I have not met one Catholic that sends their kids to Catholic school for that reason. You’re just a complete psycho and I don’t know why you constantly have to post on these. I get it you’re a homophobe. |
FFS this is not why people send their kids to Catholic school. The people who are actually this insular are homeschooling their kids. |
The kids won’t care. But the adults are another story. They aren’t dumb. They’ll know why you are there and that your motives are much different from theirs. |
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Adults won’t care either as long as you don’t bad mouth the accepted norms, complain pr expect variances b/c you aren’t Catholic.
I’ll add- I absolutely send DC to Catholic schools to be (somewhat) insular and get away from bad behavior. Not top of the list when we made the decision for our oldest 12 years ago, but it certainly has move up. And in many cases DC absolutely know who are/ are not Catholic. But does it change anything, not really. |
| PP here - and in ES they did not know who was Catholic and who wasn’t. But in HS, it isn’t hard to figure out. |
Not remotely true. We picked Catholic schools because: 1. They still expect students to follow rules. There are expectations for behavior and students are held accountable. 2. We are impressed by the writing instruction and the emphasis on strong communication skills. 3. The school we selected has a strong robotics program as well as a strong theater program, two things that are important to our child. 4. We appreciate the emphasis on developing a strong moral character. The school supports what we expect at home: do your best, tell the truth, don’t hurt others, etc. 5. The service opportunities! 6. The school doesn’t use laptops much. There is a nice balance between online work, textbooks, traditional lecture, group activities, etc. 7. Supportive and responsive teachers Nothing on our list is about staying in a bubble. |
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Seems to me this is more an issue for the parents than the kids. Kids don't give a damn.
No Catholic HS in this area is so dogmatic as to be openly hostile to LGBQ+. There are varying degrees of course, but if you're looking for a strict Opus Dei experience, there's always the seminaries. |
That is flatly ridiculous. |
-1. I don’t want my kid to be shielded from selective sins. I want them to be shielded from adults who tell them those selective sins are actually virtues. |
Who cares about the adults these are teens kids don’t even meet their friends parents at this age. |
I agree but I would stay away from all boys, they are still a bit behind the curve maturity wise. |
THIS |
| My kids are not sheltered from anything. I sent them to Catholic school because it was a smaller school, they have rules that are enforced, I liked that they focused on virtues, they have textbooks, and the families are generally committed to education. We are not insular at all (spouse is not Catholic). My kids couldn’t care less what religion someone is. And they have their own ideas about things (both are super pro-females as priests, for instance). |
Also, their school was open during the pandemic. I chose the school years before the pandemic, but they expressed a commitment to the education of children. And they were not lying. |
Traffic in campus is a pain, for not saying chaotic most of the times. |