Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think a lot of these larger co-ed Catholic schools are a lot like the good public schools we attended in the 80s and 90s.
100% this.
Anonymous wrote:I think a lot of these larger co-ed Catholic schools are a lot like the good public schools we attended in the 80s and 90s.
Anonymous wrote:1. No fights at private.
2. Kids can actually sign up for classes.
3. They don’t lose your paperwork over and over.
4. Teachers aren’t missing for months to full years leaving ineffective subs.
5. If a student makes a sports team you know it and get sufficient information to participate.
5a. Actually, there is also sufficient information to try out for a sports team.
6. Schedules are posted early enough to make plans.
7. No fights at sports events.
8. No drive by shootings even at the “good” public schools.
9. Sufficient bathrooms and water fountains in working order.
10. I could go on but won’t.
Anonymous wrote:I attended a large local catholic co-ed. I knew of 1 non-catholic student, other than myself and some athletes. It's catholic. My first 5 minutes, everyone was in bleachers doing the sign of the cross, saying a prayer in unison, and I knew I was a fish out of water
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For those of you with kids in big co-ed Catholic schools—how do you see them as different from public schools? Assuming both have large student bodies and offer the same kinds of activities, and your child is doing great academically either way… why choose the private (and pricey) route if you're not specifically seeking a religious focus? What do you feel you get from it?
My local public school sucks, and my son needs a safe and rigorous environment to succeed. He wants to see girls, so that put DeMatha and Gonzaga out of the running. I don’t have the cash for Bullis or Maret, so SJC was a nice sweet spot, and I got ample aid.
St John's is very similar to public. More strict. But similar in all other ways.
Wow I’m looking at it for my daughter are fights regular?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For those of you with kids in big co-ed Catholic schools—how do you see them as different from public schools? Assuming both have large student bodies and offer the same kinds of activities, and your child is doing great academically either way… why choose the private (and pricey) route if you're not specifically seeking a religious focus? What do you feel you get from it?
My local public school sucks, and my son needs a safe and rigorous environment to succeed. He wants to see girls, so that put DeMatha and Gonzaga out of the running. I don’t have the cash for Bullis or Maret, so SJC was a nice sweet spot, and I got ample aid.
St John's is very similar to public. More strict. But similar in all other ways.
Wow I’m looking at it for my daughter are fights regular?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For those of you with kids in big co-ed Catholic schools—how do you see them as different from public schools? Assuming both have large student bodies and offer the same kinds of activities, and your child is doing great academically either way… why choose the private (and pricey) route if you're not specifically seeking a religious focus? What do you feel you get from it?
My local public school sucks, and my son needs a safe and rigorous environment to succeed. He wants to see girls, so that put DeMatha and Gonzaga out of the running. I don’t have the cash for Bullis or Maret, so SJC was a nice sweet spot, and I got ample aid.
St John's is very similar to public. More strict. But similar in all other ways.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:For those of you with kids in big co-ed Catholic schools—how do you see them as different from public schools? Assuming both have large student bodies and offer the same kinds of activities, and your child is doing great academically either way… why choose the private (and pricey) route if you're not specifically seeking a religious focus? What do you feel you get from it?
My local public school sucks, and my son needs a safe and rigorous environment to succeed. He wants to see girls, so that put DeMatha and Gonzaga out of the running. I don’t have the cash for Bullis or Maret, so SJC was a nice sweet spot, and I got ample aid.
Anonymous wrote:For those of you with kids in big co-ed Catholic schools—how do you see them as different from public schools? Assuming both have large student bodies and offer the same kinds of activities, and your child is doing great academically either way… why choose the private (and pricey) route if you're not specifically seeking a religious focus? What do you feel you get from it?