Anonymous wrote: Many Catholic schools have long histories. Their buildings are paid off. Also, given that their mission is to provide a Catholic education to as many kids as possible, they aren't spending money on bells and whistles. I know that at the school where my kid attends, there are sports teams practicing in the Cafeteria, and running laps on the sidewalk around the building, because of lack of fancy practice facilities. The education is fantastic, but it doesn't have the posh feel of other area privates.
Anonymous wrote:they pay their teachers next to nothing. 10 years ago I got a job offer from one of them: $26,000 a year. to teach math.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Subsidized by parishes, less spent on facilities generally, larger class sizes.
And less experienced, younger faculty that costs less than more experienced, older faculty.
Is this typical? We toured a few schools and their teachers had been there for a number of years including a number that had been there for over a decade.
Smaller schools have more tenured faculty. Larger ones like the Catholic high schools have lots of younger faculty. They are cheaper.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Subsidized by parishes, less spent on facilities generally, larger class sizes.
And less experienced, younger faculty that costs less than more experienced, older faculty.
Is this typical? We toured a few schools and their teachers had been there for a number of years including a number that had been there for over a decade.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Subsidized by parishes, less spent on facilities generally, larger class sizes.
And less experienced, younger faculty that costs less than more experienced, older faculty.
Is this typical? We toured a few schools and their teachers had been there for a number of years including a number that had been there for over a decade.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Subsidized by parishes, less spent on facilities generally, larger class sizes.
And less experienced, younger faculty that costs less than more experienced, older faculty.
Anonymous wrote:Subsidized by parishes, less spent on facilities generally, larger class sizes.