class and analyze them (though this seems to vary by school and whether class is an honors class).
(3) disciplinary issues. Increase in bullying post covid, cell phones in schools lead to many distractions, taking pictures of kids using restrooms, drug use, increased mental health issues, weaker friendships & community.
(4) lowering of academic standards generally due to: 50% pass rate rule (though parent who was talking about this didn't live in Arlington county. Think she lives in fairfax), stander based grading, no more accountability for homework, grade based on exam only, no more accountability regarding showing up to class, no points for class participation, quizzes aren't graded. I remember a letter from teachers in wakefield regarding this issue but I forgot what happened.

If I am misinformed please let me know! Would rather save the money


You REALLY need to relax. The bottom line is that with parents as over the top concerned and involved in the intricacies of their kids’ education as you appear to be the kids will be just fine. I don’t think you need to send them to a school that devotes an hour a day to a religion that you don’t believe in to educate them.


OP, do not listen to this poster who clearly is an APS booster. Most Catholic schools blow away all public schools in language arts. I know from experience having had one transfer to Catholic HS from public middle school in a very good MCPS "W" cluster. He was sorely not prepared for the level of writing expected of him in his new HS even though he always got high As in all subjects. Luckily he caught up and got to be a pretty good writer in the end. I am confident this would not have been the case if we sent him to public high school.

As for the religion classes, your child would not be expected to worship in the Catholic faith. Only to learn about it and attended masses when they happen. Think about it like you going to a mass for a wedding or funeral...you don't believe in it, but you are respectful.

Catholic schools 100% blow away public schools with regard to structure and discipline. Don't let anyone try to convince you otherwise. These kids gain soft skills that they would not get in public schools. They are expected to make more public presentations in class than in public school. Kids from my daughter's Catholic school are always seemingly more polite and polished than her pubic school friends. It is a stark difference.

Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:OP, we are a Catholic family. I attended Catholic school my entire life. When we moved to Arlington we considered Catholic school. But here’s the thing: the public schools are better academically. They just are, and always have been.

It’s so interesting that you think the Arlington middle schools are full of kids going wild and undisciplined. The typical complaint by the middle school parents are that the schools are too strict. That was our experience.


It’s not universally true that publics are better. I don’t want to start an argument, but I’ve worked in both public and Catholic. The Catholic schools I’ve worked in have been much better at writing instruction, for example. Also, students are able to focus better because discipline is stressed; therefore, teachers can get though more content.

I’ve also notice that professional development opportunities are stronger in the Catholic schools I’ve worked for. I’m encouraged to take classes for more reasons than simply recertification.



I never said it was universally true. I was talking about Arlington public middle schools and the local Catholic schools.


OP here. I don't have any direct experience with middle school in Arlington. Everything I've heard is from parents who's kids are in middle school. These are the things that have been worrying me:

1) Lower writing standards. Kids barely write.
(2) Kids do not read novels in class and analyze them (though this seems to vary by school and whether class is an honors class).
(3) disciplinary issues. Increase in bullying post covid, cell phones in schools lead to many distractions, taking pictures of kids using restrooms, drug use, increased mental health issues, weaker friendships & community.
(4) lowering of academic standards generally due to: 50% pass rate rule (though parent who was talking about this didn't live in Arlington county. Think she lives in fairfax), stander based grading, no more accountability for homework, grade based on exam only, no more accountability regarding showing up to class, no points for class participation, quizzes aren't graded. I remember a letter from teachers in wakefield regarding this issue but I forgot what happened.

If I am misinformed please let me know! Would rather save the money


You REALLY need to relax. The bottom line is that with parents as over the top concerned and involved in the intricacies of their kids’ education as you appear to be the kids will be just fine. I don’t think you need to send them to a school that devotes an hour a day to a religion that you don’t believe in to educate them.


OP, do not listen to this poster who clearly is an APS booster. Most Catholic schools blow away all public schools in language arts. I know from experience having had one transfer to Catholic HS from public middle school in a very good MCPS "W" cluster. He was sorely not prepared for the level of writing expected of him in his new HS even though he always got high As in all subjects. Luckily he caught up and got to be a pretty good writer in the end. I am confident this would not have been the case if we sent him to public high school.

As for the religion classes, your child would not be expected to worship in the Catholic faith. Only to learn about it and attended masses when they happen. Think about it like you going to a mass for a wedding or funeral...you don't believe in it, but you are respectful.

