No. It is part of a network of Sacred Heart Schools. It will never become secular and will fail miserably if attempted as their pipeline is coming from Catholic K-8 schools. |
Then you have to adhere to church doctrine and root out those who won’t faithfully carry out the schools mission. The problem is they are sitting on both sides of the fence. Catholic but *wink* not when it comes to social issues. |
No different than the Jesuits. |
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I thought project Veritas had folded after being sued so many times for fraud, etc., plus the massive unethical behavior of their former head/founder. The woman who took over from him resigned shortly thereafter when she discovered the depth of the corruption there — wisely decided she wasn’t go to go to jail or bankruptcy defending this corrupt organization and resigned.
https://amp.cnn.com/cnn/2023/12/11/media/project-veritas-hannah-giles-quits/index.html |
This is footage before they folded. A couple years ago. |
| Question: we expect teachers and schools to tell us when our children are doing poorly in math or science or history, but not if they’re experiencing gender dysphoria? |
No. Very different in the fact that although jesuits are understanding of human fault and sin, in no way they condone or promote it contrary to popular belief. |
Is SR condoning or promoting sin? I don't think so. Jesuits have had leaders in their schools who have faltered as well. How this is handled will be very telling, but my gut tells me the teacher will suffer some repercussions. |
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Sadly, it's for the child's own protection, if the child doesn't feel safe telling their parents about their dysphoria. |
Just as some may not feel safe telling their parents they are failing math. I don't see the difference. It is up to the family to work out these issues, not school personnel. |
If you don't see the difference, I don't know what to tell you. |
Math is a graded core subject. A child’s sexuality or gender identity is not. |
I will add that failing math is more of a school based issue that can can be addressed at the school level while gender is more of a family issue that could impact a child's mental health if not handled properly. Family should be involved, period. |
Agree. It is 100 percent the family, and not the teachers' job. Not in any way within a teacher's purview. Kids telling teachers or teachers presuming to recognize gender dysphoria--neither is a reliable source. Most importantly, (nearly all) teachers are not licensed by their jurisdictions to practice psychotherapy. Affirming a child's view that they are in the "wrong body" is a psychological intervention that schools/teachers should not be making. |