Anonymous wrote:The only other parochial school we considered was St Jerome in Cheverly. We felt it was far more inclusive and liked the strong principal(no longer there) and active parent community, but honestly were not wowed by the curriculum either. It seemed academically no stronger than our local public school, Spellman Elementary in Cheverly and that’s where we ended up and we have been happy. We also considered Friends Community School, which is not parochial, but impressed us all around — but just couldn’t bring ourselves to pay that much for these early elementary years.. I don’t know much else about the other parochial elementary schools in the area, sorry but hope this was helpful.
Anonymous wrote:Our friends at St Jerome are very happy there but when my husband and I visited we were not impressed. The curriculum bills itself as classical and innovative but to my husband who attended catholic school most of his childhood he said it felt like they were reinventing the wheel. And not in an inclusive way, rather, it seemed very conservative and even a little rigid. I am not Catholic and felt the same way. I’ll admit we lean crunchy but wanted to check it out because there has been such positive buzz. I have also heard class sizes are large and tuition increases have been steep.
Anonymous wrote:I got the impression that Holy Redeemer was for less academically able kids. At least the kids I’ve known who have gone there vs those I’ve known at St. j. The early Montessori program at St. Jerome’s is great too.