Anonymous wrote:Friend’s kids go to local Catholic school for 3rd grade and 5th grade. It seems like every other day they go to mass, have some prayer event, have a student assembly, etc. Do kids at these schools have enough instruction time for ACADEMICS?
How do they compete with public and non-religious schools whose total number of school days are the same (or more) but without all the religious extracurricular?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It depends on the school but there are mixed views on that. Many people find that the basic writing and math skills taught in Catholic schools give them a stronger foundation than public schools when the kids get to high school.
What seems to lack is a broader degree of differentiation that you might get in public schools. Few if any K-8 Catholic kids get to Geometry for example. Advanced learners who might be in AAP and students at the other end of the spectrum don't necessarily have their needs met.
Catholic schools are a good fit for a run-of-the-mill student who also wants a religious component to their education.
It took me all of two seconds to prove you wrong. Of course Catholic schools offer geometry. Here’s a typical example:
https://www.ihm-school.com/academics/eighthgrade.cfm
How many Catholic schools do you actually have experience with? What qualifies you as an expert on Catholic education?
I'm a Catholic who looked at multiple diocesan schools for my kids and this was feedback I heard from school parents as one of the negatives. Yes, some schools offer it but most kids don't have access to it, is what was shared with me by parents at at least three different schools near me.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It depends on the school but there are mixed views on that. Many people find that the basic writing and math skills taught in Catholic schools give them a stronger foundation than public schools when the kids get to high school.
What seems to lack is a broader degree of differentiation that you might get in public schools. Few if any K-8 Catholic kids get to Geometry for example. Advanced learners who might be in AAP and students at the other end of the spectrum don't necessarily have their needs met.
Catholic schools are a good fit for a run-of-the-mill student who also wants a religious component to their education.
It took me all of two seconds to prove you wrong. Of course Catholic schools offer geometry. Here’s a typical example:
https://www.ihm-school.com/academics/eighthgrade.cfm
How many Catholic schools do you actually have experience with? What qualifies you as an expert on Catholic education?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Friend’s kids go to local Catholic school for 3rd grade and 5th grade. It seems like every other day they go to mass, have some prayer event, have a student assembly, etc. Do kids at these schools have enough instruction time for ACADEMICS?
How do they compete with public and non-religious schools whose total number of school days are the same (or more) but without all the religious extracurricular?
And yet graduates of these Catholic schools are as a well prepared for high school and college and law and medical school as are the graduates of public and other private schools.
Sounds like the premise of your question is flawed.
Anonymous wrote:It depends on the school but there are mixed views on that. Many people find that the basic writing and math skills taught in Catholic schools give them a stronger foundation than public schools when the kids get to high school.
What seems to lack is a broader degree of differentiation that you might get in public schools. Few if any K-8 Catholic kids get to Geometry for example. Advanced learners who might be in AAP and students at the other end of the spectrum don't necessarily have their needs met.
Catholic schools are a good fit for a run-of-the-mill student who also wants a religious component to their education.
Anonymous wrote:Well, they don’t have to evacuate classrooms for desk-throwers, so there’s that.
Anonymous wrote:Friend’s kids go to local Catholic school for 3rd grade and 5th grade. It seems like every other day they go to mass, have some prayer event, have a student assembly, etc. Do kids at these schools have enough instruction time for ACADEMICS?
How do they compete with public and non-religious schools whose total number of school days are the same (or more) but without all the religious extracurricular?