Catholic schools 100% blow away public schools with regard to structure and discipline. Don't let anyone try to convince you otherwise. These kids gain soft skills that they would not get in public schools. They are expected to make more public presentations in class than in public school. Kids from my daughter's Catholic school are always seemingly more polite and polished than her pubic school friends. It is a stark difference.



You’re not an Arlington County parent. You have no first hand knowledge of Arlington public schools. You also have no first hand knowledge of Arlington Catholic schools. Why should your opinion matter over someone who does?

I’m not going to respond point by point to your irrelevant post but will say this: you say that the OP’s kids won’t have to practice the Catholic faith but just “learn about it.” That’s right - and the kids will spend just as much time learning about it as they will spend learning math, science and language arts. It’s a core subject in elementary schools in the Arlington Diocese. That’s a lot of time spent on a subject of no interest to a non-Christian.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:OP, we are a Catholic family. I attended Catholic school my entire life. When we moved to Arlington we considered Catholic school. But here’s the thing: the public schools are better academically. They just are, and always have been.

It’s so interesting that you think the Arlington middle schools are full of kids going wild and undisciplined. The typical complaint by the middle school parents are that the schools are too strict. That was our experience.


It’s not universally true that publics are better. I don’t want to start an argument, but I’ve worked in both public and Catholic. The Catholic schools I’ve worked in have been much better at writing instruction, for example. Also, students are able to focus better because discipline is stressed; therefore, teachers can get though more content.

I’ve also notice that professional development opportunities are stronger in the Catholic schools I’ve worked for. I’m encouraged to take classes for more reasons than simply recertification.



I never said it was universally true. I was talking about Arlington public middle schools and the local Catholic schools.


OP here. I don't have any direct experience with middle school in Arlington. Everything I've heard is from parents who's kids are in middle school. These are the things that have been worrying me:

1) Lower writing standards. Kids barely write.
(2) Kids do not read novels in class and analyze them (though this seems to vary by school and whether class is an honors class).
(3) disciplinary issues. Increase in bullying post covid, cell phones in schools lead to many distractions, taking pictures of kids using restrooms, drug use, increased mental health issues, weaker friendships & community.
(4) lowering of academic standards generally due to: 50% pass rate rule (though parent who was talking about this didn't live in Arlington county. Think she lives in fairfax), stander based grading, no more accountability for homework, grade based on exam only, no more accountability regarding showing up to class, no points for class participation, quizzes aren't graded. I remember a letter from teachers in wakefield regarding this issue but I forgot what happened.

If I am misinformed please let me know! Would rather save the money


You REALLY need to relax. The bottom line is that with parents as over the top concerned and involved in the intricacies of their kids’ education as you appear to be the kids will be just fine. I don’t think you need to send them to a school that devotes an hour a day to a religion that you don’t believe in to educate them.


OP, do not listen to this poster who clearly is an APS booster. Most Catholic schools blow away all public schools in language arts. I know from experience having had one transfer to Catholic HS from public middle school in a very good MCPS "W" cluster. He was sorely not prepared for the level of writing expected of him in his new HS even though he always got high As in all subjects. Luckily he caught up and got to be a pretty good writer in the end. I am confident this would not have been the case if we sent him to public high school.

As for the religion classes, your child would not be expected to worship in the Catholic faith. Only to learn about it and attended masses when they happen. Think about it like you going to a mass for a wedding or funeral...you don't believe in it, but you are respectful.

Catholic schools 100% blow away public schools with regard to structure and discipline. Don't let anyone try to convince you otherwise. These kids gain soft skills that they would not get in public schools. They are expected to make more public presentations in class than in public school. Kids from my daughter's Catholic school are always seemingly more polite and polished than her pubic school friends. It is a stark difference.



You’re not an Arlington County parent. You have no first hand knowledge of Arlington public schools. You also have no first hand knowledge of Arlington Catholic schools. Why should your opinion matter over someone who does?

I’m not going to respond point by point to your irrelevant post but will say this: you say that the OP’s kids won’t have to practice the Catholic faith but just “learn about it.” That’s right - and the kids will spend just as much time learning about it as they will spend learning math, science and language arts. It’s a core subject in elementary schools in the Arlington Diocese. That’s a lot of time spent on a subject of no interest to a non-Christian.


I’m a non-Catholic parent who sent my kids to a Catholic k-8 in this region. I was concerned about the 40 minutes of religion instruction a day. What I found out is that it operated as a 2nd language arts class. Yes, they read and wrote about biblical stories or the lives of saints. They were READING and WRITING. Her first research paper was in religion class, and her teacher walked the 5th grade class through the whole research and writing process. She did similar papers in 6, 7, and 8. Her papers were marked for content, citations, and grammar just like her Language Arts papers were.
Anonymous
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:
Anonymous wrote:OP, we are a Catholic family. I attended Catholic school my entire life. When we moved to Arlington we considered Catholic school. But here’s the thing: the public schools are better academically. They just are, and always have been.

It’s so interesting that you think the Arlington middle schools are full of kids going wild and undisciplined. The typical complaint by the middle school parents are that the schools are too strict. That was our experience.


It’s not universally true that publics are better. I don’t want to start an argument, but I’ve worked in both public and Catholic. The Catholic schools I’ve worked in have been much better at writing instruction, for example. Also, students are able to focus better because discipline is stressed; therefore, teachers can get though more content.

I’ve also notice that professional development opportunities are stronger in the Catholic schools I’ve worked for. I’m encouraged to take classes for more reasons than simply recertification.



I never said it was universally true. I was talking about Arlington public middle schools and the local Catholic schools.


OP here. I don't have any direct experience with middle school in Arlington. Everything I've heard is from parents who's kids are in middle school. These are the things that have been worrying me:

1) Lower writing standards. Kids barely write.
(2) Kids do not read novels in class and analyze them (though this seems to vary by school and whether class is an honors class).
(3) disciplinary issues. Increase in bullying post covid, cell phones in schools lead to many distractions, taking pictures of kids using restrooms, drug use, increased mental health issues, weaker friendships & community.
(4) lowering of academic standards generally due to: 50% pass rate rule (though parent who was talking about this didn't live in Arlington county. Think she lives in fairfax), stander based grading, no more accountability for homework, grade based on exam only, no more accountability regarding showing up to class, no points for class participation, quizzes aren't graded. I remember a letter from teachers in wakefield regarding this issue but I forgot what happened.

If I am misinformed please let me know! Would rather save the money


You REALLY need to relax. The bottom line is that with parents as over the top concerned and involved in the intricacies of their kids’ education as you appear to be the kids will be just fine. I don’t think you need to send them to a school that devotes an hour a day to a religion that you don’t believe in to educate them.


OP, do not listen to this poster who clearly is an APS booster. Most Catholic schools blow away all public schools in language arts. I know from experience having had one transfer to Catholic HS from public middle school in a very good MCPS "W" cluster. He was sorely not prepared for the level of writing expected of him in his new HS even though he always got high As in all subjects. Luckily he caught up and got to be a pretty good writer in the end. I am confident this would not have been the case if we sent him to public high school.

As for the religion classes, your child would not be expected to worship in the Catholic faith. Only to learn about it and attended masses when they happen. Think about it like you going to a mass for a wedding or funeral...you don't believe in it, but you are respectful.

Catholic schools 100% blow away public schools with regard to structure and discipline. Don't let anyone try to convince you otherwise. These kids gain soft skills that they would not get in public schools. They are expected to make more public presentations in class than in public school. Kids from my daughter's Catholic school are always seemingly more polite and polished than her pubic school friends. It is a stark difference.



You’re not an Arlington County parent. You have no first hand knowledge of Arlington public schools. You also have no first hand knowledge of Arlington Catholic schools. Why should your opinion matter over someone who does?

I’m not going to respond point by point to your irrelevant post but will say this: you say that the OP’s kids won’t have to practice the Catholic faith but just “learn about it.” That’s right - and the kids will spend just as much time learning about it as they will spend learning math, science and language arts. It’s a core subject in elementary schools in the Arlington Diocese. That’s a lot of time spent on a subject of no interest to a non-Christian.


I’m a non-Catholic parent who sent my kids to a Catholic k-8 in this region. I was concerned about the 40 minutes of religion instruction a day. What I found out is that it operated as a 2nd language arts class. Yes, they read and wrote about biblical stories or the lives of saints. They were READING and WRITING. Her first research paper was in religion class, and her teacher walked the 5th grade class through the whole research and writing process. She did similar papers in 6, 7, and 8. Her papers were marked for content, citations, and grammar just like her Language Arts papers were.


OP here. Interesting thanks PP. My biggest concern is with writing in public school so that’s good to know.
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